Business and Finance Jenalyn
Business and Finance Jenalyn
Business and Finance Jenalyn
FINANCE
20 BUSUNESS PERSONALITIES
LOCAL AND INTERNATIONAL
BUSINESS TRADE
Unfortunately for the family, their store was burned down during World War II.
However, business-minded Henry saw an opportunity selling used military
combat boots and other postwar goods from supportive American soldiers!
His success led to the opening of his first shoe store, the SM in Avenida,
Manila. Henry had problems finding shoe manufacturers who could design
shoes according to what he had in mind, but he persisted. He spoke to
customers and built his own network of suppliers and manufacturers.
If you thought you only loved The Champ and Chicken Joy, then be prepared
to be inspired by the man behind the franchise.
Also coming from an immigrant family from China, Tony learned the value of
hard work and dedication from his father who worked as a cook in a Buddhist
temple. Tony’s father started a Chinese restaurant in Manila with his savings
so he can send him to college.
In 1975, Tony bought a Magnolia ice cream parlor. However, it was not
generating enough business. After talking with his customers and people
within the neighborhood, Tony decided to include sandwiches, fried chicken,
and French fries in the menu. In time, the restaurant found itself packed to
overflowing capacity.
By 1978, Tony had opened six more restaurants, but the main item was no
longer ice cream. Tony then decided to adapt the McDonald’s concept and
named his franchise after his work ethic of being as “busy as a bee.”
Today Jollibee has grown to more than 2,500 stores in the Philippines plus
locations in the US, China, Saudi Arabia, Vietnam, Singapore, and Brunei.
3. JOHN GOCONGWEI JR., JG HOLDINGS
John’s life story is a “rich-to-rags-to riches” story. John Jr. was born in China
to the scion of one of the wealthiest families in Cebu.
When the father died, so did the business and the family fortune was soon
gone. John Jr. supported his family by peddling items along the streets of
Cebu by bike. Soon, he was trading items by boat to Lucena City and to
Manila by truck. Eventually, he started importing items from the US.
John Jr. soon realized that importing carried too much risk and low margins.
Thus, in 1957, he borrowed Php 500,000 from China Bank and started a corn
milling business named Universal Corn Products.
Today, the Gokongwei family owns several successful and highly diversified
businesses. Among these are Robina Land Corporation and Cebu Pacific.
4. Socorro C. Ramos, National Bookstore
The next time you buy your batch of new school supplies and textbooks, do
not forget to thank Ms. Socorro C. Ramos!
Her story is a stuff for telenovela, and frankly, I’m surprised the networks and
movie outfits have not caught on. How’s this for a plot teaser?
Girl’s brother marries scion of a wealthy bookstore owner in Manila. The girl
finds job as a saleslady at 18, meets and falls in love with the son of the
owner; thus, he is technically her in-law! Their parents forbid the relationship
and sends the girl back to the province. However, their love is so strong, girl
and boy stand up to the parents, get married, and have twins.
The boy takes over a branch with the girl, and they renamed it in National
Book Store. However, a war breaks out, and the store is destroyed! They
rebuild the store, but everything is held under suspicion of being
“questionable.” They relocate the store in Avenida, but as the business picks
up, a storm destroys their roof. Soon, they rebuild the store, and every
centavo is used to build a nine-story National Book Store.
The girl is Socorro and the boy is Jose. Today, National Bookstore has grown
to over 100 stores. Despite digital technology, it continues to flourish!
5. Cecilio Kwok Pedro, Lamoiyan Corporation
Cecilio used to head Aluminum Container Inc., which produced the aluminum
toothpaste tubes for Procter and Gamble, Philippine Refining Company (now
Unilever), and Colgate-Palmolive. However, environmental concerns led his
clients to shift to plastic-laminated toothpaste tubes. Aluminum Container Inc.
failed and closed its shop in 1986.
His programs include free housing for more than 30 deaf–mute staffs. To
date, more than 180 hearing-impaired students have received college
education through DEAF or Deaf Evangelistic Alliance Foundation.
6. Mariano Que, Mercury Drugstores
Mariano saw the need to supply sulfa drugs, which were used to treat
bacterial infections. He started to buy sulfa tablets and sold them at affordable
prices. Soon, other people followed and adapted Mariano’s strategy.
However, only Mariano sold high-quality sulfa tablets, which ensured him a
steady clientele. With his hard work and dedication to build up savings, he
was able to put up his first drug store in 1945, which he named Mercury Drug.
The Roman god Mercury is known for speed. He also carries the caduceus,
which is a symbol in the medical industry.
Mariano invested his earnings into the company and introduced many
innovations in the service. Among these innovations were a drug-delivery
service to clients and locations that are open 24/7 because he knew people
would be needing medicines any time of the day.
By the time Mariano opened his second Mercury Drug at the newly
constructed Ayala shopping center in Makati, he had invested in technological
innovations, such as biological refrigerators and computer-guided controls.
Mariano’s dedication to his business has allowed Mercury Drug into 700
stores and a widely recognized name for quality pharmaceuticals.
7. Alfredo M. Yao, Zest-O
The next time you pass a vendor peddling goods on the street, keep in mind
that he or she can be supporting the next Alfredo M. Yao.
When Alfredo lost his dad at age 12, his mother was left to support him and
his siblings by becoming a sidewalk vendor. A relative was able to give
financial aid, which allowed Alfredo to reach, but not complete, college at the
Mapúa Institute of Technology.
Alfredo took several odd jobs, which included time at a printing press. During
his stay there, Alfredo learned how to print cellophane wrappers for candies
and biscuits. His experience prompted him to start his own printing business.
His printing business was doing well. However, his discovery of the Doy
Packaging system from Europe was the turning point of his entrepreneurial
career. He tried to sell the system to juice manufacturers, but no one was
interested. Thus, Alfredo ventured into the juice business by concocting
flavors in his kitchen.
These juices were not only delicious but also appealing to parents as they
found the light and brightly colored packs easy to include in their children’s
lunch boxes. Best of all, the packaging allowed the juice to stay chilled longer.
Zest-O was born!
Today, Zest-O controls 80% of the juice market, and it has expanded to
markets in Australia, China, New Zealand, Korea, Singapore, US, and several
countries in Europe. Alfredo’s entrepreneurial success has revitalized the
juice region in the Philippines particularly farmers growing dalandan. The Doy
packs are also recycled by local cottage industries into handbags for export to
other countries!
The boy who once faced the harsh realities of life now become a successful
juice manufacturer. Alfredo has diversified his business interests into airlines
by acquiring Asian Spirit Airlines and renaming it as Zest Air.
As a mother herself Corazon understood the value of having meals that can
be prepared easily, taste good, and fit the family budget.
Despite numerous failures, his persistence finally paid off. He discovered the
pigs were suffering from a type of bad bacteria. His solution was a probiotic
bacteria that would increase the level of good bacteria in the body.
His excellence in the academe paved the way for Diosdado to become a pilot-
trainee at the Philippines Airlines or PAL, which would eventually open doors
for a design engineer position at Boeing Co. The opportunity brought
Diosdado to the US where he completed a master’s degree in electrical
engineering and computer science at Stanford University.
Diosdado’s experience working with the top technology companies led to his
design of the first single-chip 16-bit microprocessor calculator. By 1981,
Diosdado was commissioned by Seeq Technologies to assist the Ethernet to
find an efficient way of linking computers. Disodado designed the single- chip
controller that provided data-link control and the transceiver in the first 10-bit
Ethernet CMOS.
His success opened doors to build his own company, Monstroni, in 1985 and
Chips and Technology, which made US$ 12 million in the first quarter alone.
By 1996, Diosdado sold Chips and Technology to Intel for US$ 430 million!
Throughout his success, Diosdado never forgot his roots and Filipino heritage.
He set up the Banatao Filipino American Fund to lend support to Filipino
American students in Northern California who aspire to become electrical
engineers.
INTERNATIONAL
1. Donald Trump
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America’s 2016 Republican Presidential Candidate Donald Trump is perhaps the most
infamous CEO sitting upon a $4.5 billion empire. Trump’s career began with an
economics degree from the University of Pennsylvania in 1968. Just seven years later,
he took over his father’s construction company and renamed it Trump Organization.
Known for his pompous attitude, Trump finalized countless multi-million dollar real estate
transactions for hotels and casinos, including NYC’s Plaza Hotel. Despite this, massive
loan payments caused Donald Trump to declare bankruptcy four times since 1991. While
dodging the IRS, he started Trump University, a for-profit being sued for misleading
practices. Donald Trump also lost his NBC show “The Apprentice” after making crude
comments about Mexican immigrants. And now he’s running for President…
2. Mark Zuckerberg
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Worth $51.2 million, Mark Zuckerberg is the famous young CEO of the Internet social
media platform Facebook. After growing up in White Plains, New York, Zuckerberg
attended Harvard University to study computer science. In 2004, he officially launched
Facebook from his dorm to help people network. Soon after, three seniors filed a lawsuit
that Zuckerberg stole their idea called HarvardConnection. The $300 million settlement
gave the men 1.2 million Facebook shares. Mark Zuckerberg then dropped out of
Harvard to work full-time on the company. Facebook had grown to 1 million users in one
year, and there’s now over 1.65 billion. Zuckerberg’s successes were portrayed in the
award-winning film, “The Social Network” and there’s so much veiled information about
the whole Facebook issue that many people question its true purpose…
3. Bill Gates
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Perhaps the world’s most renowned software guru, Bill Gates was the formidable CEO
for Microsoft until 2014. Growing up in Seattle, Gates showed the programming skills and
aggressive business acumen for high-tech innovation. With his Lakeside School
classmate Paul Allen, he developed his first software, “Traf-o-Data,” at 15. In 1975,
Gates dropped out of Harvard University to form Micro-Soft with Allen. Although the 25-
employee firm started out shaky, Bill Gates rapidly expanded the operation and grossed
$2.5 million in 1979. Though he’s credited with beginning the computer revolution, Gates
has faced controversy. Microsoft has been the defendant in over 35 patent infringement
lawsuits. Bill Gates remains the world’s richest person with a $76.6 billion net worth.
4. Michael Bloomberg
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Ranked eighth in Forbes 400, Michael Bloomberg is the notable CEO for Bloomberg L.P.,
a privately held financial software company. Born in Boston, Bloomberg earned a B.S. in
Electrical Engineering from Johns Hopkins in 1964. Two years later, he earned an MBA
from Harvard Business School. Bloomberg began working at the Wall Street investment
bank Salomon Brothers. Using his $10 million severance package, Michael Bloomberg
established his own firm. By 1982, Merrill Lynch had invested $30 million in his company.
Although he left the CEO spot to become New York City’s mayor in 2002, Bloomberg
L.P. went on to install over 325,000 terminals worldwide. He’s also launched “Bloomberg
BusinessWeek” magazine and the Bloomberg Tradebook.
5. Mary Barra
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In the male-dominated business world, Mary Barra stands as one of the most famous
female CEOs. Forbes magazine ranked Barra fifth in the “World’s Most Powerful
Women.” After studying electrical engineering at Kettering University, Barra earned a
General Motors Fellowship at Stanford in 1988. She became manager of the company’s
Detroit assembly plant and climbed the ladder. By 2011, Mary Barra advanced to Vice
President of Global Product Development to redesign GM’s automobile platforms. When
Dan Akerson stepped down, she assumed the CEO title in 2014. Barra was the world’s
first female CEO for an international automaker. Her leadership has been criticized
though. GM has issued 84 recalls involving over 30 million cars since her term began.
6. Warren Buffett
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7. Howard Schultz
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8. Frederick W. Smith
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Frederick W. Smith is the famous founder and CEO of FedEx, a global courier company
with $14.9 billion total equity. Growing up with a widowed mother in Marks, Mississippi,
Smith was crippled with a bone disease. After regaining his health, he entered Yale
University in 1962. For his economics class, Smith wrote a business plan for an overnight
delivery service and earned a “C.” Frederick W. Smith later turned his paper into success
after serving in the U.S. Marine Corps for three years. The determined entrepreneur
raised $91 million in venture capital to found Federal Express. By 1973, the company
delivered small packages to 25 cities. Since then, Smith’s taken the service international
with over 300,000 employees. Fortune placed Smith 26th among the “World’s Greatest
Leaders.”
9. Martin Shkreli
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Among today’s most hated CEOs is 33-year-old Martin Shkreli, the co-founder of Turing
Pharmaceuticals. Growing up in working class Brooklyn, Shkreli earned a bachelor’s in
business administration from CUNY Baruch College in 2005. He initially worked at
Cramer, Berkowitz & Co as a hedge fund analyst. Almost immediately, the SEC
investigated Shkreli when he predicted Regeneron Pharmaceuticals’ stock would fall. He
founded Retrophin in 2011, but departed four years latter to establish Turing
Pharmaceuticals. Here’s where Martin Shkreli gained infamy for jacking the price of
Daraprim up 5,556 percent to $750 per pill. Although the price stands, Shkreli’s in hot
water with the FBI. In December 2015, he was charged with securities fraud for running a
Ponzi scheme with Retrophin.
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