1 / 53

SSB2216 Presentation: The Remaking of the Singapore Economy and its Implication for Employment

SSB2216 Presentation: The Remaking of the Singapore Economy and its Implication for Employment. How does the notion of a creative and entrepreneurial economy affect the employment landscape?. Team Members. Koh Shao Hong Nah Zheng Xiang Philson Mohd Shah Rizan bin Saleh Phoon Gui Shuen

van
Télécharger la présentation

SSB2216 Presentation: The Remaking of the Singapore Economy and its Implication for Employment

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. SSB2216 Presentation:The Remaking of the Singapore Economy and its Implication for Employment

  2. How does the notion of a creative and entrepreneurial economy affect the employment landscape?

  3. Team Members Koh Shao Hong Nah Zheng Xiang Philson Mohd Shah Rizan bin Saleh Phoon Gui Shuen Tan Hong Chuan Julian Koh Long Jie Cai Hanbin, Kenneth

  4. Presentation Overview • Introduction • View of the Changes to Singapore's Economy and its Employment Landscape • The Past Economy • Reasons for Transition • Characteristic of a Creative and Entrepreneurial Economy • Implication on Employment Landscape • Case Study 1: Eastman Kodak Co • Case Study 2: Adrenalin Events and Education • Case Study 3: MBE Technology Pte Ltd • Conclusion

  5. Definition • Creative Economy • Individual talent and skills are the primary inputs • Based on a new way of thinking and doing • Revitalising industries • Uniqueness • Entrepreneurial Economy • Profit-making • Risk-taking • Innovation

  6. Past Employment Landscape

  7. Employment Practices • No stringent guidelines • General, broad ranging roles • Low-skilled, labour intensive

  8. Management Style • Personnel Management • Assumed workers require strict monitoring • High bureaucracy • View T&D as a cost centre

  9. Employee Expectations • Reluctant to attend training • Sought job security • “Iron Rice Bowl” • Stable Income

  10. Employment Benefits • Basic, fair employment practices • No Flexi-hours • Few opportunities for T&D

  11. REASONS FOR TRANSITION

  12. Reasons for Transition • External environmental changes New needs and wants New competitors Evolution of economies External events New Technologies

  13. Reasons for Transition • Singapore need to adapt herself to changes • To ensure progress and that we do not lag behind the other countries

  14. Can it help? • Exploit complementary business areas • R & D and technology development • Build regional knowledge centers (hub) • Attract Biotech firms • Invest in Tourism • Two casino resorts

  15. Response • Why is it necessary? • Substitute price competitiveness • Attract MNC’s higher-end investments • Maintain status

  16. Creative & Entrepreneurial Economy

  17. 3 Main Characteristics • Creativity • Collaboration • Entrepreneurship

  18. Implications on employment Landscape Newly adapted working environment Rise in education criteria New and different skill sets

  19. Raise in Education Criteria • Well-educated workforce • Greater demand for talents • Local context • MOE established Compulsory Education(CE) in 2003 • MOE adapting Future-Ready Singaporeans in 2012

  20. New and different Skill Sets • Social Intelligence • Novel and Adaptive Thinking • Cross-Cultural Competency • New Media Literacy

  21. Newly Adapted Working Environment • Colorful and Spacious Infrastructure • E.g. Google, Pixar • Effective Working Relationships • Recognition and Appreciation • Fun Organizational Culture

  22. Eastman Kodak Co

  23. Photography Industry • Founded in 1889 by George Eastman • Invented Roll Film • Dominant position in the photographic film in the 20th century Background

  24. Hiring Practices • Hiring People with disabilities • Internship for students • Creativity requirements are not their hiring criteria

  25. Training and Benefits • Customised Employee Development Plan (EDP) • EDP Updated quarterly • Minimum 40 hours of t&D each year • Provide support and education for people with disabilities

  26. Mentality towards Economy Remake • Transition to Digital Photography Slowly despite invented Digital Cameras since 1975 • Kodak executives could not foresee the future without traditional film • Underestimated the change of the economy

  27. Problems faced • Customer switched to digital offered by Sony • Film sales dropped drastically in 2001 • Financial shocks to Kodak • Lost of market shares to Asian competitors • Declining of sales revenue due to low profit margin from Digital Cameras • Filed Chapter 11 Bankruptcy Protection

  28. Implications for the Employment • Unable to hire valuable and creative employees due to bad bankruptcy Reputation • Employee doesn’t want to choose Kodak as their employer • Unable to retain workers • Retrenchments • Limited resources to provide trainings and skill upgrades to existing employees

  29. Social Enterprise Sees events as an opportunity to do good Over 300 events to date Adrenalin Events & Education

  30. Creativity identified as crucial element in events industry Constant Innovation Perception

  31. Training Policy Application of Technology Workplace Areas Affected Structure Hiring Criteria Benefits System

  32. Past

  33. Present

  34. Structure Adrenalin Client Core Creative

  35. Creativity Zero youth-at-risk headcount Hiring Criteria

  36. Additional Special Benefits depending on occasion Special Company retreats Benefit System

  37. Key Problem Faced

  38. A Brief History

  39. Business Orientation

  40. Areas of Concern

  41. Production: Manufacturing of Wafer • 24/7 continuous production • Semi-Automated machineries operated by a few employees • Maintenance of machineries done every 1-2 years • Both Machine and Human-Intensive

  42. Hiring Criteria • Minimally diploma in General Engineering • Good background knowledge in Physics • Commit to long hours • Possess a quick and analytical mind • Able to converse in either English/Mandarin • Foreign workers accepted (MOM guidelines) • Gender Preference in different departments

  43. Training and Development • Knowledge needed only pertained to local facility • Performed in-house by Senior Engineers : • Operating machineries • Analysing outputs of productions • Handling of wafers and cleaniness control Training? Development?

  44. Welfare and Benefits • Standard MOM Benefits: • Company Transport • 1-2 Months’ Bonus salary based on company’s annual profits • Extra allowance for lunch (on top of basic pay) • 4-day work week • Promotion within company Mostly Short-term benefits:

  45. Research & Development (R&D) • Recently began R & D on a small scale • Employed a PHD student to be focused in R&D

More Related