Are
hefty paychecks and good career prospects the only aspects talents look for in
a base country? The answers may be the key to a country's success in bringing
its best brains home.
THERE is a global war being waged as companies
and countries struggle to keep their best within their borders while they try
to woo the world's brightest.
And if salary perks and benefits offered by
countries like Qatar, China, Singapore and Malaysia for returning experts and
expatriates are anything to go by, the “War for Talent”, a term coined by
research giant McKinsey & Company in 1997, is still going strong despite
the global economic slowdown.
But 13 years after the term was coined, the
landscape of the war has greatly changed. Most notably, the “weapons” used to
attract talents have changed.
While salary packages and fringe benefits used
to be one of the most powerful magnets for talent, it may not be enough in the
current human resource climate.
David Lee, author of the Insights: The Journal
of the Northeast HR Association article titled “Becoming a Talent Magnet: How
to Attract and Retain Great Employees”, says that competitive pay and a good
benefits package although important are not enough to attract and retain “the
best of the best”.
Quoting a study by another US consulting firm
Kepner-Tregoe of Princeton, Lee, an executive coach and founder of US
consulting and training firm HumanNature@Work, points out that 40% of the
employees surveyed felt that increased salaries and financial rewards were
ineffective in reducing turnover.
Hence, the vital question for most human
resource managers and national talent development organisations is “What are
the world's best looking for?”
Lee says the proverbial carrot lies in the
intangible, such as pride in where they work and what they do, appreciation
from their managers, opportunities to learn and grow as well as respect.
Interviews with Malaysian diasporas and
experts who have returned seem to support the trend.
Although many of them acknowledge that salary
packages and career prospects matter, it is often not a deal breaker when it
comes to their decision to remain abroad or return home.
One of the main attractions for talents is the
environment for them to develop and excel in their fields of interest.
When Kuala Lumpur-born consultant psychiatrist
and analytic psychotherapist Dr Tan Eng-Kong left for a sabbatical in Australia
in 1976, he knew he would get to work with some of the best psychiatrists in
the world.
“At that time, Australia invited the best of
American and British psychiatrists to its country, and I was lucky to be able
to take a sabbatical from lecturing in Sydney,” says Dr Tan, who was in Kuala
Lumpur recently.
As he found greater opportunities to practise
his field of interest psychotherapy in Australia, he chose to stay there and
build his career.
“In those days, the field of psychotherapy was
not developed yet in Malaysia. So, I had to stay back in Australia just to
practise,” says Dr Tan, who has now spent over 30 years building a successful
career in Sydney.
While psychotherapy is currently gaining
popularity among local mental health professionals, Dr Tan still feels it is
more popular and better received in the West.
“When you have the brains or energy, you want
to go to the best place to learn from the best,” says Dr Tan, who still visits
Malaysia regularly to share his expertise with local mental health
professionals.
Dr Lam Wei-Haur, who has just come back under
the returning experts programme (REP) after spending six years in Britain and
two years in China doing research in ocean renewable energy, shares a similar
experience.
“Funding for research at a post-graduate level
was limited when I finished my undergraduate studies in 2001. I was lucky to
obtain a scholarship to further my studies in the UK,” says Lam, who is now an
associate professor in Universiti Malaya's department of civil engineering.
“However, after six years of research in the
UK, I wanted to learn about the system of research and development in China,”
he adds.
Lam, who is in his 30s, says he came back
because he felt he would be able to contribute more to the field of ocean
energy in Malaysia.
“Although the tax cuts and benefits such as a
permanent residentship offer for my spouse made the transition back to Malaysia
easier, the reason I came back is because I felt that I could contribute more
to my field of research here, back home,” he explains.
There may be more established research
institutions and teams overseas but having the opportunity to work with
researchers in a developing nation such as Malaysia is like “sketching on a
white piece of paper” for him.
On worries that Malaysia may not have
sufficient funding and infrastructure for research, Dr Lam says researchers
have to look for opportunities themselves.
“Our Government is now very supportive of
scientific research and there are a number of sources researchers can go to for
grants. We must understand that opportunities do not come to us if we do not
make an effort to ask or look for it,” he stresses.
While Dr Hood Azlan Mohd Thabit, 35, is
determined to return to Malaysia to continue his research in endocrinology
(specifically in diabetes) after his post-graduate research in Cambridge, he
agrees that the base country of a scientist or researcher is of marginally less
importance compared to the research network and collaborations he could forge
with other researchers around the world.
“It is very difficult for an individual or
group to do research on its own, not just because the world is more globalised
now, but because it is so easy to collaborate through the Internet, they have
no excuse not to,” he says.
While certain countries have established
infrastructure for research, others have the human resource and expertise, he
adds.
“Personally, it is really for the satisfaction
of doing what you do. And coming home, for most people, is about whether they
can continue their work in a meaningful way,” says Dr Hood.
For corporate social responsibility (CSR)
consultant Wong Lai Yong, who hails from Penang, the location of her base
country does not matter as long as she is able to contribute to society from
where she is.
Since she first volunteered to read to the
blind in primary school, community service has been in her blood. Today, she
continues to serve the people around her by spreading her knowledge on
childcare development and social entrepreneurship based on her experiences in
Japan.
“I've always realised that education is the
best way to bring people out of poverty, so I think about the ways I can help
bring education to people who have no access to primary education. That is why
I have never confined my contributions to Malaysia alone,” says the cheerful
39-year-old.
She does not plan to return to Malaysia in the
near future but even so, she visits regularly to share her knowledge.
“If Malaysia wants to attract talents, it must
be able to provide a supportive and conducive environment for these talents to
perform and contribute,” she says.
“We might not be able to compete with many
developed nations in terms of salary and benefits, but we can offer Malaysian
diasporas the comfort of home and the company of their family members.”
Malaysian
transplant
Carol Lamb calls herself a transplanted
Malaysian, having settled down in the United States in the 1980s. Lamb, who now
runs communication firm Fantastic International Inc in Atlanta, says she is
often asked in social circles where she is from.
“How do I convey that I am from a country
surrounded by glistening islands with white sandy beaches, tropical rainforests
with unique animal and plant life, cool mountain ranges with quaint villages,
tall skyscrapers with world-class shopping, a fusion of Asia and British rule?
I decided to build my own website and affiliate with one of the biggest online
travel booking engines on the Internet, Hotels.com,” she tells.
With the help of Tourism Malaysia and its New
York office, she travelled back to Malaysia and wrote about exciting tourist
attractions and sites. The concept of medical tourism caught her attention and
she is now helping to promote Malaysia as a health tourism destination among
Americans.
“The number of Americans going to Malaysia is
small. This is the reason why I created the Global Marketing Network'. I
promote medical facilities that are in Malaysia at exhibitions around the US.
“Malaysian medical facilities need to be seen.
Malaysia also needs to be on the lips and minds of people thinking about having
surgery abroad. What better way to do this than participating in exhibitions?
“Additionally, most Americans do not know that
Malaysia used to be a British colony. They are also unaware that English is
widely spoken, the country has great infrastructure, fantastic beaches, awesome
hotels, scrumptious food and is multi-racial and multi-cultural.
“Who better to explain all this face-to-face
than a Malaysian who knows the country well?”
LIM WEY WEN
The Star
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