Chief Change Officer - #285 Steve Monaghan: The Advantage of Age in the Age of AI
Episode Date: April 9, 2025Steve Monaghan flips the script on innovation culture: experience isn’t a relic—it’s a strategic edge. As General Partner at FinMir.ai, Limited Partner at True Global Ventures, Independent Non-...Executive Director at RAK Bank, and former Chief Digital Officer at both AIA and DBS Bank, Steve brings a cross-industry view forged through decades of deep transformation. From aviation to fintech to AI, he shows how age fuels better questions, sharper pattern recognition, and global insight in a world obsessed with novelty. Whether he’s building Asia’s first unicorn or designing systems that could restructure entire economies, Steve makes one thing clear: for Gen Xers tired of being underestimated, age isn’t a liability—it’s leverage.>>Built to Learn, Not to Fit“I wasn’t hired for my experience. I was hired for the questions I knew how to ask.”Steve’s journey—from pilot to pricing guru to product architect—was never about titles. It was about learning faster than the system could teach him.>>From N-O to K-N-O-W“People don’t fear change. They fear not understanding it.”Steve shares his framework for flipping resistance into insight. At DBS, it became a model: learning, venturing, capital. The goal? Turn skeptics into innovators.>>Legacy Is Not a Headline“This isn’t my next startup. It’s my swing-for-the-fences play.”Steve’s current project could restructure economies by eliminating capital inefficiencies in payroll and supply chains. It’s big, bold—and designed to help the people most hurt by broken systems.>>The Advantage of Age in the Age of AI“Older workers know how to ask better questions. That’s the advantage.”Forget the ageist myth. Steve explains why mature employees are becoming AI’s secret weapon—and why experience, not just coding, is the multiplier.>>Mental Health Is Not a Risk Factor—It’s a Design Factor“You can’t build resilient companies without resilient founders.”As an investor, Steve supports founders with integrity, grit, and humility. That includes stepping back when needed—and being asked, not judged, for how you feel._________________________Connect with Us:Host: Vince Chan | Guest: Steve Monaghan --Chief Change Officer--Change Ambitiously. Outgrow Yourself.Open a World of Expansive Human Intelligencefor Transformation Gurus, Black Sheep,Unsung Visionaries & Bold Hearts.10 Million+ All-Time Downloads.Reaching 80+ Countries Daily.Global Top 3% Podcast.Top 10 US Business.Top 1 US Careers.>>>130,000+ are outgrowing. Act Today.<<<
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Hi, everyone.
Welcome to our show, Chief Change Officer.
I'm Vince Chen, your ambitious human host. I'll show it is a modernist community for change progressives
in organizational and human transformation from around the world.
Today, I'll be chatting with Steve Monahan.
I first met Steve back around 2015 or 2016 in Hong Kong when he was the original director
at AIA, one of the leading insurance groups in the Asia Pacific.
He was running a unique health technology accelerator at the time.
Later, I invited him to be a venture coach and judge for the University of Chicago's
first ever global neo-adventure challenge hosted right here in Hong Kong. Since then, he's moved to Tokyo. We've called up a few times, both in Japan
and back in Hong Kong. To me, Steve embodies authenticity. He is consistently successful
and resilient in the face of sackbacks, largely because, I believe, he is always true to himself.
He walks the walk and talks the talk.
A real leader and an incredibly inspiring speaker.
How could I not invite him to the podcast then?
Just how inspiring is he?
Stay tuned for the next 30 minutes and you'll find out.
Good morning, Steve. Good morning, Vince. How are things?
I began my career in Australia, started as a
commercial pilot and started to learn technology as a function of that. So in
many ways much of my career actually was founded then and there. I used to fly at
22 hours a day and I'd run the company during daytime and fly at night and as a
method of getting some sleep I taught myself technology, how to use spreadsheets
when that was a brand new technology and enabled me to get this advantage over my competitors
that enabled me to A, achieve my objective of getting sleep and be able to get quotes
in people's hands immediately that would usually take most companies a few days to go in and
fulfill.
From there, I became more interested in the business side
than the flying side.
And then I started teaching financial institutions
how to use spreadsheets and then started building models
that people would build front ends around and payrolls,
et cetera, and moved into the software industry
and then moved into the hardware industry
with Dell Computer Corporation.
I was on their startup team for Asia Pacific, developed pricing models,
all sorts of things.
So spreadsheeting really gave me my basis in understanding tech.
And then of course, creating hardware started to teach me about the
importance of Moore's law, MacCalf's law and Criter's law, et cetera.
So as I built the business across Asia Pacific, I moved from Australia
into Malaysia Malaysia and then
my final role with Dell was in Korea.
I set up the Asian Product Development Center for Compaq Computer Corporation.
That was also an equally interesting journey, working with some really brilliant people.
My last role with Compaq was to set up the Indian business, which was failing miserably. And so I had a very kind boss that said,
jump on a plane on Monday to India.
You've got to either fix or close the business
and closing is not an option.
So I was given this tremendous opportunity to go
and spend some time in India.
And I went out to market, looked around
and found out that who we thought our competitors were,
everyone said it was impossible that we can compete, but it made no sense because we were
the world's biggest PC company. How could you not be cost efficient? So after looking at
how the market worked, how customers interacted with technology, etc. went back,
financially modeled everything, worked out a better supply chain model to Dell and then recreated the product to fit the financial
model.
And when we did that, we zoomed from number four in the market, non-profitable to number
one in a quarter and stayed that way for the next 10 years.
That really gave me the basis for moving into finance.
I went to Citigroup asking for help to redo my financial supply chain.
They weren't so sure what a financial supply chain was, so I moved to Citigroup.
I developed their first mobile payments patent in 2001, something
that most people use today.
I called it multi-entry bookkeeping.
Today you called the ledger and we used barcode on the phone for mobile payments.
Today you use QR codes.
Then from corporate investment banking in Citig Citi, moved across, opening up a
consumer finance division for OCBC bank, and then moved to Japan where I got to
run a consumer bank, uh, and did a turnaround of that business during the
layman crash.
Then I moved across and became an entrepreneur as I've done a few times
before, actually ended up going to Singapore where I became
the first Chief Innovation Officer at DBS, helped get them on the path to digital transformation,
then moved across where you and I met at AIA, where we run around the AIA accelerator and
created Hong Kong's first unicorn and then moved across after that to being an entrepreneur
again and building the first insurance company underwriting system with AI and
then after that moved across became a digital officer in Saudi Arabia for
RehabBeg and then moved back here to Japan after COVID to establish really a focus on advisory investment.
I've invested in a bunch of startups.
And now starting my next big thing,
which is a swing for the fences play to transform economies.
No more small stuff.
Wow. It's fascinating to hear how your career journey has evolved, particularly how you've
navigated from aviation to technology, software and hardware, then deeper into various sectors
of finance and entrepreneurship across different regions and countries.
What's the core motivation that keeps you moving forward, especially
in taking on vicious projects?
Very simply learning. If I distill it down as I reflect on all of those transitions,
it was really about this insatiable thirst for learning that I have. Not only that, but
being able to work with others and inspire them to get that same thirst for learning that I have. Not only that, but being able to work with others and inspire them to get that same thirst for learning.
So many of the folks that work for me have gone on to be quite wildly successful chief innovation offices of insurance companies, etc.
And they've also transitioned industries. So
one thing that you find that's common across everywhere is business is business and technology
is technology.
There's no such real thing as fintech or health tech or insure tech.
It's all just tech.
And all you've got to do is work out how you use that tool set within your business practice.
So every time and every transition, every country I went to, there was always something
new to learn about that culture, some insight that they had that I didn't.
So I learned as much going into each of those roles as I was able to bring to the table
with that past experience.
Your personal website kicks off with a bold statement, learning the foundation for sustainable,
competitive inventing. He also openly mentioned,
I've succeeded and I've failed always learning.
Could you share with us some candid insights
about times when things didn't go as planned?
Specifically, could you tell us about what you've learned
from these setbacks and failures
in your career and innovation projects?
There's been so many failures.
I'll start at the beginning.
When I joined Dell Computer Corporation, I had gone through a three-hour interview where
the national sales manager had picked apart my resume.
I was joining as a product manager.
And he basically challenged every line in it.
And at the end of the interview, he was so frustrated
because he really didn't want to hire me.
He said, I can hire someone with 10 years experience.
Why should I hire you?
And I said, if I had 10 years experience,
I wouldn't be applying for this job.
About two months later, I'm sitting in the office at 11 p.m. working on this monstrous
multi-spreadsheet model that generates pricing once a month.
And I put my head in my hands and I thought, oh my goodness, I've oversold myself.
I really just didn't think I could do it.
But I went back and I read every single book I could on pricing, accounting, valuation,
everything.
And I went, in a very short period of time,
went back and rebuilt all of those models.
Instead of making them just disparate pass-offs,
I actually integrated them all,
created configurators in Excel,
started being able to do forecasts instantly,
which was something that would take days usually.
And then I started to look at how you would use for technology the way it's really meant
to be used is to arbitrage time.
So how I could actually get a time advantage over my competitors, exactly what I'd done
in aviation.
So for me, and that experiential learning is the most powerful form of learning was
actually became the foundation for everything that followed.
So it's a little like riding a bike.
You can study it all you want,
but until you actually apply it and put it together,
you can get on the bike.
You really don't know.
And so repeatedly, most people would be scared
to do something new.
Absolutely not for me.
I thrive on it because I know I'm gonna learn something
and failure is just part of that journey.
And that's well established in the business world.
I've gone on to fail at many things, but each of those things has
led me to the next big thing. And I think that's the most interesting part of my journey.
You've really lived and worked all over the globe. Singapore, India, Saudi Arabia, Hong
Kong, Silicon Valley, and now Japan. Everywhere you've been, you've been the outsider.
How do you think this foreigner identity has shaped your approach as a leader driving change?
Part of that learning process was always I was the outsider. I was the outsider from a company
perspective, from an industry perspective. I was the outsider from a company perspective, from an industry perspective. I was the outsider from a cultural perspective
because I was from a different country.
I've been an immigrant in most of the countries
since my 20s, right?
So I've lived as an immigrant.
So I've always been the outsider,
which gives me an advantage and a disadvantage.
And the advantage is I have a view,
an external view, I'm not tainted.
I'm learning from the other side of the equation.
It's really insightful to hear how you've managed change
and overcome resistance in your roles.
Could you elaborate on how you've tackled the challenge
of people's natural fear of change in your work?
In particular, when introducing new technologies
or business models, how have you transformed a simple no
into no, knowledge and acceptance?
And what role did learning play in this process?
What I've distilled it down for from is the reason that people
are fearful that they don't want to change,
isn't that they don't want to change.
Actually, I think everyone wants to change.
We love going on holidays to new places.
We love having different meals every day.
But if you're going to place a minefield
in the middle of that journey and place everyone at risk, no one's going to go and make that journey to do that new thing.
And that learning helped me distill into the reason that you get the most
no's is because people don't know.
They don't understand.
They haven't learned.
They don't really see what that new thing is.
My full role has been to turn a no into a K-N-O-W.
So a no to a no and then into now.
And that's really the role of any business person
and any innovation officer or any digital officer,
is to actually go and make that happen.
The way that we made that happen,
and it was particularly successful at DBS,
where my partner in prime I'd worked with in Japan,
and he was the head of talent management for DBS,
a gentleman by the name of Tom Patterson. Tom worked in HR and so we came up with this program
of learning, venturing and capital. So how do you take learning so people are no longer fearful that
they know that they can take advantage of that technology and transformation and transform,
you know, that learning into
venturing, experiential learning, which is the most powerful form of learning, and then
into capital for acceleration.
How do you really start scaling things?
And when you bring that approach to bear, it works from the board to the branch.
You really have that focus on learning, making sure people understand, getting enthusiastic
about change.
And in the technology industry, change is a constant.
We're forever planning to do things that don't, where the tech doesn't even exist
today, but we know we can get there and we know that we can actually have that
growth mindset to go and scale the business off the backs or either price
cutting or taking advantage of cost reduction, et cetera.
That doesn't exist in most industries.
So that was a huge advantage for me coming
from the tech industry into the financial services industry.
The moment that you could start helping people understand
how the tech industry worked and why their margins keep
increasing while everyone else's keep decreasing
was because they're driving depreciation cost as well
as value in the appreciation of features. So they're creating their own markets and then they're driving depreciation costs as well as value in the appreciation of features.
So they're creating their own markets and then they're driving and making huge amounts.
So if you take Google, who was probably five or six years ago, increased the personal storage
from one to two terabyte has been stable for five or six years.
But in reality, the cost per gig has actually plummeted.
On average, it halves every 18 months.
So their margins continue to improve
while your experience of that service
doesn't necessarily change.
Once you understand how tech works
and apply it into new businesses,
and you can give people that understanding
and how they can use it as a multiplier,
such as AIX, then gives that growth mindset
which is very important for everyone in business.
The motto of a podcast is, make your laws of change.
Steve has shared his own laws of change on his website, which I'll link in the show
notes to those interested.
He outlines three core principles. First, that change is always
met with opposition. Second, that implementing change requires a forceful effort. And third,
that the larger the organization, the greater the force needed to enact change.
These principles aren't just relevant to organizational shifts.
They apply to personal transformations too, such as career changes, something many of
us are facing today.
Take the first principle, change is always opposed.
If you are in a stable job with a decent income, why risk what you have for the uncertainty
of change?
The second principle states that change requires force.
Whether it's due to layoffs or needing to relocate, the push and pull factors must be compelling enough
to drive the change. Finally, similar to large organizations needing greater force to change,
the higher you are in your career, the more you have as dick, and the stronger the impetus needed
to push you through a transition.
People generally resist change
unless it's stressed upon them unexpectedly
and without clear reasoning, logic or alternatives,
as many experienced during COVID.
However, if the conditions for change are managed well, involving and consulting those
affected throughout the process, people can and will embrace change.
Don't you agree, Steve?
Absolutely.
It's a very simple formula.
And I think that you're absolutely correct in summarizing it that way.
People don't like being told what to do.
They like to be part of the journey.
They need to understand they need to be brought along on that journey.
And then given the ability to contribute to it and actually enhance upon it.
And I think that's always been the market success of an innovation group or any
innovation officer,
is to have other people take ownership of those ideas and be humble enough to let go and appreciate
that other people can actually take it to a level that you might not see because you're relying on their expertise.
And I think that's the greatest compliment you can place with any employee or colleague,
is to really try and bring out the best of both
sides so you're actually getting the sum of all versus I'm going my way and take it
or whether you like it or not.
And that's just completely destructive.
This is just game theory 101.
So speaking of innovation and change and how it's sometimes resisted or embraced.
You and I previously discussed an interesting case involving a bank in the Philippines.
You mentioned that a particular segment of the staff there, the more mature, often overlooked
group, actually contributed significantly to innovation efforts after
you engaged with them.
I wanted to bring this up because there's a common belief in the tech world that older
employees might not be as tech savvy as their younger counterparts, which can lead to ageism in the workplace.
From your experience, can you share
how you've seen mature employees contribute to innovation?
And what are your thoughts on overcoming this legacy mindset?
This sometimes holds back valuable talent?
Sure. Actually, I'll start back earlier.
I think when Steve Jobs introduced the iPhone,
that he actually moved technology from something that only the young could do,
or that the 20-30-year-olds could do,
and made technology so simple to use that it actually engaged from three-year-old
kids or three-month-old kids that could swipe a screen all the way through to grandparents
that would previously not touch a device.
And if you look at it in the same context now with what we're seeing with generative
AI, it's now making technology so much more accessible to people that would have felt
somewhat alienated by technology in the past.
So the bank that you refer to in the Philippines, one of the observations that
I shared when I was working with their leadership team was that this is the
first generation of technology where actually older people have an advantage
because they know how to ask better questions.
And I think that's a very profound point because a lot of the younger kids may actually be somewhat disadvantaged because they don't know
the right questions to ask. At this stage of generative AI, I think that makes
quite a significant difference as we know with what we see in prompt
engineering etc. Older people do have an advantage.
Why do you think the younger people don't know how to ask relevant or
right questions as opposed to the older members of the team? In this particular
instance, the average tenure of someone in that leadership team was ranging, I
think, between 27 to 40 years. And they'd worked across every element of the business.
So being able to ask the right questions.
If you think of technology as not an individual,
you know, light bulb switch, it's more a network.
So when you understand the network,
you're in a better position to actually understand
the implications and to craft your question
in a way that takes into account
some of the constraints of the network
or some of the opportunities or accelerates of the network. So that experience is pretty hard to come
by. It's why if you look at most AI, what you want to do is take the experience and expertise
and encode it. And this is the perfect nexus of that. You're getting people that would,
when they retired in the past,
would retire with all their knowledge.
Now we've got this enormous ability to encode that knowledge
and take advantage of it and then pass it down.
Younger kids tend to ask simpler questions.
They're still learning the basics and the ropes
and trying to understand.
They've generally got very limited exposure
in terms of geographic
exposure or business division exposure. Because I think the one other thing I've appreciated
as a Gold Holder is humans can't scale. We tend to specialize. We're an accountant or we're a
marketing person or we're a finance person. And very few are able to really succeed in multiple spheres
of business.
But technology is horizontal.
Technology goes across all of those silos.
So one of my favorite sayings is the value lies between the silos, not necessarily in
the silos.
And that's why the older people definitely have an advantage because they're not constrained
in getting those questions into an AI, which can then draw upon that reservoir
of knowledge to actually return more valuable responses.
They really bring a hands-on perspective to the table.
These employees have been in the trenches,
experiencing the pain points of the workflows long
before technology was introduced.
They've lived through the problems, which means they are uniquely positioned to see
where technology can solve issues or where processes might actually benefit from a more
human touch. This blend of human insight and technology leads to a more
stimulus integration. What I would call a true artificial intelligence where it's
not just tech but a smart combination of machine and human working together.
Yeah, absolutely.
These are the core things that you try to get across
in any sort of digital transformation project.
You wanna get some sort of level of emotional engagement,
right, so that's the whole experience side of the equation.
Then you wanna make things very simple for your customers
and simple or simplicity is cognitive.
One plus one equals, we all know the answer.
So the quicker you can get people to make decisions by giving them the right
information, then that's obviously an advantage.
And then the last part is effort, minimum type swipes and swipes to actually
execute your decision.
I refer to that as ESE or easy, right?
Experience simplicity and ease.
And they're the three objectives that in
any digital transformation that you set as your primary objectives for the customer. That ability
to interact with emotion, simplicity and ease. AI is always a big topic. Let's switch gear to talk
about your next big thing. You've mentioned to me that you're working on something
really, really interesting and meaningful.
Groundbreaking, if I can use this word.
Tell us more.
I've been lucky to work for some of the largest corporations
in the world and transform them digitally.
Now I'm trying to focus on economic transformation.
I think one of the things as you look
around new generations of technology is that a lot
of people forget that the constraints which they take for granted no longer exist.
So that's the case today with economics and finance.
We have people that are paid in Asia usually every month, right?
And if you actually look at the constraint of that or the belief
that's just the way it is, it's actually quite wrong.
If you consider that an employee joins a company and doesn't get paid for 30 days
means that they're essentially a creditor to the company for that 30 days.
And what's happening is while they're giving their cashflow to the company
to take advantage of, they're actually usually burdened by much higher cost debt.
So if you look at that, you're taking very high cost debt
to substitute for low cost debt,
which results in direct capital destruction,
both at a company and economic level.
And if you look at it,
if you're able to actually optimize that across companies
and supply chains and economies,
we feel that you should be able to increase GDP by about 20%.
So it's a very big play and it relies on knowledge of legislation, finance, supply chains,
a whole range of different factors and looking for those inefficiencies between each of the silos.
And so that's where I'm really focused on now and been working here, interacting with
governments and regulators and corporations, et cetera. And the new year has started well,
so we'll see if I can bring it to take off. But as with everything in my career, it's a big
amount to climb. And this time it has such incredible social impact. If you look at this
capital inefficiency, it actually hurts the poorest in our poorest employees
and the poorest in our communities the hardest because they pay the most for alternative debt
while they fund their employers cashflow.
This just makes no sense to me in a modern and real-time world.
This is an initiative that I've undertaken with a small team.
So I'm just part of the team that's going and developing platform, etc. to go and kickstart it.
We've been spending a lot of time talking with banks and trying to educate them,
and with regulators and trying to educate them, and with politicians, etc.
So I sit there as part on the execution,
part of the investor behind it.
We'll be going for capital at some point.
This is my legacy project.
This is the one that I really want to happen
because it has such an enormous social impact.
That sounds exciting.
I can't wait to see the progress.
It's bound to have a huge and tremendous
economic and social impact.
When you're ready, let me know and I'll send in my resume, okay?
Now you mentioned you are deeply involved in both executing and investing in this project. This brings me to another critical issue
many entrepreneurs face,
mental wellness.
Could you share your observations or experiences
with your investors
on how they manage their mental wellness?
How do you support them
through the ups and downs?
Yeah, absolutely. When I look at investing in entrepreneurs, I usually look for humility, grit and integrity.
And if you can bring those magical things together, if you're not humble, you can't learn.
If you don't have grit, you won't see through the hard times.
And if you don't have integrity, there's nothing to build on.
So if you try and take those three things and look at it, I get to work with a range
of quite tremendous entrepreneurs.
And every single company that I've invested in, either myself or I was an LP in a global
fund, every single company comes across a point of hardship.
And it's incredibly mentally taxing on some of the founders.
And I've had and currently have a couple of founders that I've worked with and invested in
that are actually having quite significant mental health issues. One has completely stepped away
from the business at the moment and for the right reasons. And I'm completely supportive of that.
And I think that if we look to who we are as human beings,
I often take a view, which most VCs, I think, would disagree with.
But I actually think the human being is far more important than money.
I think that you want to keep these brilliant folks operating,
but you don't want to push them over the edge.
And I think there's so much pressure in just being an entrepreneur that most
folks from the outside don't understand it.
Anything can go wrong.
I had one company recently that had signed agreements and then all of a
sudden at the 11th hour, the financial institution reneged on them and all done.
Right. So then now they're facing near bankruptcy. the financial institution reneged on them and all done, right?
So then now they're facing near bankruptcy.
Hopefully they'll fight their way through and they're certainly closing some
pretty big accounts at the moment.
So there's hope, but you can't imagine the toll when you've invested so much of
your life into a startup.
And in one case that I went through about a year ago, my founder had spent seven years building it up only to have, he had an award-winning product in the health tech
field, very long, long tail to get there.
Had great reviews from some of the best institutions on the planet, but he wasn't yet profitable.
And when funding dried up, his company evaporated.
The mental toll was just immense because you're not just responsible for yourself as a founder, you're responsible
for everyone that works for you. And I think that a lot of people underestimate just how
onerous that responsibility is. The fact that I have have founders that have mental health
issues to show their focus and their feeling is behind that humanity. And I think that's
a great thing.
Some investors might be less understanding when it comes to situations like this,
but you seem more open and empathetic.
Perhaps that's because of your diverse experiences in different roles and capacities.
experiences in different roles and capacities. There's a common notion among entrepreneurs that discussing mental health issues openly
with investors, co-founders, or even team members might shake their confidence in your
leadership or influence their investment decisions. From your diverse perspective,
as an entrepreneur,
as an investor,
as an innovator in big corporations,
how do you handle this?
How do you address the stigma
or reservations that some might have about mental health
in a high-pressure environment of startups?
I think it's very common.
My response to folks that have that issue is saying,
it's very simply you have the wrong investors.
I think that if you deny people the ability to share,
you're actually being part of the problem
and actually more likely to lead to the failure of your investment
than if you actually have a tolerance or more importantly, an alertness to what's going on.
When you see something going wrong in the business, the first thing I ask is always,
how are you feeling? And I've had many entrepreneurs that have run,
these are quite well-funded startups, that come back and say that you're the only person
that's asked that question. And if they don't have that outlet, then the chance of that mental health issue, either
spiking or becoming quite serious, actually increases.
Everyone knows that founders often suicide.
I don't want any of my founders to suicide at all.
That would be the worst possible outcome for the company as an investor and for me as an
individual.
And I think that we need to be far more open to actually being empathetic.
If you look at it, going back to ESE, it's one of the core principles of everything to
do with customer interaction and with founder interaction.
That emotional quotient is the foundation of everything that we do in life.
If you look at, there was a book written by Pukko Raban
many years ago, which I took to heart, is Why People Buy.
And they make decisions with emotion, justify with logic
and take action when it's easy.
ESE.
This is what drives trade and economies, et cetera.
And the motor important, at the end of the day,
this is all about people and people map.
There's a really important point to emphasize. Mental health issues are not exclusive to entrepreneurs.
They affect anyone, from entrepreneurs to employees to CEOs.
I've personally faced mental health challenges three times myself with two of those occurring
during my time in corporate roles.
It's something many of us might encounter, regardless of our position.
I asked one of my staff to take leave because it was very obvious that they were having
mental health issues.
And that leave made a world of difference and that person went on to become very successful. And I won't narrow it any further,
but was very successful in the career that followed.
And that was not that person stayed working with me for quite some period of
time before they left and found a bigger and better role.
But if you don't give people that opportunity to get back in balance, then I think that everyone loses.
Absolutely. Before we web up this conversation on mental health,
in particular concerning entrepreneurs,
what advice would you give to them, or even to those
who want to support other entrepreneurs with their mental wellness?
What are some possible solutions you see? Perhaps some solutions might be tech-driven.
What others could be more about creating supportive communities or programs?
How can we help entrepreneurs not just move forward,
but also regain their confidence to become more resilient,
allowing them to fully leverage the brilliance, confidence, resilience, and brilliance,
a perfect formula for entrepreneurs?
I think the major thing for me is community, and that could be private or public, but I think having someone that you can speak to,
someone who's always open and non-judgmental, is really the first piece. And if you have that and you're willing, it's a two-way street, right?
You've got to find the people that can be supportive for you.
And equally, you've got to be open to be real with them.
And if you're prepared to make that commitment
and you've found the right people to support you,
then I think a lot of these problems can be avoided.
Steve, earlier in our conversation,
you highlighted the critical role of learning in your career
transitions and how it's been a sustainable advantage for you.
Reflecting on your passion for learning through reading, particularly on complex topics such
as AI, could you share how you believe this habit of deep, focused reading has impacted your
mental wellness?
Additionally, do you think there are specific ways that engaging with such intellectually
stimulating materials can help others manage the mental health?
I'm a bit of a nerds.
I tend to follow topics that are interesting.
So one of, or interesting to me, or the filler gap in my knowledge, if I look at
who's inspired me in the world of finance, it's got to be Demidarin.
When looking at things like, when I wanted to learn how to be a better marketer I read a copywriting book by William Strunk that said that a sentence could should contain unnecessary words in the way that the engine has no
unnecessary parts. But there are many books that I've loved reading but
recently on the topic of AI, Mustafa Suleiman, who was the
co-founder of DeepMind, wrote a very interesting book, which was nothing particularly new, but
very well researched and very well put through in a very coherent manner to actually explain some of
the risks and opportunities of what's happening with AI.
And I think that too few people actually
understand the ramifications of the directions
that we're headed.
And as an example, I wrote an article for Forbes,
I think in 2016, talking about AI and just saying
that we weren't ready.
And Forbes refused to publish it because it wasn't positive.
They seemed to have been positive on lots of other things that haven't worked out very
well.
But I think realistically, Suleiman paints a very good picture to how you must have a
very balanced view of AI.
As an example, the ability for people to create bioweapons is now going to the hope.
The AI gives you this enormous compute capability and the
ability to do things in ways that weren't possible before. And so the risks around that are growing.
Now we've dealt with very similar risks in the past as we've evolved with technology,
but now we're entering a new sphere and a new age where bioterrorism or the dark side of what happens with AI can be just as bad
as the good side of AI.
With almost every week we read about new types of cancers being addressed, et cetera.
In the background behind all of these medical developments that we see, it's because of
people in a very smart way scaling AI and understanding permutations of everything. So Solomon gives a very good example
of a company that was looking at chemical compounds and had set the gain function for toxicity to be
very little to be zero, right? To find what are the best medicines that you can actually ingest
that actually achieve curative results. And then as an experiment, they turned the function from
zero to one and looked at the
most toxic outcomes and actually invented new compounds that didn't exist that were more toxic
than VX gas. So I really encourage people to go and have a very balanced reading portfolio. One of
the books that I found most intellectually curious lately is Clement's book. That's a wrap. Thank you so much, Steve. I'll surely get you back here very soon,
as long as you have time.
My pleasure, Vince. Thanks for having me.
Let's take a moment to recap the key insights from our conversation with Steve.
Here are 8 crucial takeaways.
Here are 8 crucial takeaways. 1.
Learning is the key to unlocking transformation, not just for organizations, but also for personal
career development.
2.
Embracing learning means embracing failure. The real value lies in what we learn from
those failures.
Having an outsider's perspective can be incredibly valuable, offering a fresh, untainted view
and adding a new dimension to problem solving.
Number four, change is always met with resistance.
The trick to overcoming this opposition is by transforming a no-n-o into a no-k-N-O-W, knowledge, helping people understand the why and how of change.
Number five, empower people to own the change process.
This approach helps eliminate their fear and can drive change more effectively and extensively.
Number six, mature and experienced employees bring significant advantages
in the era of AI. Their first-hand experience with workflow pain points
before technology intervention places them in a unique position
to integrate technology seamlessly and enhance processes with a human touch.
Number seven, pay attention to mental wellness, whether it's for employees or entrepreneurs. Everyone can be affected by mental health
challenges in one way or another.
Number eight, maintain a balanced reading portfolio. It's essential for staying informed,
curious and effective in continuous learning.
Thank you so much for joining us today.
If you like what you heard, don't forget, subscribe to our show,
leave us top rated reviews, check out our website,
and follow me on social media. I'm Vince Chen, your ambitious human host.
Until next time, take care.