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Tears on the first day…

5 05 2008

The first day and there were tears all around my table. Let me tell
you the story.

We were up before dawn this morning to iron shirts, get breakfast,
prepare presentations, and get our conference room setup. Being the
very tall networker that I am, I greeted people downstairs and
directed them to our room starting at 8:15. All of the clients and
local consultants arrived by 8:45am and I went upstairs to meet my
client and co-consultant.

My client, PT Wintermar, is a shipping services and management company
whose core business is supporting offshore rigs. The company has ~500
employees of which 120 are office staff and 350 are crew for their 45
shipping vessels. I’m meeting with Pak (Mr.) Martin, the crew
Director, and Ibu (Mrs.) Meiky, the HR director for the office. Their
boss has already been through Rep’s program and has asked them to
participate since so much of what they do revolves around having the
right people (read: honest). Both of them were intrigued when the
boss gathered all the managers and directors in a meeting over
Christmas and told them that now the business belonged to God, and
that he was no longer “the boss”, God was.

Kiki and Martin are here to grapple with what that means. The first
day gives a broad overview of the 10 deliverables which we’ll provide
them at the end of the 2 weeks, beginning with an impact assessment
(looking at what they think is important in their business, and how
they’re doing), a 10-P summary of their business, and a first look at
the purpose of their business. You’ll see 10-P a lot in here, it’s a
list of the 10 different parts of their business. The founder of Rep
likes the number 10 (10 consultants, 10 days, 10 visits to a city,
etc…)

The work today was slow-going because the clients are still not quite
sure what this is all about, and how to answer many of these questions
(especially if they’re not overseeing all of the business like my
clients), and so we made good progress, but certainly didn’t finish
anything today. Early on in the day I asked both of them how long they
had been Christians and both of them gave me a somewhat puzzled look
and said since they were babies (Martin said since he was in the
womb). Little did I know what impact this question would have later
in the day.

Tan Hong Lim, my seasoned co-consultant and I took them through
everything that we could, and at one point Tan handed me a piece of
paper reminding me that while both had been Christians since they were
born, perhaps they had never actually chosen to commit their lives to
God… so we asked them. Do you believe that God loves you, and that
you’ll go to heaven when you die. Martin thought about it for a
little bit, and then responded yes. Meiky seemed a little taken aback
by the very straightforward question. She told us that she’d struggled
with the idea, and had never really committed her life to Christ. I
asked her if she would stay afterwards so we could pray with her (and
involve Errol or Rebecca, our leaders), and she agreed. God had other
plans. Tan grabbed the opportunity and said we should pray right
now. So the four of us grabbed hands and began to pray for Meiky.
She began to weep, and weep, and weep. That prayer unlocked something
in her that had been holding her back for a long time. I don’t know
what she was thinking, but I know that she was deeply affected by the
message that she was forgiven for any past wrongs and that she was
loved by God and unique in His eyes.

We prayed with her while she wept for nearly an hour. It was a great
way to start off the venture, remembering that while we’re working to
repurpose businesses, our main goal is to transform the people within
a society. Tomorrow, it’s off to work with Martin and Meiky!

PS - Janet and Alex - tonight we had Korean BBQ for dinner, nothing
like Club Riders though : )

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Categories : Life

Dinner with the locals…

5 05 2008

Sunday morning I woke up and worked out and then went for my first
experience at the breakfast buffet at the hotel next door. You know
how sometimes mom made breakfast for dinner (hooray scrambled eggs and
toast mom!), well the Indonesians do the opposite - dinner for
breakfast! There was rice, fried bean curd, chicken dishes, something
with noodles, something with fried rice, green beans and ground beef
with peppers, etc. it’s all an adventure. Fortunately for the “boo-
lays” (white skins) there are also cereals, fruits, breads,
croissants, eggs, and omelettes. They even have sausage and fried
tomatoes for Scots like me (I’m traveling on my UK passport since my
very well traveled US passport expires in July). There’s also a
killer selection of juices - Guava, Kiwi, Orange, Apple, Papaya, and
my favorite Pineapple.

So on Sunday we gathered as a full group for the first time to go over
our agenda, pray for the venture and our clients, and do a little
praise and worship. Our little laptop sang its heart out and we sang
along. We gathered in the lobby at 3 and all headed to one of the
local leader’s houses, Dr. Soparno. A former client of Rep’s who has
become very involved in supporting its missions here in Indonesia, Dr.
Soparno owns many different businesses and is well respected here in
Jakarta so his involvement with Rep has added a lot of credibility to
our venture. We arrived at his beautiful house and met the local
consultants with whom we’ll be working.

To be completely honest I had no idea what to expect of the local
consultants - old, young, experienced, heartfelt, intelligent…?
What would they be. I was overjoyed to meet them and find out that
they are all of these things. There are several younger consultants
in their late 20’s and early 30’s as well as several more seasoned
consultants in their 40’s and 50’s. All of them have so much to offer
our clients here (sometimes I wonder why we’re needed : ), and they
were overjoyed to have us there. I spoke with many of them talking
about what they do there, and what I do in the states. I now have an
appointment with Harjano, our translator, to explain how businesses
can use Facebook to build their user base : )

Several of the clients joined us for dinner as well (although we
didn’t know which clients would be ours). I didn’t get a chance to
speak with many of them, but I’m interested to see who I get paired
with because all of them seem very interesting. client run-down to
follow tomorrow

I’m hoping to put up a few pictures of the dinner and the house when I
get a chance because both were spectacular. Dr. Soparno’s wife, See
Mun, is an amazing painter and the house is filled with her work.
Tomorrow is the first day of work and I’m headed to bed early to make
sure that I’m ready. Wish me luck!

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Categories : Life

In the meantime….

3 05 2008

So I’m sitting in an apartment building in Jakarta right now, thinking that I should be telling you more about why the podcast isn’t happening for the moment, although I have one more that is hopefully going to go up soon, and let you hear about my trip because hey, it’s kinda cool.

All of the trip details will be posted to Academik.org and to Sevenlamps (on the blogroll).  I’m spending the next 2 weeks here doing some Christian consulting in Jakarta who are interested in involving God in their businesses… sounds crazy right?  That’s what I thought until I did some more investigation from a Christian perspective.  49 out of 51 of Jesus’ miracles in the Bible were in the marketplace.  He chose all of his disciples from the marketplace.  The words for work and ministry are the same in Hebrew (or is it Aramaic?)… The ideas that we currently have of work and ministry being separate are unfounded biblically.

I’m not saying that work should be a time to thump the bible over someone’s head, but I am saying that the workplace gives us a great place to act out our values.  More and more we’re leaving our principles at the door when we live our lives.  My boss, Jeremy Toeman, and I just facilitated a discussion on social responsibility at the Web2.0 Conference and a few of the things I took away from the meeting were:

Social Responsibility has different meanings to different people; it’s some variation of all of them, including volunteering, a triple bottom line, and a commitment to the long-term.

We can’t give up on our principles just because they’re not practical.  Would you stop recycling if you had to drive to a drop-off? Do you leave lights on in your house because you are too rushed to turn them off?  Do you encourage friends to follow principles that are good for the environment?

There are so many ways we can make an impact, but often we feel like we’d be inconveniencing others or embarassing ourselves in doing so.  The truth is that when you stand up for what you believe in, you stand out… and no one ever liked you because you were like everyone else.

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Categories : Uncategorized

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