NOW HIRING: Community Relationships Associate

Are you a fresh-graduate looking for an alternative career in the next big thing?

Youth Asia communicates with thousands of youths across Southeast Asia via YouthSays.com. We serve them. It’s the reason we exist. And we need you to

  • Be the guardian of their happiness
  • Join their conversations on YouthSays, and across Facebook, blogs, and Twitter.
  • Write, blog, tweet, and send out email blasts
  • Keep the team updated with what the community feels
  • Contribute ideas to keep our community feeling fantastic

As the world gets online and on social media, every business needs someone who has this experience and expertise in online communications and community management. As your first job, you gain massive experience in this field, and build a career as a specialist.

When you work with our team, expect

  • To surround yourself with positive, energetic team mates to help you GROW
  • Take on major responsibilities, and grow rapidly with it!
  • Apply your passion and skills into a business you can be proud of

This a full time role based in Petaling Jaya. You’ll need the following to qualify for the role:

  • A good command of written English
  • Experience in blogging, or contributing to forums
  • An interest in communicating with, and helping out all kinds of people

You’ll also need to be ready to fall in love with your career.

Interested? Questions?  Think you’re the right fit?

Contact us at talent@youthasia.com with your CV, and let’s talk.

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“Confirm Friend?”: A layman look at Youth, Media, & Influence

Last year, I presented the original “YOUTH: Media, Influence, and Winning Them Over” (Full transcript) at the Malaysian Media Conference.

In the material, was a simple idea about friendship.

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http://www.adoimagazine.com/mmc2009

Then months passed. And many things changed. What started as a simple idea changed into something much, much more.

But to share this with you, I have to start with what has not changed (and probably will not).

Media & Influence Explained by Grandma

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Meet Ah Mah.

She’s my grandmother. She is 97 years old.

MEDIA: She watches 12 hours of TV everyday. And she doesn’t change the channel during ads. Heck she doesn’t even move much.

INFLUENCE: She doesn’t hang out much with friends, or have them on Facebook. At her age, many of her friends hang out in a better place. Since she’s here, she is mostly influenced by my dad and my maid.

Now meet my mom.

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Here she is holding a melon. Or cucumber. Or something.

MEDIA: She watches about 4 hours of TV a day. She’s on the internet 2 hours a day. She reads the papers.

INFLUENCE: She’s influenced by what she read on the papers, sees on TV, some crazy emails forwarded by her friends, and very occasionally, my dad. She recently began to invade Facebook too, bringing along with her, a circle of line-dancing aunties.

That’s my mom.

Now. I’d like to introduce you a young girl, Rina, from a nearby office. She’s 23 this year.

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MEDIA: Unlike grandma, Rina does NOT watch 12 hours watching TV. Papers? Never liked it. Instead, she spends a lot of time online, chatting, sharing and connecting with 1,000s of ‘friends’. She consumes media created by her social circle. Perhaps that’s why it’s called social media?

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In fact, she’s using different ways to connect with different circles of friends.

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INFLUENCE: Not surprisingly, she’s pretty influenced by her friends, as well as what she consumes online.

Not surprisingly (again), this is true across most people connected to the internet as well.

Measuring the Influence of Friends

A study by Forrester Research and Intelliseek in 2006 revealed that recommendations from consumers leads to consumer trust.

Online banner ads are right at the bottom with text ads on mobile phones.

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A similar research done by the Nielsen Company reinforces this. “Recommendations from people known” and “Consumer Opinions posted online” top the charts in consumer trust. Online video and banner ads were once again way at the bottom with SMS text ads.

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But most of you already know this. Research is just proof that you’re right.

Now we know Rina is influenced by her friends. Big cheese.

Does this apply to local youth in Malaysia?

Let’s see.

  1. In 2008, according to the MCMC: Young Malaysians aged 15 – 34… about 87.7% of them have access to the internet.
  2. The Nielsen study was repeated in Malaysia with identical results.
  3. And day before yesterday… Comscore reports that in Malaysia, social networking penetrates 84.7 % of Malaysians, with social networking visitors visiting a social networking site 22 times a month (almost every day), in the same way my Grandma watches TV every day.

Want to influence a Malaysian youth? Start by being their friend.

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The “Friend Test”: Can a brand be a friend?

I have once proposed an easy 3 question test. This was featured in Marketing Magazine in late 2009, and then on 89.9 Business FM in January. 3 questions which can tell you if a brand is a friend. And it starts in the schoolyard, where you learn what being a friend really means.

Friends understand you

Friends never let you down

Friends contribute to your identity

Think of your really good friends. Is the answer yes to the above? I hope so.

Now think of a really good brand. Is the answer yes to the above?

Ask an Apple fan, or a kid who loves his Nike’s. You’ll hear it for yourself.These brands tend to pass the friend test.

But how about other brands? Are they friends? How can they be a friend?

True friendship: Actions speak louder than words.

Here’s another friend test. You see how they ACT.

Here’s my Facebook profile.

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Now take a closer look.

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On Facebook, you can clearly see the FRIEND’S ZONE. This is where friends hang out. I hear from my friends inside here. Sometimes we talk about brands. Sometimes we rave about them, too. And we do it in the friends zone.

Then beside us, trying to be near us, trying to look like us, be like us, and get our acceptance are the brands who lurk in the STRANGER DANGER ZONE. We turn a blind eye to the stranger danger zone (except when we are seduced by money or sex?).

Brands pay a lot of money to be in the STRANGER DANGER ZONE. Some even go so far as POP UP at you. EYEBLAST you. And DISTRACT you when you’re online. Not cool. That’s not how real friends act.

Real friends (or brands who are real friends) don’t have to. They find themselves in the FRIEND’S ZONE. And in thousands of Facebook profiles. Twitter conversations. IM chats. Email correspondences. They find their way into our minds and hearts.

I discovered this for myself, almost accidentally.

The Unintentional Discovery of Social Advertising

In 2008, a group of young people organized YOUTH’08, a weekend-long youth festival. They had a key presenter and an advertising & promotion budget, and got 21,000 visitors to what became Malaysia’s Largest Youth Festival.

In 2009, I joined this group to organize the festival again. With only a few weeks left, the key presenter couldn’t get involved in time. Without a promotional budget. All we had was the mother of all invention – necessity.

Desperate. Slightly scared. We did what was natural.

We told the youths in our online community YouthSays.com that we needed their help. We’re going to give them what’s left of our budget if they could help us tell their friends. Each young person was given their own unique link they could use across their Facebook, Twitter, IM, Email etc social conversations. We offered only what we could, which was RM0.20 for every friend they invited to register for a pre-event pass.

10,000+ Youths registered before the event. The weekend received 36,720 visitors. And the YOUTH’09 Festival was saved.

A few months later, we had a big challenge, to present a “What change do youths want to see” to a group of leaders at the Youth Engagement Summit 2009. And we needed to collect voiced from across ASEAN. Fast.

Once again, we called upon youths to use their unique link across their Facebook, Twitter, IM, Email etc social conversations, and in return, we would fly some of them down to Kuala Lumpur for the Summit.

The result? 105,205 responses in 6 weeks.

Eventually many brands, agencies, and even non profits asked us to lend them this power. We spent months developing a robust platform, and tested it on 30 social campaigns in 4 countries.

In March 2010, we rolled out 4 commercial campaigns for clients like Jobstreet.com, TM, Nestle, and DiGi.

You can check out the live campaigns in Malaysia here:

http://malaysia.youthsays.com/campaigns

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As of 07-04-2010, we mobilized a total of 13,661 youths to send 201,331 of their friends to these campaigns. And now our aim is to mobilize 1 million youths to send millions more to your campaigns.

After all, if brands are already spending money on the STRANGER DANGER ZONE, getting into the FRIEND’S ZONE shouldn’t be a bad idea.

Because in the end, if we understand media and influence amongst youths, their friends is always a good place to start.

If you want my future forget my past,
If you wanna get with me better make it fast,
Now don’t go wasting my precious time,
Get your act together we could be just fine.

If you wanna be my lover, you gotta get with my friends. Make it last forever friendship never ends.

What do you think about that now you know how I feel, Say you can handle my love are you for real,
I won’t be hasty, I’ll give you a try
If you really bug me then I’ll say goodbye.

~ Spice Girls

About the Author

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Khailee Ng is the Executive Director and Cofounder of Youth Asia, where he organizes over 250,000 youths in Malaysia, Philippines, Indonesia and Vietnam to collaborate with leading businesses on research, social media marketing, and activation.

He has been organizing youth communities since his student days. His community organizing efforts in social issues and underground music has won him local and international media recognition. He completed his degree in business at the top 2% of his class a Valedictorian having studied in Sydney, San Francisco State and UC Berkeley. He also won the Asian HSBC Young Entrepreneur Award in 2006, the first (and only) time the award was given to Malaysians.

He then spent the early years of his career with Mindvalley, where he worked with entrepreneurs and technologists from 16 countries to mobilize online communities in the US and UK.

With Youth Asia, he continues to integrate the understanding of young people with modern technology to truly unleash the power of organized communities with shared goals.

Khailee writes and speaks regularly about mobilizing youths:

  • Since 2008: Regular columnist on Marketing about the youth segment
  • December to January 2010: “Marketing With Youths with Khailee Ng” An 8 episode special on Business FM 89.9
  • 22 July 2009: “Youth: Media and Influence” @ Malaysian Media Conference 2009
  • 10 January 2009: 2nd National Youth Entrepreneur Convention 2009
  • 17 November 2008: MSC Innotech
  • 19 January 2008: 1st National Youth Entrepreneur Convention 2008
  • 18 March 2007: Asia Business Forum (ABF), Kuala Lumpur

You should follow him on Twitter http://twitter.com/khailee

Read about Youth Asia cofounder Joel Neoh.

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YOUTH: Media, Influence, and Winning Them Over (Full script + slides of MMC2009 presentation)

DSC_0258To the organizers and guests of the Malaysian Media Conference 2009, you rock.

We live in exciting times and I’m honored to have been given the chance share some insights about the youth market. I hope this transcript of the presentation is useful to you in sharing your ideas as well.

To those who didn’t attend the presentation, the 6th Malaysian Media Conference (MMC) is an annual alumni of about 250 media pundits, industry specialists and key media decision-makers in the fields of media, marketing, branding and advertising across Malaysia. Amongst the speakers featured are thought leaders in their space from Malaysia, Singapore, India, Australia and Japan. http://www.adoimagazine.com/mmc2009/

I was very humbled by the opportunity to speak there about the one thing I am most passionate about.

Here are the transcript and slides:

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Position Open: Youth Research Manager

This position is currently open.

Responsibilities:
We are looking for a managerial level person who has strong market research technical knowledge (both quantitative and qualitative experience required), yet versatile enough to quickly learn and eventually represent Youth Asia well for our other range of products (Campus event activation, social media marketing and youth festival).

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YES2009 Opening Speech by Khailee Ng

Good morning believers of our generation.

We stand before a world of 6.7 billion of people. Competing. And collaborating for better quality of life.

And in this world, there are 200 million of us in Southeast Asia. Young. Aged 15 to 35. Energetic. Restless, and we are ready for change. A change for our jobs. Our education. Our family. Our personal habits. Our purpose. Our success. Our future.

We’re ready for a change. And we’ve decided to do something about it.

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Vital videos to watch if you want to reconnect with your consumer!

Many of you already seen this, but for those who haven’t, now you are saved.

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What the new generation of young Malaysian marketers really need

I have an issue with young Malaysians. Considering I contribute monthly articles to Marketing magazine about Malaysian youth marketing, I probably have many ‘issues’ with young Malaysians.

But this is a different sort of issue. The kind of issue you would care about if your business relies on marketing to young Malaysians each and every day. Recently, we’ve expanded our operations in a big way, hiring people in the process. The thought arises: How do I hire and train young Malaysians to be top performers at work? How do I turn youths into youth marketing experts?

We’re looking at the next-generation of marketers here. Is it just me, or is there something they need now more than ever?

THE SEARCH FOR TOP MARKETING TALENT

It’s 7pm, and I am in the ‘boom-room’ sofa with my eyes closed, soaking in the sounds of the rain I love so much. I am waiting for shortlisted candidate number 57 to come in. All this is happening after 2 weeks of interviewing and countless CVs.

I hear a knock on the door.

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Vietnamese Youth: Big Head vs. Saigon Cool

This study is republished from IPL.EDU.VN.

Because the link to the original is now broken, I’m  pasting it here to immortalize it, only because I believe there is some power in this kind of youth research findings.

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The profile of young Vietnamese people is shown, based on a survey of their ideas and motivations

A survey of 1,500 young people in six key cities, including Hanoi and HCM City, allows a sketch of Vietnamese young people. Chris Morley, managing director of ACNielsen Vietnam, says the company focused on this population segment because, with 60% of its population under the age of 30, Vietnam is becoming one of the markets with the youngest population in the world. “Fast changes occurring in Vietnam have an impact on the young people’s lifestyles, attitudes and purchasing decisions,” he says.

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LEAKED: Spontaneous email to my clients

Dear clients/ friends/ friendly client hybrid mutants….

I’m writing to you spontaneously on a personal, non-work related matter…..

Tonight (THUR) , two very talented local artists (like serious ones who actually make money) and myself, KHAILEE NG the youth-marketer-who-is-not-an-artist-but-cleverly-disguised-as-a-serious-artist will be given truckloads of second-hand makeup, paint, two semi-naked bodies, a bunch of canvasses, and a local arts curator as the DJ playing tunes “you have never heard before”.

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This is part of a Creative United Movement event where people in the creative industries get wasted and hang out in a non-work setting.

Yes.

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Khailee Ng with 120 marketers in the Kalumpang Jungle

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My unexpected tai-chi presentation really woke up the crowd.

I was invited by the Group marketing department of TM to do

  • A marketing training about connecting with the youth segment
  • The true story of why my team of young punks left the normal life to grow Youth Asia together

I shared bits of our story no one has ever heard, and had a lot of fun just having an honest conversation with them. I admit, dancing, singing, and my now famous grandmother was involved.

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