Goodbye 2014 and Hello 2015!

Happy New Years to all and have a good holiday!

Its time to look back on what 2014 has brought and head toward a successful 2015. Thank you to all my friends and family who stood by me in the good and bad times.

Its also time to announce the closure of a chapter and the start of a new one; I will be moving back to California at the end of January. Its been a fun two and half years in Hong Kong but now is the right time. When you live out on your own and have been through so many highs and lows, it makes you think what are the most important things in life… and like the old story about the professor teaching his students what life is about and made popular on the internet, its time to focus on my golf balls. If you haven’t read the story, its worth a read here.

Its high time that I look toward getting my golf balls closer to my life and thus embark on another new journey, this time, at home close to where my family is.

Like the story, I too, once worried about the little things; the sands. My life became filled with worries, emotional rollercoasters and people who you shouldn’t have in your life. Experience and enduring pain helps you get pass that and learn from your mistakes… and made a better person. I don’t want to get too philosophical in this post but I advise people to overlook the small stuff and take care of the more important big stuff: friends, family, your health and following your dream.

My dream was always to do something out of the ordinary, to live on my own in a different country and experience all kinds of “moments” that can be cherished, as you grow older. I was never into having tons of material things, life was more about a journey to see and feel. As an ENFP, I viewed life as a big puzzle that you need to figure out how to put together, piece-by-piece. Along the way, I gained lifelong friends, valuable experience, self-discovery and self-reliance. I had broken hearts, broke some, learned to cook, sold a company, traveled to bunch of countries, rekindle old friendships, witness the growth of others, mentored young entrepreneurs and fell in love with the world again.

2015, I hope you will be as a-ma-zing as 2014 has been.

See you next year.
JM

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A Post Dedicated to Paul Orlando

With all the news about my startup and getting inquiries left and right about how we did it, people don’t realized we never made it alone. Today, I would like to take a post to solely say Thank You to our mentor and friend Paul Orlando. Paul is one of the key person which contributed to our exit today because without him, there would be no Taxiwise.

We originally came to Hong Kong in the summer of 2012 to attend Paul Orlando’s Startups Unplugged Bootcamp, a three-month program to help young entrepreneurs gain insight knowledge on how to go about starting their first company. We learned so much in those three months without the distraction of home and family and were suppose to take that learning back with us to Silicon Valley.

The last week of the program, before we all had to say goodbye, Paul drops us a news; “Guys ill be starting AcceleratorHK with Steve Forte. You guys should join.” And so we applied with a new idea, later to be called Taxiwise, and did a little market research to throw on our application form and a funny intro video.

Paul was even our model in our funny cartoon video and our first customer testimonial to promote our early day services.

What we learned from Paul was something we will never trade. The experience we had working with him made us who we are today.

Paul has a new book out called Startup Sacrilege for the Underdog Entrepreneur which can be bought here.

Paul is back in California with his family and thank you again for everything. Taxiwise is as much as your baby as ours.

– Jean-Marc

 

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Seeing People Change

Lately, a single thought has been lingering in my mind:  “Are people changing that much that I haven’t noticed? I feel like I’ve stayed the same as I always have been.”

Last month, I took a trip to Taipei to visit my friend Wei Ni. I haven’t seen him for 3 years when he moved back to Taipei from San Jose, California due to his dad’s deteriorating health. So I figured since I have a bunch of free time, it would be nice to get together since I live in Hong Kong and the flight is only 1.5 hours away.

When I saw him, already I had the impression he was a different person, never mind the looks (I guess staying off American food reeaaaallllly slims you down) but his personality too.

I remembered back in the days when we would go out for drinks, oyster farms (even though i hate oysters), bars, Karaoke, camping etc… He was always there to encourage me to drink up or more. This time though… I was the only encouraging him. Yes life circumstances are different; his dad passed away and he took over his dad’s dental clinic. He seems settle down with a nice girlfriend and living a rather simple and quiet life.

Not that there is anything wrong with that, I’m glad he is happy and found someone to be happy with… its just not the Wei Ni that i remembered… this is Calm Wei Ni and the whole time, I was both happy and thought “Where is the Crazy Wei Ni?”

Change is inevitable as was quoted in the Matrix. I realized that and as I see everyone around me changing, getting married, moving on to other countries, starting a family or opening a new business… I look back at myself and think… “What has changed in me?”

C.S. Lewis once wrote “It may be hard for an egg to turn into a bird: it would be a jolly sight harder for it to learn to fly while remaining an egg. We are like eggs at present. And you cannot go on indefinitely being just an ordinary, decent egg. We must be hatched or go bad.”

It seems to me that change is just another natural part of life… part of me doesn’t want to change yet and is comfortable living as I am. Yet I’ve come to realized… I too have changed. Certainly the experiences of living in Hong Kong couple with doing a startup here and affected me. I am more independent, can survive in a foreign place and learned so much about business that it all felt like a long college abroad trip.

It will be interesting to look back years from now, the type of person I was (probably make fun of myself In the process).

 

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