The Philippine Star

TESSIE SY COSON ON HER BEST MENTOR, WORST CRISES, ANTI-STRESS SECRET

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every six months. We all need to always be on our toes, be innovative, creative and use technologi­es.”

8 “At BDO, in assessing possible borrowers, we are always looking at the businesses and for good cash flows, also certain securities.”

9 “Artificial Intelligen­ce or AI is the big buzz word nowadays, but we see it as a tool, not to replace humans at work. We need to study and assess AI. (If) it is too fast, developmen­ts in that field, some might make mistakes and it might be costly.”

10 On the country’s biggest bank BDO Unibank, Inc.: “It started as a mistake. I thought I just invested in some shares… It was a mistake that we had to make good. We struggled for two and a half years. My father just told me to persevere.”

11 On BDO focusing on the Philippine­s, instead of expanding to ASEAN and Asia: “We are focused in the Philippine­s and in serving the country’s needs. More than 50 percent of people here in the Philippine­s are still unbanked. As long as our economy continues to grow, the small deposits will grow, our service to them is investment in the future.”

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On hiring good and the right people: “We need to be patient, to get people to join your team and (learn) how to be aligned with you. We usually look for people aligned with our vision. We need to learn how to handle people. It’s like Anvil Business Club, like an associatio­n, you need to make the people like to be together. One cannot be too liberal and too democratic.”

13 On the toughest crises her family has faced and how she handled those: “In every crisis, it is important to cope and learn. In handling SM Megamall, there were some problems there before… In the merger of the banks (BDO and Equitable Bank), I had to suffer literally physical headaches for two and a half years... Another big crisis was the past pandemic. Our father died in 2019. The global pandemic hit 2020 to 2022, I was then always worried if Dad’s most beloved retail business would fail during my management… We really went to work during that crisis. One month after, we got rid of a lot of inventorie­s and did a lot of things. After the pandemic… it is a very different world now.”

14 On the Sy family attracting worldfamou­s retail brands to do business here: “It took us six years to bring Watsons here in the Philippine­s. Uniqlo was faster, because the owner likes the Philippine market. It took us 10 years with Ikea, but that is just leasing only. Our people make it attractive for them (local and internatio­nal brands).”

15 On Henry Sy asking her to handle the first SM Department Store: “I was 22 when my father asked me handle SM in Echague, Manila, that was 5,000 square meters. I thought then that I could handle it. I learned from my executives. Then I was asked to handle SM Makati, which was 22,000 square meters. Some people at that time even asked us to pay them (so they’d do business there), I had to learn and had to eat some humble pie in those early days.”

16 On working with good people, whether family members or profession­al executives: “In everything, you cannot do things alone.”

17 When a young Anvil entreprene­ur asked about the concept of “work life balance,” she said: “I think there’s no work-life balance, if you really want to go far… I read that in Samsung, they’re asking people there now to work six days a week.”

18 On retaining good people: “Some people of the Gen Z generation, they tend to come and go easily. Sometimes it is in the branding of the company, if the firm is a forward-looking company. Not everything is about money and benefits, lots of people want exciting things to do.”

19 When a young entreprene­ur candidly asked how to cope if government or politician­s lack real support for struggling businesses in these uncertain times, or even sometimes add problems to the economic environmen­t: “Do not depend on what government can do for you, but just work hard and think of what you and your businesses can do for the good of the country. I’d like to quote John F. Kennedy who once said: ‘Ask not what your country can do for you, ask what you can do for your country.’”

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Thanks for your feedback! Email willsoonfl­ourish@ gmail.com or follow Wilson Lee Flores on Instagram, Twitter, Facebook and YouTube. Also, follow me on Tiktok at @iamwilsonl­eeflores.

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