Tuesday, May 31, 2011

Working 9-5? Yeah, Right!

The Skyline from Tsim Sha Tsui- whoever says that modern
skyscrapers are not beautiful has clearly never been to HK



I cannot believe how much I have to post already- I mean it has only been a few days and it already feels as if I have been here for months. I guess I will just pick up where I left off from the last post.
Ladies Market Mong Kok










Kornhill Apartments
Recreation space on top of one floor
We moved into our apartments in Quarry Bay which is an area of Hong Kong considered the "suburbs". Of course, this suburban area warrants a re-definition of conventional white-picket fence, spread out suburbs I am used to. Rather than a concrete jungle with tons of businesses, it is a concrete jungle of homogeneous skyscraper apartments connected by the vast mazes of walkways which allow the people to walk from community to community without ever stepping a foot outside. We somehow have managed to get lost multiple times, even with a map. There are jungle gyms and play structures, random garden areas/ recreation areas in between the cracks of the different skyscrapers where you literally could hop onto your neighbors balcony in an adjacent apartment structure because as I have mentioned before, the buildings are built in a way that defies personal space.

Quality
Apartments
looking towards the water from
apartments
The first night at the apartments we explored our apartment building and discovered the vast city of supermalls around our apartments. Let me just preface my description of our experience in these malls by saying JUSCO makes Walmart look like a small kitchen cupboard. As we traveled up and down the around 6 flights of escalators, I found it extremely difficult to navigate what section we were in and where we were going as the majority of the signs were in Cantonese and no one spoke english. We finally found the supermarket at the bottom floor where we uncovered the delicious bakery that sells delicacies such as cream cheese filled mochi pancakes (YUM!!!), pork buns and amazing breads-- I realized later what makes all of the hong kong bakery items, even plain bread so delicious is their "extra" ingredients (i.e. butter and cream). JUSCO was just one of around 100 stores or more just in our surrounding area. I still have so much more to discover in our small area but have found a starbucks which I will no longer go to as I refuse to pay $3 USD for a small cup of coffee.. have eaten chicken served with the head at a restaurant there, found the H&M, and unveiled the Food Republic. I am sure that this food court is not "quality" Hong Kong food but it was delicious to me! I got sweet and sour soup with vegetable dumplings (still have pork in them because vegetarian is unheard of here) and noodles. All for the equivalent of under $4 USD. Pizza huts here are nice sit-down restaurants and of high-quality, no one cooks because there is not enough space.

View of Central
Now to the other part of my experience here: Interning at Konew International Group. Unlike the others I am traveling with who have to be at work by 9am, I am able to have a leisurly ride on the MTR around 10:15am without the men with sticks trying to fit people into the MTR during rush hour. My hours are set for 10:30am to 6:30pm, but I have been told that I have freedom to really do whatever I want because they really would like me to experience Hong Kong and understand the culture. Upon arrival, the HR director who I have been in close contact gave me the warmest welcome and was so greatful to have me at Konew Financial Express, Ltd. The first part of the morning I spent reading about the company and then reading the vast amount of travel brochures she had prepared for me. I learned that Konew International Group is a family company started by Mr and Mrs. Lee, parents of USC Alum and CEO Steven Lee who I had the opportunity to meet and talk to on two occasions just the first day. He was very warm and welcoming and let me know that he plans on taking me and some of my co-workers to a very nice sushi restaurant tomorrow! (thurs).

From Left- Jeffrey, Charlie,
Elaine, Candice, Esther,
Grace
My lovely workplace
Konew Financial Express, Ltd is a growing property loan and property development company that is the main branch of Konew International Group with 80 people and growing. For the next 2 months, I will be working a few floors up from the main office in a new branch called Maxcolm Credit. It is a very new branch that is an extension KFE by offering personal loan services that may not only be property loans. I am VERY greatful to be working up in this office as I am working with 6 others-- all very young, very energetic, and mostly customer service and customer relations assistants. There is one token boy working up here as shown in the picture and upon my first introduction with them, I learned that he plays field hockey here in hong kong (very uncommon), soccer, and runs marathons.  The girls are obsessed with shopping and talking, sometimes I catch one of them online shopping. The atmosphere is very social (although most of the time they speak cantonese and if something happens they clap and cheer and then explain what is going on), the constant chatter is very confusing sometimes but my only hope is that I pick up some of the language soon!

I have just finished my first project- developing a Balanced Scorecard system for Maxcolm Credit as a well-rounded way for them to evaluate themselves, for the customers to evaluate them, and for their supervisors to evaluate them. It utilized more of the business side of my education rather than the finance side, which I had expected but it should be interesting to see what other projects I am assigned to.

View from the ferry after work
Dead serious. Not a postcard.
As for the area around my work, Central is the hub of finance and business and offers many upscale luxuries such as the Louise Vuitton right across the street from my office, and the swanky restaurants in the IFC mall. My co-workers, however, have been determined to show me around everywhere and pointed out the alleyways and restaurants to eat at that are inexpensive and truly hong kong style. The first day the HR director, Averil, took me to the most popular hong kong fast food called Cafe de Coral where I had eggs with meat and rice, and the second day my co-workers ordered in food that consisted of rice, soup, tofu, chicken wings, and pork with vegetables, all for $3 USD. They then continued to show me what I will now forever think of as the Hong Kong golden food. The Hong Kong egg tart is TO DIE FOR. One of my co-workers brought me one fresh out of the oven from the best store around and I must say, it restored the legitimacy of the hong kong food delicacies after my chicken head the other night.

LIGHT SHOW {:O!
Less busy times on the street.
Last night we watched the incredible light show between all of the skyscrapers of hong kong island and Kowloon which runs for 15 minutes starting at 8pm, after taking a ferry across the harbor and seeing the incredible skyline unlike I have ever seen before. With so much to do and see and explore, my internship for the next two months is not going to be the traditional 9-5, tedious task internship. It will be more like 17-18 hr days full of hard work to make the most of my experience in this city that really and truly never sleeps-- and neither will I! My excitement overpowers any exhaustion I may feel-- tonight my co-workers are compiling a list of what us USC kids should do and see. Until next time....

Saturday, May 28, 2011

First Impressions: No place for the weak of heart

After missing our connecting flight, we had a nice sign
just for us to guide our way. Such service.
After a 15 hour plane flight fun-filled with the man behind me who clearly did not understand the meaning of "touch-screen" entertainment on the back of my headrest causing my insomnia, a missed connection flight in Taipei, and an hour long quest for how to get out of the Hong Kong airport to find a taxi, I was overjoyed to have arrived in Hong Kong where I will be spending the next two months interning at Konew Financial Express, Ltd. and discovering the wonders of a part of the world completely foreign to me.

I was so relieved to have made it that my half-conscious sleep deprived brain could not comprehend the midget sized room I would be staying in before checking into the seemingly grandiose  apartments the next day. Hong Kong King's hotel was needless to say not fit for a king, unless you are lord farquad and like sleeping on concrete. Though my first impression of Hong Kong hospitality was thwarted slightly, I was amazed by the architecture of this truly skyscraper kingdom. The buildings are so close together that the allyways are just barely big enough for one person to squeeze through. As we wandered through Wan Chai, the area where our hotel was located, I could not believe the number of little shops selling everything from fresh pig thighs, i-phones, herbal medicine to fresh fruit and puppys/kittens. While wandering we were almost run over multiple times as the value of life for a pedestrian does not out rank the rush of taxi drivers and cars alike (no I am not stupid and know when to cross the street but it is hard to get used to looking right and then left rather than the other way around).

Even the bar's are backwards here!
After getting our cell-phones (my number : +852 9647-7846) we bought our octupus cards to be able to start getting acquainted with the amazing MTR system or subway system in Hong Kong. It is absolutely incredible. There is little to no lag-time in between trains and the trains are nothing like the SF BART system- no random puke spots and nasty smells, although on our way back from Tsim Sha Tsai on Kowloon we came across trains almost impossible to fit into with the amount of people boarding- another personally shocking detail: the amount of people on the streets outstrips that of anywhere I have seen in New York or LA.

The cleanliness of the MTR, despite the vast amount of people is somewhat a microcosm of the city itself. I have never seen a city so picturesquely placed against the backdrop of lush green hillsides and mountains and although the air is a little smoggy, the streets themselves are astonishingly clean.

The peninsula hotel
My favorite parts of the first night in Wan Chai, Hong Kong-- missing the light show at Felix and watching a movie being filmed  while touring the crazy party streets of Lan Kwai Fong (LKF) with my sister's buddy Drew and his girlfriend. After having a not-so-special dinner at Peking Garden which had been recommended by one of my tour books, we headed over to Felix, a swanky bar at the top of the Peninsula hotel but it was not as stunning as we hoped for without the light show. The view of Hong Kong harbor was awesome, though.




LKF was absolutely crazy. I have never seen so many bars and clubs in one area in my whole life, not to mention the number of party-goers. It was as if the USC row had gone wild and international times 1,000 people. I was still in a daze from my lack of sleep but the intense energy kept me awake long enough to see a Hong Kong celeb and a truck ghost ridden by 20 people all at once. Cannot wait to explore tomorrow with the rest of our group... loving every minute through the exhaustion!