Thriving in the Age of Disruption

From Engineer to Incubation and Startup Ecosystem Builder: Jen VuHuong (Vietnam)

April 05, 2023 Dr. Ramesh Ramachandra & Ms. Jen Vu Huong Season 1 Episode 37
Thriving in the Age of Disruption
From Engineer to Incubation and Startup Ecosystem Builder: Jen VuHuong (Vietnam)
Show Notes Transcript

Opening the heart and clearing the mind can open one up to experiencing life and self differently. 

This is the story of a tenacious Vietnamese woman who rose above her internal stories as 'that weird kid' to embark on a journey to pursue her passions, creating in the process, her personal brand and success story.

Today, Ms. Jen VuHuong is an innovation and startup ecosystem builder, coach, trainer and author. She shares with Dr. Ramesh her journey as just a kid from the countryside to becoming an engineer in global tech companies, teaching, studying, and traveling to multiple countries; and living her mission of empowering people to create joy and impact in life.

Join us to hear these stories in Jen's own words as she inspires us to become keen observers in our own life journey.

To learn more about the entrepreneurial mindset with Dr. Ramesh, get your copy of The Big Jump into Entrepreneurship 2.0 on Amazon.com or www.Dr-Ramesh.com.

If you're interested in building crisis resilience, Dr. Ramesh will be launching her new book on the crisis ready mindset in the first half of 2023. Make sure you follow Dr. Ramesh on LinkedIn so that you’ll get her new book alert!

Host: Dr. Ramesh Ramachandra, Author, Podcast Host, Founder of Talent Leadership Crucible & Founder of Impact Velocity

Guest Speaker: Ms. Jen VuHuong, Innovation and Startup Ecosystem Builder, Coach, Trainer and Author.

#EntrepreneurialMindset #Entrepreneur #Vietnam #Author #Coach #JenVuHuong #Dr.RameshRamachandra #TheBigJumpintoEntrepreneurship2.0 #CrisisReadyMindset #TalentLeadershipCrucible #Thriving #AgeofDisruption #Incubation #Innovation #Startup #BKHoldings #Lab2Market #HanoiEntrepreneurCommunity

To learn more about the entrepreneurial mindset with Dr. Ramesh, get your copy of The Big Jump into Entrepreneurship 2.0 on Amazon.com or www.Dr-Ramesh.com.

If you're interested in building crisis resilience, Dr. Ramesh will be launching her new book on the crisis ready mindset in the first half of 2023. Make sure you follow Dr. Ramesh on LinkedIn so that you’ll get her new book alert!

Host: Dr. Ramesh Ramachandra, Author, Podcast Host, Founder of Talent Leadership Crucible & Founder of Impact Velocity

Guest Speaker: Ms. Jen VuHuong, Innovation and Startup Ecosystem Builder, Coach, Trainer and Author.

#EntrepreneurialMindset #Entrepreneur #Vietnam #Author #Coach #JenVuHuong #Dr.RameshRamachandra #TheBigJumpintoEntrepreneurship2.0 #CrisisReadyMindset #TalentLeadershipCrucible #Thriving #AgeofDisruption #Incubation #Innovation #Startup #BKHoldings #Lab2Market #HanoiEntrepreneurCommunity


Ho Lai Yun 00:00

Hello and Welcome to Thriving the in Age of Disruption. Today, Dr. Ramesh will share with you the story of a tenacious Vietnamese woman who rose above her internal stories as 'that ugly weird impossible kid' to embark on a journey to pursue her passions, creating in the process, her personal brand and success story.

Ms. Jen Vu Huong is a coach, trainer and author. She’s also an innovation, incubation and startup ecosystem builder, who’s living her mission of empowering people to create joy and impact in life.  

Join us to hear Jen’s story as she grows from being that kid from the countryside to venturing across the world and back once again to Vietnam, becoming in the process, a keen observer and a powerful protagonist in her own life story.

Dr. Ramesh Ramachandra 00:51

Jen, welcome to the Thriving in the Age of Disruption podcast series. I'm so excited to have you here today.

Jen VuHuong 00:57

Thank you, Dr. Ramesh. I'm so honoured to work with you in person and today, virtually, to make something together. I will see myself as a person that was born to develop people or to work with people. I use different ways that I call passion now to work with people, so they can look deeper in themselves, believe in what they can do, take action and create joy and impact. The ways - training, coaching, community building, or incubation. As I continue growing in my life, the ways can involve more. But the fundamental is that as a person, I really enjoy working with people potential.

Dr. Ramesh Ramachandra 01:41

You've described yourself in very broad terms, from being someone who works with communities and incubators as well as on your own entrepreneurial project. So, is there a title or a role, or you don't want to be defined by any of that?

Jen VuHuong 01:55

It's interesting because I had refused to be titled by something. And I think it had a lot to do with my childhood story that I was labelled with being ugly, being weird being impossible. And that made me not want to get any title. I don't really believe in the title. But I also learned that the title gives people the focus of what they can walk and talk to you to really conceptualise the conversation. So, I put it out there like all author, coach, trainer, community connector. And I also have now programme manager, BK Holdings, our university business system. I found some programmes and my coaching business. So yes, there's some title there. I like to put it as a personal leadership development or to trainer or coach. Yep.

Dr. Ramesh Ramachandra 02:47

Wow. Because someone who has a firm belief in not having titles, you sure can fit lots of categories. So, Jen, I was really looking forward to our conversation because, in this podcast series, I explore the entrepreneurial mindset. So someone with an entrepreneurial mindset is resourceful in life, able to manage uncertainty and risk as well as to create value for themselves and others. While an entrepreneur is someone who starts a business and runs it. You have journeyed from being an engineer early in your career, to you know an entrepreneur and at the same time you work in corporates and the community,

Jen VuHuong 03:28

The awareness that I have now is my life with two major transformation. One is my career transformation from an engineer, to now working more about people side coaching, training, community building or incubation. The second transformation and people call it personality. I was very grumpy and very quiet person for almost 20 years. And now it's like I use communication as part of what I'm doing, and outgoing and love communicating with people. Very grateful person, not bitter and grumpy as before. So, the two major transformations, I think it comes a lot from every day, reflecting on what I do and why I'm here. I had a chance to look at my life different times to answer the question “Why I'm here?” I think sometimes we get in the trap of asking ourselves that question, and then we do nothing about it. For myself. It was because I had almost three times, I would call like, close to death. One time I got an accident, that I lost more than a litre of blood when I was very little. And one time, I drowned in the river, and I almost got kidnapped. So, after three times like that, I knew that I had to be here for something beyond myself. I live the life of three people combined. My younger sister passed away. I found that maybe I had to live for her, and my aunt, who was very close to me, like my mum, passed away, and I also thought that I had to live for her. So, this kind of spiritual “Oh, I don't know, what is it? What you call it?” But it was very helpful for me to really answer the question that I'm here for more than surviving every day but to do something. And maybe some of the people who listening right now is thinking like, “Oh, maybe I have to go through all these kinds of physical incidents or some kind of very big challenge in our lives to really answer the question.” That's why we have podcasts like what you have been doing, Ramesh, I think, is to raise our awareness and you may not need to experience that physical incident. So, I think that was my advantage, in a way, to really define, “I am not the situation. I'm not where I'm from. I'm not the label. I’m not anything that can actually called by people.” But it is something that huge, and it's like the universe. And anytime I went to the field to work, because we had a big farm, then I rode the buffalo and planted the tree with my mom and dad, I saw the whole big area and the sky. And I always felt like I could be that kind of sky; I could have that power. I thought everyone could have that when I was a kid, my brother also often gave me a story of heroes, so I thought, like, “Yeah, there's real heroes there in my family and the stories.” And in Vietnam, we have Ho Chi Minh and some all these people, and they went abroad, and they came back. Those stories around me, in efficient or in not efficient way, show this deep belief that every one of us could have that power to do something, despite where we come from. And despite all the social norm. That had kept me going until now, and I was inspired by the incidents and by the gratitude to continue living after many challenges.

Dr. Ramesh Ramachandra 06:49

You've touched on multiple points here. Firstly, I think you've given us also a glimpse to how to manage in a crisis because I define crisis as a setback. That reflection that you do every day allows you to be grateful for what you have or you don't have. And I think that's really powerful. So, thank you for sharing that. The other piece that I took away was the power of stories and how you tell the story to yourself because there could be that one story that you have, which is, “Okay, I am this, this, this and be stuck forever and unhappy.” Or you can create another story from that, which empowers you, which gives you the biggest space in life to look at what you want to pursue and also to be able to pick up the pieces. So looking at the sky and seeing how there is no limit to the sky or looking at the superheroes that you aspire to be and you can become and then seeing in real life, whether it's with Ho Chi Minh or other leaders that you've seen them in reality, all comes back to I think all about our perceptions which can change the kind of actions that we take and therefore, the futures that we live in.

Jen VuHuong 07:59

Yeah, you mentioned on the call of the story. And I would invite people to really look at the story that you tell yourself right now. And if it's not empowering, maybe you can do something about it. I'm also in the journey of really create new story for myself. I had a weird thinking when I was a little kid that I would die very early. I would die at 34, which is last year, nothing happened, right? So now, the weird thinking comes from where and that was one of the things also kind of motivate me to really, every day I truly live. Interestingly, last year, I didn't die, but I had a crisis in my health. And I thought to myself could be a kind of closing period of my life to create a brand, new story because I have observed that the story that I told myself when I was a kid. I set goals about going abroad to study, learn from other people and then come back to Vietnam and do something about it. And I have lived because of that story. The choices that I make for this new stage of my life, I need to create a very new, compelling and challenging future for myself, a set of new standards that I can see clearly compared to the past. I changed my career from an engineer to then working more with people. And I had that story I had told myself for many times, even in an international speaking contest, that people didn't understand my passion, especially my family, and I even won the contest one time where I talk about I changed my career and I went bankrupt two times. 

Jen VuHuong 09:37

And I was depressed when it was in Malaysia. I got a call from my family and they said they disappointed about me. They were so proud of me with all my scholarships and going abroad, but they felt so disappointed and shame because I did go abroad, not one time, but many times, but I didn't even achieve the financial or material things as people who went abroad, in my hometown. Normally they went as a labourer working for factory. That word of like feeling shame just felt like heavy mountain on me, and I was inspired by my family to be better. At that time, I felt like my family didn't understand me, the source of my love didn't understand. And then I told that story and I felt so bitter. Many times telling that story, I feel like, “Oh, it seemed like it is that kind of reason for me to be okay with not doing okay.” 

Dr. Ramesh Ramachandra 10:34

Very interesting. 

Jen VuHuong 10:35

Yeah, yeah, very interesting. Because it was true that I was trying my best every day, and “You don’t understand me”, but I felt like somehow, I kind of use it to feel okay with not being okay. And it was like two or three years. I was struggling in that, my family and me and my passion. And when I stepped out of that story, even it was so clever story. And it was not because I wanted to make it up. But it was the reality. I said, “Okay, if my family, they wanted me to be happy, but the way they saw my happiness is different how I saw it.” And this was how they spread their care and their love. So I just stepped out of that, and they saw all the things that I had gotten and what I had done. The little kid that went out of her hometown and got the inspiration what she wanted to do in her life, I allowed myself to just take step by step. At that time, I realised because I wanted to create quick results for my family. So, I just felt that the gap because you could not get into the results right away after you just join the new career for, one or two years, it took time. And my engineering took time so I also had to take more years for my new career. So, the gratitude was the thing to give me the newest perspective on that story. And yeah, it was the power of the story, and I changed that story. And now my family still didn't understand but the person who likes every single post of me would be my sister. So, I know that they love me, but the way they see life is just different from how I see it. But ultimately they just want me to be healthy and happy.

Dr. Ramesh Ramachandra 12:10

You’ve raised an important point - What kind of stories we tell ourselves? Because that is important. Do we tell ourselves an empowering story that helps us to move forward into the future? Helps us become big and grow? Or do we tell stories that keep us small and closed and not growing? And that's where people can take the time to do self-reflection, or maybe go for a course or read some great books. 

Dr. Ramesh Ramachandra 12:38

Did you actually start and run a business of your own as well?

Jen VuHuong 12:41

I am having one based on my personal brand. It started with the transformation that I had with myself; I was silent and quiet person. When I went to my university, I left my hometown, I was like a fish in the ocean. And I went to all the communities to learn to speak up, to be okay with not being understood or to be okay to be judged. Even when people didn’t judge me, but I had all the fear and all those kind of little voices that people didn't understand me, people didn't like what I said, people didn't really learn anything from what I said. But I learned to speak up despite all the voices that I had in my head, and I transformed to be a person be able to speak up despite the fears. When I graduated in 2011 from my university, I worked full-time for Samsung. But I also, at the same time, started a community-based business with my friend. He was the one who really taught me about doing business with passion. It was a journey of one year, we invested our time, every night and weekend after a full-time job at Samsung. At that time, we didn't really earn money, but we could grow the community from some people to 40 -50 people every single meeting that we had every week, and then become like twice a month. And we saw the demand in the more advanced programs. But as a person who did it for passion, I didn't really have the kind of business model or business mindset to run it profitably. My friend and I, after one year, we didn't really make it sustainable regarding finance and even the way we run it with the team because I often went abroad to do a business trip when I was in Samsung, and that's when I realised I wanted to learn more. 

And that was the very beginning state of the business. I went to study first master, and I came back, wanted to start, but I felt like I was not ready. And they just wanted me to go to work in the corporate and things like that. With my master, I was not confident from inside with my new career and my entrepreneurial journey, right, so I went to work for Dell Partner in Penang, Malaysia. Daily, apart from work, I’m working on my skill of training, speaking, coaching and settling all the essential things for my first passion-based business. And then, I went to study in the UK, to really have a mentor and the network to then be more confident in the new career. It was a time where I started earning money for my coaching, training and community activities in 2016. And I also met my first mentor, and we were discussing strategy every single way. When I came back to Vietnam, I keep doing that community building and that business based on my personal brand. And then, I joined my university business, BK Holdings, because I had a story when I was a kid – Went abroard, do something with the Vietnam in the macro level, which has nothing to do with the government. So, I was still like working under that story of myself when I was a kid.

Dr. Ramesh Ramachandra 15:45

That’s great that you shared with us your passion-based business. And I think with those of us who are pursuing a passion, it’s okay to keep it as a passion and enjoy it. There’s no need to convert it into a business. The more important point about entrepreneurship is the entrepreneurial mindset because you train and develop yourself to become this resourceful human being who is interested to create value for others. And I think that's a necessary skill set for today's world, where we see a lot of disruption because what's happening outside is something we can't control. But we can definitely control what we experience and how we interpret the experience. 

Dr. Ramesh Ramachandra 16:31

Can you share your view about Spirituality and where you are on your spiritual journey?

Jen VuHuong 16:38

I didn't know this word ‘spiritual’ when I was a kid, but I had a sense I am not really my body because I always had a feeling that I'm just in my body or in the ‘Jen’ here in this life. This has something to do with three different times that I almost died. Also, I had a sense that I still feel that the soul of my aunt who passed away, or my younger sister passed away still live in somebody that I have met during my life. And that kind of very special condition. Or maybe with my older sister, she just suddenly, in the evening, or in the very early morning, even she normally sleep early, 3 AM 2 AM, she could actually text, and during these times, normally I have some kind of very challenging situation for my life. So, I would have some experiences like that, that I would feel there's some bigger thing beyond us out there. That has been what I always believed, and I always still relate to the sky and the universe. And I think this can also reflect on my big belief in the potential I believe every one of us can have. Every year I get excited to dig deeper in myself, to experience different dimension myself is kind of expansion of the consciousness. And I think that’s Spirituality. Yeah. And I also knew that we all connect with energy, and what you send was intention to send to somebody; it can go to that person if that person is open to receive.

Dr. Ramesh Ramachandra 18:15

Wow, you've taken us through different aspects of Spirituality, from the experience of “I’m not my body”. You’ve had like you said, three near-death experiences. So, when you say this is not my body, you have some experience of that moment that most of us will not have. You talked about Spirituality as in being bigger than ourselves, something out there, almost like energy, a consciousness, and how you keep expanding on that. Like I shared with you before in the podcast when you interviewed me, I think one of the greatest joys and the most meaningful thing is to be able to keep expanding our consciousness. The simple definition of consciousness is awareness. And it starts with self-awareness and, of course, awareness of the situation around us, like social awareness. Those are the two important pieces. So, thank you for letting me reflect on that too. 

Jen VuHuong 19:08

Thank you, Yeah, it was interesting to learn your story at that time when you try not doing well in school as communication to your parents about what was going on inside you. So it’s very interesting to look at and learn from ourselves as an observer.

Dr. Ramesh Ramachandra 19:27

Is it possible for people to live a simple life?

Jen VuHuong 

Yeah, I also really like to hear your perspective on simple life. I just theorise some will see life is simple, but some people may not see it as simple. So, when you talk about simple life, how do you see it? 

Dr. Ramesh Ramachandra 19:44

I think there are two aspects to life. One is how we think, and two is how we live, right? And the thinking part of it is easier, at least for me, because I don't have so much of noise. It's at least about myself. So, I can keep it simple. So long as I know how to shut out all the other voices, which are also loud, society, friends, family, norms, culture. There is the life that you and I are exposed to on a day-to-day basis. When I was younger, and maybe it was harder. But when you get older, and you come to the point where I am in my life, then I guess you don't need to be bothered about those comparisons. So maybe it gets simpler, too, at that stage.

Jen VuHuong 20:29

Simplicity is interesting because if I look at how I can feel joyful and I feel like I actually live in this life, with this body or with this chance of interact with people physically, I feel that I am doing the right thing based on what I believe and it’s also contribute something for society. It's like every day I be better people call it 1%. And I could grow, and I could create the joy and create some values for people. That’s simple life. It is about having what is the thing to make you feel that you truly live in this life and that you are feeling the meaning of it, and you're feeling that you're doing the right thing. And then the way of doing, not be complicated, to make you feel every day to be like being in the doing mode, does this makes sense? I just started getting into that!

Dr. Ramesh Ramachandra 21:22

It can be simple when you get clear about what's important to you, like what's worth living, right? But then, where the complexity comes is when you have to make that moment-by-moment choices to live the life simply because you will have sometimes, many things that you can be looking at and many things that you want to do. And that requires you to do a trade-off. But if you're really clear about what's important to you, and you stay on course, then you can always bring simplicity back.

Jen VuHuong 21:52

Yeah, some of the beliefs running underneath us, something going on in the unconscious mind. I had to reflect on why I always wanted to do more. I enjoy every moment everything I do. I have to believe that when I do something, I want to do with more than 100%. If I don't really put 100% or more than that on something, I don't see that it's me. So that means that I will go to the stage of getting overwhelming. I don't know if anyone wants to have that kind of situation. You firmly believe that if you are living as you, then you will 100% doing something when you decide to do that. So, it means that anything you do, you want to do that, and you want to get overwhelmed for sure. So, the idea is to go back and really focus on the selective the optimal ways to execute what do you want to do. And for me, the reason I think I always wanted to do more, it came from I was a kid that I was not enough. And that’s still running somewhere, even I was conciously aware of that. But I think it's still hidden somewhere to make me make some choices, just because I had to do it to make me feel that I could do it, because of that belief. And another belief, would be, because my family at the beginning, I felt that they didn't understand my choice. So, I wanted to create the results so they could believe in my choice. I had a time I went to do a lot of investments because I had to make the people I love to see the results quick. This is sometimes still running under some choices that I have made. And I think last year, when I went to health crisis, it was a time I was reborn. And my family saw nothing matter really, as long as I was healthy. And I also deeply felt that, at that moment, everything was great as long as I was healthy, for my family and I became very more in peace. I think deeply inside myself in what I'm going to go for in the years to come. Over the last years, especially Covid, I also learned you can stand alone or we can stand together.

Dr. Ramesh Ramachandra 24:02

What are the three things that represent thriving for you? 

Jen VuHuong 24:07

My name Jen - Joyful, empowering and nature. I should I change it to become ‘nurture’ because I have seen that everything in my life has been nurtured. That's what I also want to do with people, nurture their potential, or what they have, that they didn't even see it yet. So for me, this has been the three words that I want to bring in whatever I do - Bring the joy, maybe pull that kind of energy, the kind of empowerment that it could have something inside them to bring out, believe in that potential, do something about it, and nurture it all the way and be authentic of themselves. And I also have the love gift, what I learned from my siblings, they had been like striving and then thriving, and they have been loving me unconditionally and giving me unconditionally. And I have seen that anyone in this planet, if they are happy, healthy and successful, they truly give to other people and pay forward, like what you are doing right now, with this podcast? I think that is also demonstration, giving and paying forward? So yeah.

Dr. Ramesh Ramachandra 25:14

Thank you for sharing that. 

What are your thoughts and wishes for women in 2023? As well as advice for young women who are trying to find their place in the world.

Jen VuHuong 25:31

Yeah, I think go for a walk once a week or once a month. Now you already lived in nature, I think that's a great advantage. And I am inspired by that image. Anytime I think about that little group looking at the sky and believe that you are more than whatever and give yourself that permission to write down what do you want to do that make you feel proud of yourself, and it’s your need, your desire, not your parents’, your husband’s, your wife’s, but it's something that from deeply inside you, the answer may not come up clearly. And it has been repeated over and over again, the same thing. Maybe you want to do something about it. And if you have been doing it, I think maybe you can help some people out there because I have seen a lot of women out there who have that desire to do something, especially when they already got married. They had children, and they found that, “Oh, I didn't achieve those goals. And they somehow, they felt it’s because they had families, and they started worrying that bad. It was interesting because I talked to them like they actually had more family, and now, they can still work on that desire, that dream again. 

Jen VuHuong 26:41

So never lose that sense of, “You still have that potential.” And if you really want to do something about it because you don't feel right, I think you can do something about it. Either listening to podcasts, like meeting people who really try all their lives; I think it can give you the sense of community and collective power to take a step forward. Or maybe you can start off doing something new every single day, start a new habit. And so, any little thing like that, I think the fundamental is to really step out of the big picture you have right now, to really see the real big picture for yourself. When I was in the UK, and there was a friend and she told her story in my seminar as a guest speaker. And she said she always tried to be a man, and she always tried to be masculine. And she didn't want to do it. And she wanted to embrace the feminine side of herself. And at that moment, I thought, like, “Do I also have that, like, in myself?” Everyone called me a tomboy since I was a little kid, up to my university. I remember the story. And I felt like, “Yeah, I did have that time in my life that I resisted to really talk about woman, man because I felt no differences.” But then I think that story was still with me to remind me that actually, I can take advantage of that, to just embrace on what I'm doing. And the reason I resisted was because I still had the impact from the label that I had. If you see that you resist on anything, maybe that is a sign to work on it. So every time I resisted, or when I had a strong reaction on something, I felt that was interesting. Maybe it came from something inside that I didn't really work on yet.  

Dr. Ramesh Ramachandra 28:25

That’s right. Well, that's really great. Thank you very much for this comprehensive list of what young women can take on and practise to be successful in life.

Jen VuHuong 

I know that there's some studies about leadership that women the leadership really make a great impact. Because, as a nature, women have compassion. And as a mother, as the sister, if you can embrace that to become the empowering thing, rather than something hinder what you can do, yeah, I think you will be blooming and shining. 

Dr. Ramesh Ramachandra 29:00

Wonderful, thank you. 

So, Jen, you're a published author.

Jen VuHuong 29:06

Yeah, I published six books, and I'm working on my number seven now on coaching. And it was very inspired by a group of people who attended our coaching programs in innovation and entrepreneurship. Yeah.

Dr. Ramesh Ramachandra 29:19

What was the motivation behind writing all these books?

Jen VuHuong 

Yeah. So, I would like to say thanks to my sister; I had a story on television, talking about the reason I went to write, it was because of her, thanks to my sister. She and I were not getting along. And I had a very extreme thinking on her when I was a little kid that I could not live in the same house as her, because she often told me that I was very naughty. I one time went to her table where she did her study; I normally never wanted to touch anything because I didn't like her at the time, right? But I saw her notebook open. And I saw all the keywords that I never thought it could relate to my sister - love, hope… And it made me want to look deeper into it. And I saw that she was worrying about my future, if I was naughty, and she had a hard time overcoming of the passing away of my grandfather, who was very close. So, I didn't read a lot, but I just read some sentences like that. And it really changed our any totally shifted my relationship with her. Just because I started seeing that she always cared about me. As a kid, sometimes you didn't know that, even it was obvious. And because of that, I thought a piece of writing could change somebody's life and perspective, and so I started writing every day, thanks to my sister. And I didn't think was a book, but when I left my hometown and talked about my stories with my friends, and they said I could put it in a book, so I don't need to repeat it over and over again. And I just started putting everything in books. It’s more about closing the chapter of my life. When I define, first is my mission. And the second is like define some goals that I have in my life. And third one is passion, about how to execute my mission to develop my cell leadership and community leadership, about happiness. And the latest one is about women… That is my journey and why I put all the things and why I got inspired to writing books. 

Dr. Ramesh Ramachandra 31:18

Well, thank you for sharing your inspiration, Jen. It's been a really great interview. I enjoyed talking to you and learning from you and thank you for being with us on this podcast show.

Jen VuHuong 

Thank you for having me, to listen to my story as an observer again and get some insights for my own sharing, yeah.

Dr. Ramesh Ramachandra 31:39

Great, wonderful.

Ho Lai Yun 00:00

Thank you for joining Dr. Ramesh and Jen today. 

If you're inspired by Jen’s entrepreneurial experience and interested to learn more about the entrepreneurial mindset, check out Dr. Ramesh's book "The Big Jump into Entrepreneurship 2.0", simply click on the Amazon link provided in the podcast description. In addition, make sure you follow Dr. Ramesh on LinkedIn so that you’ll get the latest insights from her and our amazing podcast guest speakers.

Next up, Dr. Ramesh moves over to Singapore, to meet with Dr. Neo Kok Beng, an award-winning engineer, educator, and entrepreneur, whose latest venture includes the development of the Personal Aerial Vehicle or Flying Car. Be sure to join us for the next episode!


Bio
Jen VuHuong on LinkedIn
Empowerment Performance Author, Trainer & Coach; Innovation & Incubation Program Builder; Former Engineer

“Hi, it is Jen." 
I believe you have a great potential to do something that matters!
From a silent Vietnam countryside kid being called “weird, impossible”, I became an international engineer, a 2-time top Master degree scholar, then a TEDx speaker, personal development trainer and writer, coaching people over 30 countries. 
I am dedicated to help you to believe in yourself and your dream and make it possible!

Let's get started, together, through personal and leadership development materials at my website:
http://jenvuhuong.com/