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Why offshore recruiting is rising in APAC countries

Finding just the right person to fill a vacant position isn’t an easy task, no matter where your company resides in the world. Expanding the pool of potential workers and hiring offshore might be the thing that helps you gain the skill sets needed to take your business to a new level.

The concerns of COVID-19 meant many employers turned to a work-from-home model. Once a brand adopts remote work, it’s much easier to expand its horizons and tap into employees around the globe. Even issues such as time zones become less of a concern when people set their own schedules.

Here is a look at why offshore recruiting is on the rise.

What is the meaning of offshore recruitment?

Offshore recruitment is simply hiring someone from a different country to fill open positions. For example, someone in an Asian-Pacific (APAC) country recruits a social media manager in the United States to help promote their new product in America.

A recent HR report showed around 80 per cent of APAC employers used offshore recruiting to achieve business goals. Some of the top markets for offshore recruiting strategies included Vietnam at 46 per cent, South Korea at 43 per cent and Thailand at 39 per cent. Most often, they hired workers in Information Technology, Customer Service and Research and Development.

What offshore recruiting can do

There are a few issues employers should be aware of with offshore recruiting before they jump on board:

  • Complicated tax structures between some countries
  • Higher wages in some areas
  • Language barriers if the person doesn’t speak the same language
  • Time zones and holding video conferences or other meetings

Although some things still make offshore recruiting a bit of a challenge, there are many benefits to hiring outside your typical employee pool.

The many benefits are why APAC employers turn to other countries to fill the gap.

Overcome labour shortages

Persistent supply chain issues and concerns over labour shortages have driven the economy in the last few quarters. The Consumer Price Index is at a 13-year high, but companies are still hiring as base growth rates remain up.

The reasons for the labour shortages since the pandemic started are myriad. However, if you find you can’t locate or afford local talent to fill positions, turning to a global pool of workers may help fill the gap.

Source higher talent

Those with the most knowledge of niche areas may not be local, so your business severely limits growth potential if you don’t open up your recruiting process to those in other areas.

Your city may have plenty of intelligent individuals. Still, they may not have had the training opportunities to expand into new technologies or set up a cybersecurity wall to protect a company’s most sensitive data.

Save money

When you recruit offshore, you might not hire people in other countries as full-time employees. Instead, you might employ them on a contract basis for a single job, pay them part-time as freelancers or in many different scenarios.

Doing so could help you save money because you won’t have the expenses of benefits, paid time off and other perks you’d offer your typical staff members.

Tap into revolutionary technologies

More and more employers are using artificial intelligence to help them find workers. Recruiters often spend hours trying to find the right person for a position, but computers have grown so smart that they can do the same work in a fraction of the time, scouring the internet for the best candidate for any job. Sometimes those people come from other countries, resulting in offshore recruiting efforts to find the best match for the job.

Cover all shifts

For companies that need customer service workers, tapping into a talent pool across the globe makes sense.

You’ll easily cover all shifts around the clock without forcing people to work overnight or other strange hours. You can also tap into the customer service platforms countries such as India and Malaysia have in place to handle calls and online chats.

Gain local knowledge

Another reason for turning to offshore recruiting is to gain local knowledge and insight from people in other countries. As your business expands, you may want to find more customer pools. If you have a marketing team in each country you want to reach, you benefit from their insight into what shoppers want.

Do you plan to have content and social media for each country where you sell your products? You’ll want it in the native language of that location. Although you can hire a writer or use a bot to create content, nothing will sound quite right until a native speaker of that location makes it.

Finding the perfect offshore recruit

Be transparent about your hiring practices, how long the position is for and any other details the candidate needs to know. If your churn rate is high, hiring and training offshore recruits could cost you more than local ones.

However, if you are open about the pay structure, benefits and challenges, you just might onboard new employees and keep them around for years to come.

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Green and sustainable crypto – Is this the way forward?

Energy consumption has been a major source of criticism in the cryptocurrency business. Ethereum has finally deployed a huge network upgrade that dramatically transforms how the blockchain validates transactions, mints new currency, and secures its network.

This mechanism, known as proof-of-stake, has cut Ethereum energy use by more than 99 per cent. This sounds good. However, Bitcoin is unlikely to follow suit.

Is Bitcoin now green? No, but at least Bitcoin’s emissions of greenhouse gases are down than before. According to the Cambridge Bitcoin Electricity Consumption Index, Bitcoin’s greenhouse gas emissions decreased from 59 metric tons of carbon dioxide equivalent in October 2021 to 48.88 metric tons.

According to research released by Cambridge University’s Centre of Alternative Finance, Bitcoin is failing to go green, with the cryptocurrency recording only modest increases in its use of renewable energy in the year leading up to January.

Powerful computers connected to a worldwide network process Bitcoin transactions and “mine” new tokens in a competition to solve challenging mathematical puzzles. Policymakers, investors, and environmentalists concerned about the process’s impact on global warming criticise it for guzzling electricity and heavily relying on dirty fossil fuels like coal.

Green cryptocurrencies are those whose mining activities are powered by renewable energy sources.

Things are changing, and there are alternatives to make it “greener”

Solar

Currently, solar is said to as “the cheapest energy source.” Solar energy, which has the greatest pace of growth among all energy sources, presently provides three per cent of the world’s electricity while emitting no noise pollution and scaling up easily. Solar energy has global potential, in contrast to comparatively rare geothermal.

Also Read: Beyond buzzwords: How climate tech startups can create an impact in green recovery

According to Bloomberg, a solar power company in South Africa pays investors with cryptocurrency. Sun Exchange allows investors to spend as little as US$4 on solar cells. Although the cost is lower than what would have been charged for electricity from the grid, the customers who receive the renewable energy nevertheless pay the price for a 20-year contract.

Sun Exchange gets a portion of the revenue to pay for installation and upkeep while also turning a profit. Investors are paid the balance. They can receive South African Rands or Bitcoin, with the latter enabling simple cross-border payments to the more than 35,000 participants thus far across 180 countries.

Biomass

Five per cent of US primary consumption, 10 per cent of global energy, and 1.4 per cent of Canada’s electrical production come from biomass. Most of this energy is used for industrial heating and other activities, which have considerable environmental benefits that include enhancing hygiene by reusing waste and lowering greenhouse gas emissions.

Utilising biodegradable materials as fuel for energy production is not out of place in the race for a sustainable Bitcoin mining business. When compared to solar, it might not offer a more significant arbitrage, but buying these energy choices from a position of strength remains the ideal.

Bitcoin Magazine reported that a Dallas, Texas-based hemp processor, Generation Hemp, sees more peer-to-peer in the future for cannabis than just passing around a pre-roll. They have unveiled plans to mine for cryptocurrency using cannabis as fuel.

Hydro

Compared to other renewable energy sources, hydropower has the best energy extraction (conversion) efficiency (up to 90 per cent), is the most dependable, and has the smallest carbon footprint.

Borgo d’Anaunia is a small municipality in the Trentino-Alto Adige area of northern Italy. The 37-year-old Daniele Graziadei became Italy’s first municipality to run a crypto data centre. Another illustration of the use of hydropower is this.

The need to be more green expands to other tokens too

VeChain is working on green initiatives to increase stakeholder involvement, such as the one agreed with the government of San Marino, or to deliver the future of safe and traceable food. According to the project’s current estimating models, VeChain generates 4.58 metric tons of carbon emissions, which is equivalent to the emissions generated by mining a single BTC.

FRZ Solar System (FRZSS) was created to combat the energy issue using blockchain technologies and web innovations. Given that solar energy is limitless, renewable, endless, pollution-free, and inexpensive, the FRZSS intends to popularise solar power plants as the primary power source. The team has also been working with other companies to reduce the cost of electricity generation.

Tezos is a green energy crypto blockchain similar to Ethereum in that it supports smart contracts and can be used to mint NFTs. The low carbon footprint of Tezos means developers and users can prioritise innovation without compromising sustainability. They have increased energy efficiency per-transaction basis by at least 70 per cent.

Also Read: Can Bitcoin help us in the fight against climate change?

IMPT is a blockchain-based technology that allows individuals and businesses to swiftly and safely reduce their carbon footprint. Customers can earn carbon credits while buying online. They could even buy them directly from the platform. Furthermore, IMPT should tokenise carbon credits so users can purchase them as NFTs. The NFTs are then recorded into a decentralised ledger that users view to give traceability and transparency.

Back to Bitcoin

The large carbon footprint associated with Bitcoin mining appears to be at odds with any environmental objectives. The demand that limited electricity is used for the real economy and not for Bitcoin mining is justified in light of escalating energy prices and shortages.

Creating new strategies for the most efficient utilisation of resources is necessary. Bitcoin mining has the potential to hasten the global energy transition by serving as a backup energy buyer for the excess power balance.

Additionally, energy power plants constructed with the intention of mining Bitcoin can generate a higher profit than those built to sell the electricity at market rates, mainly when constructed in remote areas with easy access to renewable energy sources but no infrastructure for integrating them into the grid. Plant owners might use these revenues to fund additional clean energy initiatives that support ESG objectives and the world’s increasing demand for electricity.

But for these projects to be successful, Bitcoin generation and the associated value chains would need to be held to a very high standard of accountability and measurability.

Editor’s note: e27 aims to foster thought leadership by publishing views from the community. Share your opinion by submitting an article, video, podcast, or infographic

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How 9/11 and the Fukushima disaster fueled Uber and WeWork’s growth in Japan

In this episode, we are excited to welcome Masami Takahashi. Takahashi is the President of Scrum Studio and CEO of Japan at Miles, an application that offers rewards for travelling, allowing anyone with a smartphone to earn miles and rewards whether your commute is by car, rideshare, plane, train, subway, bus, bicycle or on foot. Prior, Takahashi led expansion for WeWork & Uber, and he’s a perfect example of an Interpreneur as we have coined in our book.

In our conversation, Masami shares how to become a bridge between HQ and local teams when working on an international market (AND why it’s the job of the local team to make HQ fall in love with that local market), how to build trust and strong relationships within a distributed organisation, and how he helped scale companies such as Uber and WeWork in the Japanese market.

Also Read: Beyond the uber of X: Reimagining on-demand

Get your copy of our Wall Street Journal Bestselling Book, Global Class, a playbook on how to build a successful global business.

This episode is sponsored by our partner, ZEDRA. Learn more about how the ZEDRA team can support you in expanding to new markets here.

Find our entire podcast episode library here.

This content was first published by Global Class.

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Ecosystem Roundup: Sea cut 7K jobs in last 6 months; iGlobe planning new US$200M deep-tech fund; Temasek, SoftBank mark down FTX investments to 0

Sea cut 7,000 jobs over last 6 months
The reduction affected roughly 10% of the company’s total workforce; Some of the latest job cuts were for Shopee, which let go of around 100 people; Layoffs at Shopee started around June this year.

Grab revenue more than doubles YOY in Q3, deliveries hit EBITDA breakeven
The internet major logged US$382M in revenue for the quarter, surging 143% compared to the same period in 2021; It attributed the leap to strong performance from its mobility and delivery segments.

iGlobe Partners eyes new US$200M fund for deep-tech investments
Since 1999, iGlobe has closed over 100 investment deals across Asia, Europe, and the US; Its portfolio firms include Hoolah (acquired by ShopBack), Docquity, Novelship, and Tonik Bank.

KB Financial leads ADDX’s US$20M upsized pre-Series B round
It’ll use the capital to grow its wealth management platform for private banks, brokerages and family offices; ADDX allows individual investors access to private market deals that have traditionally been open only to institutional investors.

Singaporeans feel ‘betrayed’ by Temasek-backed FTX
Retail investors who put money on the exchange to save or trade are bearing the brunt of the crisis; Many of them were lured to FTX by a stamp of approval from Singapore state-owned investment firm Temasek.

Temasek marks down full FTX investment to $0
The firm said it invested US$210M in FTX International, which represents about a 1% stake; It also poured US$65M into the troubled exchange’s American business, FTX US, across two funding rounds for a roughly 1.5% stake.

SoftBank to mark FTX investment to $0
In its earnings call last week, the Japanese investment giant said it has invested US$100M in FTX; This represents roughly 0.4% of the cryptocurrency exchange’s total equity.

Korea launches probe into Terra co-founder’s fintech firm
Daniel Shin’s Chai Corporation has been raided by the Korean authorities; They are looking into the company’s launch of its Terra payment services, which may have involved using its customers’ personal data without consent.

Philippine startup enabler Archipelago Labs launches with US$10M fund
The company plans to deploy the fund in early-stage Web3 companies with sustainable business models and sound token economics; Next year, A-Labs will run the first cohort for its Archipelago Labs Accelerator Block.

To leverage Web3 technologies, Web2 companies may start by building the right culture
Web3 is all about “a change in how we are looking at our community and our audiences”, say panellists at an Echelon session; Before they can fully embrace and implement Web3, there are misconceptions to clear.

Singapore gets an NFT-gated Web3 co-working space Metacamp
It has three floors and can accommodate 20 startups with up to five team members; The NFT-gated system allows approved members to enter the Metacamp premises by holding an NFT in their crypto wallet.

Green and sustainable crypto: Is this the way forward?
Green cryptos are those whose mining activities are powered by renewable energy sources and Bitcoin’s emissions of greenhouse gases are down than before.

Blockchain promises to be as foundational and indispensable as internet
According to Amit Ghosh of R3, the wisdom, life lessons, and values you gain from taking risks and travelling shape you into the person you are, and we are the sum of our experiences.

Sumitomo Mitsui to invest US$9.2M in Vietnam’s SmartNet
SmartNet provides payment solutions in Vietnam and is focused on micro SMEs; It operates SmartPay, an e-wallet licensed by the State Bank of Vietnam.

AI-driven property portal MOGUL.sg nets US$6.5M Series A
Nech Capital led the round; MOGUL.sg’s 3D map supports searches with an immersive experience to help prospective buyers visualise the properties and their surrounding areas better.

Choco Up to invest up to US$5M in Dream Impact’s social startups
Choco Up aims to back impact startups across diversity, equity & inclusion, circular economy and human-centric education; HK-based Dream Impact connects social entrepreneurs to resources.

One-click checkout startup Beam raises US$2.5M seed funding
The investors are Sequoia Surge and Partech Partners; The payment firm plans to use the fresh funding to hire employees, acquire more merchants, and expand to other countries in Southeast Asia.

SG logistics firm Amilo comes out of stealth mode after US$2M round
The company has also made two acquisitions; It bought a majority stake in Indonesian last-mile aggregator Kahago, which has been rebranded as Amilo Indonesia; Details on the other deal were not disclosed, but the acquired company is based in Vietnam.

Betafi attracts US$1.3M funding for its unified user research platform
The investors are Together Fund, Entrepreneur First, and Titan Capital; Betafi helps product teams conduct user interviews and usability tests effortlessly to validate their ideas, designs, beta software, and websites.

Students-focused Vietnamese fintech startup Rootopia secures US$1M
The investors are Genesia Ventures, ThinkZone Venture, and BK Fund; Rootopia helps connect angel investors with parents who need funds for their children’s school fees.

‘Kampd connects professionals based on what they know rather than who they know’
Kampd CEO Amit Gupta says the social networking platform empowers creators (thought leaders and industry stalwarts) to create and amplify their content on Kampd.

Women as focus of impact investment: Does it bring more harm than good?
One panellist argues that putting women in the centre of impact investment is counterproductive to the goal of promoting gender equality.

How Zuno Carbon plans to help organisations reduce their environmental impact
Zuno provides end-to-end carbon management solutions for organisations of all sizes that provide unprecedented visibility into their supply chain emissions.

Digital transformation: It starts and ends with our people
Kickstart any digital transformation initiatives by involving your employees and helping them understand their roles, workflows, and needs.

Why offshore recruiting is rising in APAC countries
Although some things make offshore recruiting a bit of a challenge, there are many benefits to hiring outside your typical employee pool.

Fundraising or preparing your startup for fundraising? Build your investor network, search from 400+ SEA investors on e27, and get connected or get insights regarding fundraising. Try e27 Pro for free today.

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5 signs of burnout you might be missing

Burnout takes time to develop: it creeps up on you quietly. Its hallmarks are hopelessness, cynicism, and an inability to focus.

It’s also associated with physical symptoms like heart palpitations, blood pressure problems, muscle tension, and random aches and pains. But it manifests in more insidious ways too.

You may be at risk of burnout if…

You’re irritated by the little things

When you lose the ability to enjoy your job, you also run out of patience.

Coworkers you used to like suddenly seem pushy, boring, or obnoxious. Your routine feels unbearably stale, but new projects are even more exhausting. If you have a client-facing job, it takes an inhuman effort to talk to them politely and attentively.

Plus, the irritation may spill over to your personal life. You get either snappy or robotically distant, even with people you love. You can’t handle minor inconveniences like a broken appliance. You also can’t enjoy your hobbies the way you usually do because you keep getting distracted or annoyed by some detail.

Bad habits become more tempting

Life-ruining or relatively harmless bad habits seep into your life when you’re under too much workplace stress.

Maybe you’re back to chewing your nails, or you’re drinking more coffee than usual. You spend money on stuff you don’t need, all for that brief rush of joy you get when making your purchase. You haven’t smoked in more than a decade, but you miss it more than usual.

There’s a well-documented link between burnout and addiction. Some turn to alcohol and drugs for the first time because of burnout. Those who struggled in the past are likely to relapse under strain.

When I got burned out, I started hate-reading people on social media compulsively. This isn’t a big deal, except that it robbed me of hours I could have spent with people I love. It enhanced my bad mood and feelings of pessimism, and I couldn’t stop even though I wanted to.

Work haunts your dreams

Burnout can creep into your dreams.

You may have repetitive nightmares of being back at school and getting humiliated by some teacher you never think about anymore. Or you may dream about being trapped, drowned, buried, and so on. My burnout nightmares usually featured some lost item everyone blamed me for.

Also Read: Customer service agents are feeling burned out, how can we help them?

Another weird symptom of burnout is having “flat dreams”. If your dreams are normally colourful and imaginative, and you’re suddenly having plotless, boring dreams, that could mean the stress is getting to you.

Your sleeping patterns are all over the place

Going to sleep becomes fraught when you hate the thought of going to work in the morning. You may find yourself going to bed later and later each day. Or you stay up in bed for hours, scrolling your feeds aimlessly in the hope of distraction.

Sleeping patterns get especially messy on weekends or vacations. You sleep in, wake up listless, spend your day in a haze, and then have trouble falling asleep. The more you’re annoyed by your inability to sleep, the harder it is to relax.

For many years, taking time off was touted as the best cure for burnout. Now we know that it doesn’t work like that: burnout makes true rest impossible.

You’re losing your imagination

If you’re burnt out, and someone tells you to imagine the future, you don’t know what to say. You’re taking life one day at a time, work has robbed you of the ability to look ahead.

But that’s not all. From personal experience, I can say that burnout changes your inner world.

You’re less expressive, and it’s harder for you to describe feelings (or even think about them). You feel blank, emptied out inside, but overwhelmed at the same time. You can’t imagine a better way forward.

The ugly truth

Everyone needs to know how to spot burnout in themselves and their loved ones, but recognition won’t solve the problem. Burnout isn’t something you can handle through positive thinking or better time management. You have to tackle it directly.

Therapy can help, and so can certain lifestyle changes. But keep in mind that burnout is a response to your circumstances.

Sometimes, the only way to escape it is to change the circumstances in question. Talk to your boss, demand a change, and quit if you have to. No job is worth this kind of suffering.

Editor’s note: e27 aims to foster thought leadership by publishing views from the community. Share your opinion by submitting an article, video, podcast, or infographic

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