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Vietnamese millennial quits well-paid job to make his dream come true

April 13, 2021 by tuoitrenews.vn

A lot of people were taken by surprise to know that Nghiem Tien Vien had resigned from a high-paying job to return to his hometown several years ago.

Many of them would like to ask him a question: why?

It is natural to raise the question, in fact.

Vien, a millennial, quit when he had a decent job with a monthly salary of around US$2,500, which would be a dream to many other people in Vietnam.

At the age of 31, Vien is the director of the Gostream Technology Joint Stock Company, one of the seven most excellent startups of Vietnam which participated in Techfest 2019 in Silicon Valley in the U.S.

Gostream managed to raise $1 million in its Series A funding round from the local Vinacapital Ventures Foundation previously.

Facebook once listed it as one of 30 platforms that had been live-streamed most in the world in 30 days.

‘I can do it more simply’

Vien was offered a job as a technical manager in a U.S. company based in Vietnam with a salary of $2,500 a month after he graduated from the Hanoi University of Science and Technology several years ago.

To many people’s surprise, however, he gave up the post to come back to his hometown and work for a newspaper as a technical manager.

While working there, Vien had to do a lot of tasks related to live-stream activities.

He found it uncomfortable to use existing tools and apps that were available on the market then.

“It can be improved. I can do it more simply, why did others make it complicated like that?” Vien wondered to himself.

Vien nurtured the idea for one year before launching a startup offering a technical solution named Gostream.

The app helps users save time by using recorded and edited videos in live-streaming.

Gostream was put in the spotlight virtually immediately after being unveiled, thanks partly to meeting the growing demand of many sellers online at that time in Vietnam.

Being inspired from the first success, Vien continued to introduce a new product, Gostudio, an app that provides users with a tool to live-stream interactively on such popular social media platforms as Facebook, YouTube, and Twitter with many unique features and functions.

“The platform can be used as a mini studio that allows you to add a logo, photos, characters, and videos to live streams,” Vien talks of some special functions of Gostudio.

“You can also operate it as a network of television channels and invite others to live-stream videos from anywhere they have got a connection.

“You can use two cameras from two different corners to flip scenes during a live stream, which is really the same as a real studio.

“Gostudio, however, is easier to use because you can utilize smartphones instead of cameras.”

In the context of the novel coronavirus (COVID-19) pandemic, Gostudio soon became a household name because of a growing demand for virtual meetings and conferences and its capability to cope with the demand domestically and internationally.

“The pandemic turned out to be an opportunity for us and we tried to engage with investors,” Vien told Tuoi Tre (Youth) newspaper.

“They were so persuaded by our existing products that they were willing to invest in our projects in 2021.”

Gradually conquering global market

Three years ago, Vien chose the north-central province of Nghe An, his hometown, as a starting point for making Vietnam recognized on the world’s ‘technology map.’

However, Hanoi and Ho Chi Minh were two only cities whose startups could attract investments at that time.

Vien acknowledged that his decision to choose Nghe An to launch a startup was driven by financial considerations.

He only needed to spend a much smaller amount of money than his peers do in other big cities like Hanoi or Ho Chi Minh City paying for office rent or equipment.

This helped Vien’s enterprise hold on for a longer time to have their first client.

Vien had to deal with human resources as well.

“It is very difficult to compete with major companies,” Vien acknowledged.

The young businessman became a headhunter in his own hometown, looking for potential employees who live and work in the local community and training them for the company.

Apart from setting up a head office in Nghe An, Vien chose a co-founder to be a leader to work with investors in the southern region on his behalf in Ho Chi Minh City.

“Our products are sold via the Internet; we work mainly on the web so where our company locates would not matter,” the millennial explained.

“That is why I chose my hometown, Nghe An, to make my dream come true.

“When our products get well known, it would not matter to investors where our company is based.”

The first steps are always the hardest. This is not different to Vien, who experienced a challenging phase during the very beginning stages with the startup.

Vien took three to four jobs at the same time, including product development and customer service.

Sometimes Vien had to stop eating to fix some errors after receiving a call from his customers.

Vien and his co-workers found the right direction despite encountering many obstacles.

Gostream has become a popular choice amid the increasing demand for selling goods online in Vietnam.

There are more customers who look for the company’s products, as its brand name has become more recognizable.

“Our subscription plans are various, from VND100,000 [US$4.3] to millions of Vietnamese dong per month depending on the client’s demand,” said Vien.

“The customers are willing to pay the fee as long as they are well served in their business goals.

“There have been more than 700,000 Gostream subscribers to date.

“There is an average of 10,000 active users daily, which includes around 50,000 live streams.”

Gostream’s revenue in 2020 was around VND15 billion ($650,000), which created jobs for a team of 40 young employees.

“We are in the process of perfecting Gostudio, making some new improvements to make it suitable for foreign markets,” Vien talked about the ongoing plans.

“We set a goal of entering the Southeast Asian market in the first half of this year.

“In the second half, we will conquer markets in the U.S. and Europe.”

Thanks to the excellent achievements in the startup industry, Vien was included in the list of Vietnam’s 10 most outstanding young faces of 2020.

This year, Vien will be Vietnam’s representative to compete in the ‘Startup World Cup 2021,’ which will be held in the U.S. on November 11.

Keys to success

More than 90 percent of startups that work in the technology field fail to bring success eventually, so what are the secrets to overcome the ‘curse’?

In Vien’s opinion, most entrepreneurs know that there is a limited chance of success in launching a technology startup.

Whether they dare to accept the challenge or not is really an important thing.

“It depends substantially on a combination of factors that all provide an opportune circumstance for me to enjoy the positive results,” Vien said.

“In addition to that, of course, we have our own capability.”

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Vietnamese-American man builds easy investment platform

April 13, 2021 by tuoitrenews.vn

Making capital investments is usually thought as intended for well-off people or bankers only, but Kendrick Nguyen, an American of Vietnamese origin, has launched an easy investment platform where anyone can invest amounts as small as a few hundred thousand Vietnamese dong.

Over the past several years, 39-year-old Nguyen has become a familiar face of the annual National Festival for Innovative Startups (Techfest Vietnam), hosted by the Ministry of Science and Technology to support the Vietnamese startup ecosystem.

As the co-founder and CEO of Republic (Republic.co), an investment platform connecting tech startups and blockchain projects with global investors, he hopes Republic will develop into a unicorn with billions of U.S. dollars and become a leading platform for crowdfunding.

Playground for all

Nguyen co-founded Republic in 2016, after he left the position of chief attorney of the venture investment fund AngelList, which is behind five unicorn companies, including Uber.

Republic offers the lowest limit of investments compared to other crowdfunding platforms.

Accordingly, with only US$10, anyone can invest in any company on this platform.

Republic CEO Kendrick Nguyen (middle) is seen at the 2019 Techfest in Vietnam. Photo: Courtesy of Kendrick Nguyen

This supplied photo shows Republic CEO Kendrick Nguyen (middle) at the 2019 Techfest in Vietnam.

It is as easy to make investments using the Republic platform as buying items at shops, he said.

“When you like a certain company and believe it will be successful, you can invest $10-20 using a credit card,” the entrepreneur added.

“Such investment is quite different from goods purchased in that if the investee operates successfully, the $10 you have invested may grow up to $100, $1,000 or even millions of dollars, just like in the story of Facebook or Tesla.”

If the investment fails, the investor will lose the money, the young CEO added.

With such an affordable and convenient investment method, Republic could raise $36 million in Series A in the U.S. and has grown rapidly over the past year, attracting over $300 million from more than one million investors.

With his Republic platform, Nguyen asserted that deciding on choosing which company to invest in, as well as considering which industry to be useful in the future, has no longer been the prerogative of any bank or billionaire or financial empire, but of the general public.

Future of $10 investment

“Crowdfunding will become an inevitable trend,” the Vietnamese American said, adding that the future of society is that everyone will be investors and will own part of the services and products for which they are also customers.

When a person invests in a company like Uber, they will call an Uber car.

When they are interested in environmental issues and invest in a café chain using environmentally-friendly recycled products, they will become among the clients of such chains, the entrepreneur explained.

He said he is confident that the crowdfunding market will increasingly develop, even without his platform.

“My aspiration is for Republic to be a leader in that market,” the executive said.

“After five years, the Republic platform has more than one million registered investors with a total investment of more than $300 million into over 300 enterprises.”

At this time next year, the total investment will exceed $1 billion and after 10 years, the figure will reach $1 trillion, the Republic co-founder said.

Toward Vietnam

As an American with Vietnamese ancestry, Nguyen said he finds it easy to make connections with his homeland, where he has identified what fields he should invest in.

“A desire to make contributions to the homeland’s development is a thing of common sense,” said the platform CEO, who left Vietnam when he was in elementary school.

Nguyen, who earned a PhD from Boston University in the U.S., taught at the Ho Chi Minh City University of Law in 2011-12, and has become a regular Techfest guest speaker since 2016.

The entrepreneur, who can speak Vietnamese fluently, said he is seeking opportunities to support a number of potential Vietnamese startups on the Republic platform through cooperation with VietChallenge, a non-for-profit organization.

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Passenger buses, tractor-trailers required to have onboard cameras in Vietnam

April 13, 2021 by tuoitrenews.vn

About 200,000 passenger buses and tractor-trailers in Vietnam are required to be equipped with onboard cameras prior to July in accordance with a new decree.

The Directorate for Roads of Vietnam has asked local transport departments to remind transport businesses of the upcoming implementation of Government Decree No. 10.

In accordance with this regulation, approximately 200,000 passenger buses and tractor-trailers in the country will have to be outfitted with onboard cameras before July 1.

Transport businesses are recommended to select cameras that use 4G or 5G mobile networks to ensure optimal transmission of images and avoid wastefulness, as 2G technology will soon be scrapped in compliance with the roadmap of the Ministry of Information and Communications.

Camera data must include such information as driver’s license numbers, number plates, time, and GPS coordinates.

The camera coverage area must include the cabin of the vehicle, its doors, and the driver.

The data of each vehicle must be sent to the corresponding transport businesses and the Directorate for Roads of Vietnam for 12-20 times per hour.

Police officers and traffic inspectors will be allowed to access camera footage to facilitate their investigation and inspection.

The Vietnam Automobile Transport Association previously petitioned the Ministry of Transport and the government to postpone the implementation of Decree No. 10.

Many transport businesses had been affected by the COVID-19 pandemic, while installing such cameras would be expensive, the association cited.

For example, a 30-seater coach would need to be equipped with four cameras costing up to VND11 million (US$476), while data transmission would cost another VND240,000-320,000 ($10.3-13.8) per month.

However, the proposal of the Vietnam Automobile Transport Association was rejected.

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Distinctively Vietnamese: mesmerizing Dinosaur Backbone mountains

April 28, 2019 by tuoitrenews.vn

In a northwestern province of Vietnam lies beautiful mountains surrounded by fog, which appeal to many tourists as an impressive and mesmerizing place to explore.

Known as Dinosaur Backbone, the mountains are nestled in Bac Yen District, Son La Province, which is home to Ta Xua National Park.

The scenery is known to many local and foreign wayfarers for its beauty and mystery with clouds and fog floating around the top of the hills as if they were covering them.

It takes a few hours to travel the distance of 100 kilometers from Son La City, the nearest municipality, to the mountains.

There are two footpaths leading up to Dinosaur Backbone, both of which are narrow and can only be driven on by experienced drivers as they are quite dangerous.

Hence, most visitors take a walk on the pathways running along the Dinosaur Backbone hills, climb the mountains, or just stop to take photos of the beautiful scenery.

“The scenery, people and even driving on the zigzag road to reach this place [Dinosaur Backbone] are an interesting experience,” Phung Thi Thanh Huyen, a university student who traveled here with a group of friends from Hanoi, said.

Standing on the hills, visitors are not only exposed to a mesmerizing sight of mountains surrounded by clouds and fog, they are also a witness to terrace paddy fields, known to local as “stair paddy fields” for their resemblance to an actual staircase.

This is a unique and traditional form of practicing agriculture of Mong people, one of the ethnic minorities of Vietnam, which is also another attraction for visitors.

According to one of the locals Mua Nhe Di, Dinosaur Backbone started attracting tourists around 10 years ago and the number of visitors has increased over the years.

In response to this new influx of tourists, the Mong people started opening local diners where many tourists pass by.

“During the winter or raining season, the top of Dinosaur Bone will slowly disappear among a sea of clouds, especially in the early morning,” Di said.

“Usually on the weekend this is an ideal place for backpackers and youngsters to go camping, gather, and get to know other visitors,” he added.

Here are some of the photos of Dinosaur Backbone mountains.

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This one-legged Vietnamese student is painting her future

April 14, 2021 by tuoitrenews.vn

Determined not to let her disability stop her from reaching her goals, Nguyen Thi Cam Nhung, from Ben Tre Province in Vietnam’s Mekong Delta, is pushing herself toward a bright future regardless of the hardships life throws at her.

Students at Ton Duc Thang University, located in District 7, Ho Chi Minh City, have gotten used to the girl with one leg making her way to class on weekdays.

Nhung is a first-year student of the industrial arts faculty.

Before her accident while playing, she was a boisterous child like any other.

The serious fall broke the upper bones of her right leg but the injury was taken lightly until complications developed a few months later.

Examinations showed abnormal swelling in the leg, which later turned out to be a large tumor.

The little girl’s life was derailed when her leg joints were immediately disarticulated to avoid tissue necrosis in the leg.

Instead of frolicking around just like her peers, Nhung would wind up spending the majority of her early childhood with limited mobility.

The young girl refused to give up learning to walk with crutches, despite the countless bruises and scratches she accrued from falling, and was finally able to walk on her own.

After Nhung finished middle school, her family decided she would sit out high school and find a manual job that does not require much mobility instead.

The girl’s education was spared thanks to her 9th-grade homeroom teacher, who signed her up for Doan Thi Diem High School, located in Thanh Phu District, Ben Tre Province in the Mekong Delta, without the family’s knowledge.

Toward the end of her high school years, Nhung again found herself at a crossroads when her family tried to advise her against moving to Ho Chi Minh City to attend college.

Her parents expressed doubts regarding how she would face struggles alone, take care of herself away from home, and how to use less disabled-friendly public transport.

The thought that left Nhung most nervous at this critical point was if she would be able to land a job that matches her mental ability as well as physical disability.

Her final decision made, she did her best in her studies and was admitted to Ton Duc Thang University, where she took her first steps toward a brighter future.

“I’ll look for a suitable job to cover part of my tuition fees and gain new experiences,” said Nguyen Thi Cam Nhung (right). Photo: Ngoc Phuong / Tuoi Tre

‘I’ll look for a suitable job to cover part of my tuition fees and gain new experiences,’ said Nguyen Thi Cam Nhung (right). Photo : Ngoc Phuong / Tuoi Tre

“I decided to pursue my education to the very end,” Nhung said.

“I want to be independent and determine my own future.

“There’re so many places I want to visit and so many things I want to learn.

“I’ll try to exceed my limits and won’t let my impairment hold me back.”

Nhung showed her painting talent quite early in her life, and art helps take away sorrows and gives back love and positive vibes while connecting her to the outside world.

When it was time to choose majors in college, she followed her passion, believing she is cut out for the job, which might not involve a lot of traveling.

Except for the beginning when her father took her to Ho Chi Minh City and helped her complete admission procedures, the physically challenged girl always tries to handle everything on her own.

When she has classes, she hops from the school dormitory, where she stays, to the halls and classrooms within the school campus, one of the city’s largest and most modern-looking.

“Now I can go anywhere within the campus,” Nhung shared proudly, adding she just needs to take an occasional rest during the long walks.

“I can reach the second floors on foot but have to use the elevator for higher ones.”

Though she just took some fundamental courses and hand-drawn painting classes in her first year, the student is well aware of hurdles ahead.

Nhung’s father, who earns a meager income as a construction worker, and her homemaking mother struggle to afford education for her and her two younger siblings.

Refusing to let her disability and poverty get in the way of realizing her dreams, Nhung forces herself to face her situation head-on while trying to save as much as she can.

As she is still unable to buy a laptop, she often borrows her friends’ or uses computers at the school libraries, also some of the city’s most well-equipped and modern, for homework.

“I’ll look for a suitable job to cover part of my tuition fees and gain new working experiences,” Nhung shared.

Nguyen Duc Hong Quang, a lecturer of the university’s faculty of industrial arts, pays special attention to Nhung during the two courses she took with him.

According to Quang, art-related fields have seen relatively fierce competition and high requirements in recent years.

The road will even be much bumpier for students with disabilities like Nhung, he said.

“Challenges can sometimes motivate us to keep moving forward and gain unexpected accomplishments,” Quang noted.

“Nhung should keep up her persistence and determination if she is to succeed.”

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Breakfast @ Tuoi Tre News — April 14

April 14, 2021 by tuoitrenews.vn

Check out the news you should not miss today:

Politics

— Foreign Minister Bui Thanh Son on Tuesday held a phone talk with Brunei Second Minister of Foreign Affairs Dato Erywan Pehin Yusof, during which both agreed to regularly and effectively maintain the nations’ mechanism of joint committees on bilateral cooperation, the Vietnam News Agency reported the same day.

Society

— Vietnam on Tuesday afternoon reported seven new imported cases of COVID-19, increasing the country’s tally to 2,714 with 2,445 recoveries, according to the Ministry of Health.

— According to Hanoi’s Department of Construction, the capital city now has 1,579 old condominiums built between 1960 and 1992, with many of them being seriously degraded and posing a threat to local residents. However, there have been huge obstacles in demolishing and reconstructing the buildings due to the lack of a legal framework.

— The Steering Committee for COVID-19 Prevention and Control in the southern province of Binh Phuoc’s Hon Quan District on Tuesday said they had recently caught two taxis transporting five foreigners to illegally enter the locality.

— Local authorities in the north-central province of Nghe An are working to find out the reason why the Nha Le (Le Dynasty) Canal through Nghi Yen Commune in Nghi Loc District has had its water turn dark and smelly during the past days.

Business

— The Vietnam Automobile Manufacturers’ Association on Tuesday announced that its members sold a total of 70,952 vehicles in the first quarter of 2021, a year-on-year surge of 36 percent, the Vietnam News Agency reported the same day.

Education

— Students at Luong Dinh Cua Elementary School in District 3 are having the chance to watch water puppet performances on their school campus on April 12, 13, 14, and 16 as part of a project to bring the Vietnamese traditional art to primary schools across Ho Chi Minh City.

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