Plan And Execute: Visionary Career Planning With A CIMA Flavour

Oct 08, 2013 1 Min Read
Alt

eva.christodoulou@leaderonomics.com

From the moment Wan Haslan stepped into the audit and business advisory services department of PricewaterhouseCoopers as a fresh graduate, he was following the visionary career plan he had set for himself. This plan eventually led him to become the chief financial officer (CFO) of Iskandar Investment Bhd.

From the outset, Haslan planned to be in the industry and not in public practice. However, he understood the importance of first building a good foundation in accounting and finance.

He honed his expertise in these areas, spending his formative working years at an accounting firm and investment bank.

Haslan then moved into the industry in a bid to hone his business management skills to give him an edge over his peers.

In 1991, after graduating with an accounting and finance degree from Lancaster University in the UK, Haslan returned to Malaysia to take up the audit and business advisory department job.

“I had an opportunity to work in the UK after I completed my studies, however I decided to come back to kick-start my career as I had already secured an offer from PricewaterhouseCoopers in Kuala Lumpur,” Haslan explains.

The first job was ideal for him as it offered a great technical foundation for his career plan of being a business manager. Apart from the technical know-how, the role equipped him with the skills needed to understand and help organisations from different industries. The nature of the job also widened his contacts and professional network.

Hands-on experience

After three years at PricewaterhouseCoopers, Haslan left for the then Amanah Merchant Bank, now part of the Alliance Banking Group. In this second job, Haslan learned the ropes of raising funds and structuring companies to appeal to banks.

“In the investment bank, I was in the capital markets department, which was involved in raising funds from the market using various funding instruments.

“It involved looking at the business of the company and giving advice on the structure of the business in order to appeal to financiers and therefore optimise financing amounts raised and minimise financing costs.”

After two years, it was time to move on and Haslan joined Mardi Tech Corp, (a start-up company under the Malaysian Agricultural Research and Development Institute) in 1996, where he remained for 10 years as he wanted the hands-on experience of running all aspects of a business.

His role allowed him to get involved in joint ventures, be involved in the selling of technologies, and learn the licensing side of technologies.

“My third job gave me a good grounding in deal-making, leadership and building a business from scratch. In this job, which was essentially a technology commercialisation company, I was involved in deal making, setting up of companies and selling technologies on behalf of my shareholder, a research institute.

“What I gained from these first three jobs really gave me a strong foundation that made me what I am today.

“In order to really go ahead in life you need both the hard and soft skills. My first two jobs provided me the hard skills. My third one provided me the soft skills. I wouldn’t progress where I am today without my first three jobs,” he says.

CIMA’s push

Haslan has much to say about how CIMA, the Chartered Institute of Management Accountants, has helped him get to where he is today.

Having undertaken the CIMA qualifications on a part time basis during his tenure at MARDI Tech Corp, Haslan sees a direct connection between his ability to progress in his career, and the strategic thought process instilled in him throughout his undertaking of this qualification.

“The CIMA syllabus is unique. It taught me how to use the technical skills that I have learned to make strategic decisions.

“For example, part of the syllabus is a case study module, which allows me to use all the technical knowledge that I have gathered to address the issue in that particular paper. The case study could be on any industry. Going through that process helped me apply this skill of solving problems and providing solutions in my career.”

Haslan’s choice to undertake the CIMA syllabus came after extensive research. He observes that all other qualifications out there are equally good. However, they all have different specialisations.

“The important thing to do when searching for a suitable professional accounting qualification is to set your purpose and objective, and CIMA met my criteria. What I wanted was to eventually become a business manager with a strong accounting background.

“The CIMA syllabus is structured in such a way that enables me to think strategically instead of just technically. The case study paper really attracted my attention and was a very important factor that made me choose CIMA.”

Haslan took two-and-a-half years to complete all the papers on a part time basis. Completing the qualifications while working was a solid combination, as most of his experiences at work helped him utilise his learning to get through the exam papers.

“Taking the exams while working also involved a lot of challenges and personal sacrifices, and this has strengthened me as a person,” Haslan shares.

“I learned to act in spite of fear, to be proactive in spite of my mood, to be willing to do what’s hard now in order to have it easier later in life, to think bigger than any problems or obstacles, and to never give up.”

According to Haslan, the CIMA qualification and membership has helped him in three ways – networking, marketing and credibility.

“I want to be in an environment where I can meet with like-minded peers. The CIMA membership is not just about the technical know-how; more importantly, it’s about reaching out to other CIMA members in strategic positions, not only in Malaysia, but also overseas. That is the value of the CIMA qualification,” he explains.

Skills and attributes

Haslan, also an MBA holder from the International Islamic University of Malaysia with a best student award in the finance specialisation, believes that the skills and attributes that enable one’s success in the workplace are soft skills, combined with a clear and positive emotional state of mind.

“Hard technical skills are quite secondary. Business is about people first and how you treat them. That determines your success in sealing a deal or solving a problem. Numbers are important but they are there only in a supporting role.”

Haslan adds that “the emotional state of mind is very important. It allows empathising and connecting with people. It also enhances your ability to handle pressure which comes from all directions and increases in intensity as you move to the top.”

Experience is also important, he stresses. “What I went through in my third job gave me lots of experience in identifying, negotiating and closing deals. One may not be the best in technical skills, but one should be able to ask the right questions and identify the right answers to get the job done. And CIMA has also helped me with this immensely,” he concludes.

A love for property

Haslan’s career path so far has spanned six companies over a period of 22 years. Even though he was meticulous in his choice of his first three jobs to ensure he could acquire the experience he was looking for, as he admits, fate then came into play to channel him into the property industry, which he has learned to love and become passionate about.

Since then, he has remained in the industry through his fifth, as well as sixth (current) role. Starting his experience in the property industry with Tabung Haji Properties, where he was involved in a number of significant corporate initiatives, he was then recruited to join a company in Saudi Arabia, namely Madinah Knowledge Economic City, which is developing a township in the city of Madinah.

During his tenure, he had led the finance team in the successful listing of the company, which was the biggest initial public offering in 2010 in the Gulf region.

After assuming the role for three years, he returned to Malaysia in 2011 to become chief financial officer of Iskandar Investment Bhd, which is a developer of catalytic projects such as Educity, Legoland Malaysia and Medini in Nusajaya, Iskandar Malaysia.

The 45-year-old has a good number of proud moments and no regrets. With only two years in his current role, he feels he has still a lot to achieve.

“My CIMA experience has taught me to always go for business-building initiatives and to apply strategic thinking in whatever I do.

“The CIMA mind-set has made me think about the big picture and about being more than a CFO.”

What advice does Haslan have for those aspiring to have a great career? “Invest in education – it’s the best investment that you can make and no one can take it away from you. After that, you really need to look at what you want to do and execute your vision.”

“Your first job may not be what you want to do, but with a vision and plan, you can tune it to benefit your career progression and move towards your dream. Whatever step we take in our initial years, will have an effect in our later years, so have a vision and make your choices accordingly,” he advises.

See more at: http://mystarjob.com/articles/story.aspx?file=/2013/10/5/mystarjob_careerguide/13652966&sec=mystarjob_careerguide#sthash.3Rv3MdFT.dpuf

Click here for more articles like this.

Share This

Personal

Alt
Eva was formerly the Research & Development leader at Leaderonomics. Prior to that, she was an editor at Leaderonomics.com. Today, she is the Product leader of Happily, an engagement app at Leaderonomics Digital. She believes that everyone can be the leader they would like to be, if they are willing to put in the effort and are curious to learn along the way, as well as with some help from the people around them.

You May Also Like

brown wooden blocks displaying words "be here now"

The Endless Soundtrack – Rethinking Our Reliance on 24-7 Entertainment

By Juliet Funt. Too many gadgets? Overload of entertainment? Are they responsible for taking away our mindful moments? How do we regain control?

Sep 13, 2023 5 Min Read

Alt

Raise Your Game: The Age of Talentism

In this Raise Your Game session, Arun Kumar shares that at the end of the day, it is not the technology that makes an organisation, or even an individual unique, it is talent.

Dec 11, 2018 20 Min Podcast

Anxious man being counseled

How To Overcome and Put a Stop to Workplace Trauma?

In this episode of Psyched, we discuss the topic of trauma in the workplace.

Oct 20, 2021 66 Min Video

Be a Leader's Digest Reader