Singaporean Entrepreneurs

21 Feb, 2008

Singapore’s Social Entrepreneur Diana Saw makes things BLOOM in Cambodia

Posted by: Ginger In: Interviews with Entrepreneurs

bloomteam2.jpg
The picture shows Diana Saw (on the far front left) working with the Bloom team in Phnom Penh, Cambodia. They are adding sequins to some of the bags which they will sell at the Bloom Shop. Read on to find out how you can help not by donating, but by being a discerning consumer.

(1) You started Bloom in September 2006, how long was that after your Cambodia holiday which shocked you into action?

The decision was swift as it was simple: move to Cambodia to provide jobs for poor women. I first
visited Phnom Penh in April 2006 and was back the next month to look for a house. My partner and I relocated to PP the following month, in June. Not knowing anyone or anything about business in Cambodia, it took me three months before I started Bloom.

(2) What in particular did you see that made you want to do something? (We’re wondering if you’ve gone to other 3rd world Asian countries and seen similar? If yes, what was different about Cambodia?)

My first visit to Cambodia was with Dale Edmonds, who runs Riverkids Project, an anti-child trafficking NGO. I accompanied Dale as she successfully intervened in a attempted sale of a baby by her mother. I felt pity for the impoverished mother who was subsequently jailed. So where RK helps children, a laudable job in itself, I decided I would help poor women–may they never know such desperation.

(3) How did you start the BLOOM social enterprise? Did you have a local partner? Was there a lot of red-tape? What were the toughest challenges?

I approached the job placement arm of an NGO in Phnom Penh (PP). There are many NGOs who train poor Cambodians, but what this country needs is jobs. You can train people all you like, but if no one employs them, you’ll have frustrated skilled people who are unable to use their
skills. Or you may end up with a situation like the Philippines, where university graduates have to become domestic helpers in foreign countries.

I didn’t have a local partner. It is easy for foreigners to start a business in Cambodia–hardly any
red tape. Just pay USD260 a year for a business visa. Then you have to apply for a business licence and pay various taxes. People can worry or complain about the corruption in Cambodia, but it is no more than a nuisance.

CHALLENGES:
1. language
2. cultural misunderstandings
3. lack of infrastructure (internet is hugely expensive and the post and telephone networks,
unreliable)
4. lack of proper healthcare
5. for a social enterprise operating in Cambodia, the challenge is taking on the many NGOs (who get donations) on the one hand, and capitalist (profit-obsessed, so with lower costs) businesses on the other.

(3) Apart from hiring and training locals, have you considered setting up cooperatives/micro-financing like those done by Muhummad Yunus in Bangladesh?

Bloom has a savings plan for staff. Every month staff are encouraged to put away a percentage of their income which goes towards buying a sewing machine. Bloom will then subsidize the cost of the machine. With the machine, workers will be able to become small business owners, supplying bags not only to Bloom, but to other sellers, like small shops in the tourist markets.

bloombags.jpg

(4) Have you considered selling your designer bags in Singapore or via online? Would Phnom Penh have the postal facilities for this?

My friends are really sweet, organising Tupperware type parties for Bloom bags. You can also buy them from RK (www.riverkidsproject.org), and all profits Dale makes goes towards RK. The biggest hindrance to our growth is the high courier charges from Cambodia. (USD14 a kg to Singapore for a parcel below 10kg). Having said that, we do have customers who buy bulk, in SG, US, UK, Australia, New Zealand and France, who find it worthwhile to pay for courier charges.

(5) Many schools in Singapore are moving towards CIP (Community Involvement Projects) themed overseas trips instead of the usual tours. Is there any area they can help you in? (Of the top of my head, they can help you a lot with publicity about the café and your bags and possibly sell some of the merchandise back here in Singapore)

I think those are good ways to help, but the main thing is to spread awareness about workers’ rights and what it means to be an ethical, or intelligent, consumer. Young people should not simply purchase things but give a thought as to where those things come from and who made them and how were the workers treated when they made them. I really doubt anyone wants to be an accomplice in the exploitation of workers. At garment factories in Cambodia, for instance, workers are paid a minimum wage of USD50 a month, for a 48 hour work week. How much did you pay
for your branded T-shirt that says “Made in Cambodia” on its label? How much did the teenage girls who made the shirt get paid?
*******

If you want to follow how Diana & BLOOM are doing, she blogs about how things are progressing here.

If you’re in Cambodia, visit the:
BLOOM Workshop at No. 29B, St. 163.
BLOOM shops at #808, Russian Market, Phnom Penh and on Pub Street,
Siem Reap (above KHMER PLACE and beside GOODYSAURUS restaurants).
phnom_penh_international_airport_map.gif

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18 Responses to "Singapore’s Social Entrepreneur Diana Saw makes things BLOOM in Cambodia"

1 | The MWF Read - 02/20/2008 | Saphrym

February 22nd, 2008 at 9:03 am

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[...] Singapore’s Social Entrepreneur Diana Saw in Cambodia – Singapore Entrepreneur – Very cool social enterprise going on. Go read about it. [...]

2 | How Deimos uses Social Networking - EntreCard.Com - Writing Contest! Win 3,000 EntreCredits - by Alan @ libdrone.info | ahkong.net

February 25th, 2008 at 3:34 pm

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[...] EntreCarder Blogger – Ginger shared with us an interesting read – Singapore’s Social Entrepreneur Diana Saw makes things BLOOM in Cambodia which makes me wonder: How much those fellow Chinese workers further up north in Mainland China [...]

3 | Shelia

February 25th, 2008 at 4:14 pm

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What an incredible effort!

The Bloom Social Enterprise sounds like it can give these families the independence they need to sustain their own lives and not depend on work outside of the home.

Encouraging the individuals to save their money to invest in their own futures gives them so much hope and incentive.

Blessings on all of your efforts!

Shelia’s last blog post..Manic Monday: Explosive

4 | sukosaki

February 27th, 2008 at 3:35 am

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Nice post. I think that what you are doing for Entrepreneurs is great. Keep up the good work!

sukosaki’s last blog post..Make Money With Referrals

5 | Making things BLOOM in Cambodia | Evil Woobie

February 28th, 2008 at 5:52 am

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[...] more on entrepreneur.com.sg to find out how you can help not by donating, but by being a discerning [...]

6 | Canvas bags

March 8th, 2008 at 4:02 pm

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“Incredible work” I would say. You are completing the purpose of your life by helping others

7 | The Seventh Day: Eleventh/Ultimate Blog Party Edition | On the Horizon

March 10th, 2008 at 7:04 am

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[...] Little Entrepreneur shares Singapore’s Social Entrepreneur Diana Saw makes things Bloom in Cambodia from Singapore Entrepreneurs [...]

8 | Iluzjonista » Blog Archive » The Seventh Day: Eleventh/Ultimate Blog Party Edition

March 10th, 2008 at 11:01 am

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[...] Little Entrepreneur shares Singapore’s Social Entrepreneur Diana Saw makes things Bloom in Cambodia from Singapore Entrepreneurs [...]

9 | Brian Chan

March 20th, 2008 at 12:43 am

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Very good work done! You have my respect Diana. Your story has encouraged me further to look out for ways I can contribute to society through social entrepreneurship.

Thanks!

Brian C

Brian Chan’s last blog post..Problem Solving: Tried & Tested (Part 1)

10 | Cambodia

March 27th, 2008 at 11:32 am

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To read latest news about Cambodia, go to http://www.netvibes.com/cambodia

11 | Diana Saw

April 3rd, 2008 at 11:59 am

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Thanks for all who wrote encouraging things about Bloom. I really appreciate the kind words.

Re the comment about China’s workers. You can easily Google the minimum wage in China. A June 07 report from Reuters: “The highest current minimum wage in China is [USD]$106 a month in the southern business center of Shenzhen. The lowest is $35 a month in the eastern province of Jiangxi. Shanghai, one of the world’s most expensive cities, raised its minimum monthly wage by $7.80 to $98 a month last year.”

Whether factories pay is another matter. The issue is not so simple as the factory owner screwing its workers. If you’ve seen the documentary “China Blue”, which follows the lives of a teenage factory worker and her boss, you will understand that factories in China that try to treat and pay workers fairly simply cannot survive. They need to compete for the business of your Walmarts and the like. These latter companies drive prices down because a) they need to sell clothes at the low prices demanded by customers and/or b) because they want to line their pockets and those of their shareholders.

I face the same challenges at Bloom. Many, many customers bargain with us, or try to drive prices down because they think, as a business located in the third-world, we should be priced like a Chinese factory. If I disagree, they take their business elsewhere. This means Bloom suffers. But I stick to my guns and tell these people (politely, of course) to piss off, because a) I am not running a Chinese factory and b) I believe strongly people should be paid fairly for their work, and I am not going to screw Bloom (which belongs to the workers) and c) Bloom invests in quality, which I believe is worth paying for.

At the end of the day, let us not kid ourselves and take the easy, unthinking, way out, of blaming the factory owner and other people. The buck lies squarely with consumers, with people like you and me. Workers all over the world get exploited because we persist in buying things at a bargain, without understanding, or caring to understand, real world prices (the actual cost of a product, if workers were paid fairly) and we persist in buying branded goods, whatever the prices, again, not giving a thought as to how they were made.

It requires effort, certainly, to make an informed judgement about our consumer purchases, but don’t you think it is worth it, to know that a teenage girl and her friends were not kept up 20 hours straight to produce a pair of jeans, for which they were paid pittance, just so you can enjoy wearing a label on your backside? As a consumer you can make your voice heard. Vote with your wallet.

You can read more about the excellent “China Blue” here:
http://ruafrica.rutgers.edu/global_initiative/events/media/cb_synopsis.pdf

Diana Saw
cambodiacalling.blogspot.com

Diana Saw’s last blog post..“You’re not so different, you and I”

12 | Putting a face to “Made in China” « eat like a humming, poop like a jumbo

April 27th, 2008 at 1:44 am

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[...] without poverty” and see what I can pick from Muhammad Yunus’s brain. At the moment, Diana Saw, a Singaporean social entrepreneur is playing a part in alleviating the labour rights problem in [...]

13 | Putting a face on “Made in China” « eat like a humming, poop like a jumbo

April 27th, 2008 at 2:50 am

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[...] without poverty” and see what I can pick from Muhammad Yunus’s brain. At the moment, Diana Saw, a Singaporean social entrepreneur is playing a part in alleviating the labour rights problem in [...]

14 | Curious Cat Economics Blog

April 28th, 2008 at 5:45 am

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Great post. Providing better lives to people is a great aim for a business. And creating self sustaining organizations that allow people to make a living while providing a valuable service is an important method to help.

Curious Cat Economics Blog’s last blog post..Capitalism in China

15 | Giving People the Opportunity to Succeed at Curious Cat Investing and Economics Blog

May 15th, 2008 at 10:46 pm

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[...] Singapore’s Social Entrepreneur Diana Saw makes things Bloom in Cambodia You started Bloom in September 2006, how long was that after your Cambodia holiday which shocked you into action? [...]

16 | lynda soh

August 22nd, 2008 at 10:40 am

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dear diana,
you do not know me , but the first time i heard of you was from William Chua, from SIA…and then The Changiville, which i adore, my fav room is Lavendar room…which i have slept in it twice, first at Changi room ,which is the suite as William named it…..anyway, i just returned from PP and also helping out at Riverkids ProJECT, my heart and soul is still there, tho body is here…..i loved reading your blog…you are my kind of girl….so gutsy and yet so passionate about what you do…..love to meet up with you sometime ,when i am back there again..hopefully in december……when i saw one of your outlet at Russian Market,which i didnt know till now, i could have kicked myself…i was there with my hubby and friends…adoi…..never mind ,i will be back….so till we meet…..soon.
love ,lynda soh

17 | Diana Saw

September 30th, 2008 at 10:36 am

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Dear Lynda,
Many thanks for the kind words. You can contact me directly at dianassy@yahoo.com or call me 092601328 when you are next in Cambodia.
Cheers,
Diana

18 | Singapore Social Entrepreneur Diana Saw makes things BLOOM in | internet marketing tools

June 20th, 2009 at 3:50 am

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[...] Singapore Social Entrepreneur Diana Saw makes things BLOOM in Posted by root 3 days ago (http://entrepreneur.com.sg) Re the comment about china workers you can easily google the minimum wage in china fusion theme by digitalnature powered by wordpress Discuss  |  Bury |  News | Singapore Social Entrepreneur Diana Saw makes things BLOOM in [...]

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We occasionally go off-topic but this blog is mainly about doing business in Singapore & China for start-ups. From ideas & strategy to the nitty-gritty details that will affect your business (but no one tells you about them) we try to help any way we can.

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