Success Story of John Gokongwei


Success Story of John Gokongwei
 "We need blood and sweat and hard work to make the Philippine economy compete globally, for our family businesses to be world class in this era of globalization. We must compete not just with rhetoric and words. We need hard work, perseverance, innovation, courage, and total dedication. We need to slug it out."

He’s known to be a philanthropist. John Gokongwei, Jr. is a prominent Chinese Filipino businessman with holdings in air transportation, banking, food manufacturing, petrochemicals, power generation, publishing, real estate and property development, telecom and textiles. In 2009 Forbes magazine issue, Gokongwei has a networth of $720 million making him the fifth Philippine richest businessman.The entrepreneurial career of John Gokongwei, Jr is one of the most cited in Asia. Once a scion of a wealthy clan, the young Gokongwei overcame the death of his father, the creditor’s seizure of their home, and the loss of the family business to bounce back from adversity. The shock and humiliation so steeled him that a bank’s rejection of his loan application failed to dishearten him in the 1950s, when he was starting his first factory. Nor did his failed attempts to join San Miguel Corporation dim his spirit two decades later.

He was born August 11, 1926 in the scenic Gulangyu isle across Xiamen City, in the Fujian Province of South China. But he spent his childhood and first became an entrepreneur in the resource-poor yet dynamic trading port city of Cebu, where his great- grand father, Pedro Lee Gotiaoco, had risen from poverty to become one of the wealthiest merchants and leaders of the Chinese business community. Later, the reversal of fortunes forced the teen-aged John to peddle soap, thread and candles using his bike. By age 17, he was riding the batel, traveling two to three weeks with products to sell from Cebu to Lucena and then on to Manila. During World War II, the young Gokongwei also sold diamonds in Cebu as a result of the trust placed on him by the older Chinese traders, who were impressed with his initiative.

After the war, Gokongwei setup Amasia, a trading firm that imported textile remnants, fruits, used clothing, and old newspapers and magazines from the U.S., and stocked them on the ground floor of a two-story apartment, above which Gokongwei’s family lived. Next, he moved to Chinatown in Manila to start a corn-milling factory producing glucose and cornstarch. The 30-year old entrepreneur lacked capital, but had good shinyong or “trustworthiness,” so China Bank officials Albino SyCip and Dee K. Chiong granted him a P500,000 clean loan to start him off. Gokongwei has since moved from one venture to another, reinvesting his earnings and working for half a century to build a conglomerate.

The Gokongweis’ flagship company had originally focused on “food, clothing and shelter,” but today it has become the most diversified conglomerate in the Philippines. It controls the biggest snack food producer, Universal Robina Corporation, the URC branded Consumer Foods Group, and the URC Agro- Industrial Group. Robinsons Land Corporation, developer of residential and office condominiums, shopping malls and housing projects, boasts the largest number of hotel rooms (1,140) in the country. The successful Robinsons malls have built over half a million square meters of total leasing space nationwide.
Cebu Pacific Air, which entered the market in 1996 on a strategy of offering “low fare, great value,” has grown to become the second largest domestic carrier in the Philippines.

On March 04, 2003, Gokongwei made a rare appearance to celebrate the launch of Sun Cellular by his Digital Telecommunications Philippines Inc., the largest fixed- wire telephone service provider in Luzon outside Metro Manila.

Gokongwei paid his dues to philanthropy when he established the Gokongwei Brothers Foundation. In 1999 the foundation put up GBF training Center as an advanced technical school for engineering graduates; it also launched the Children’s Library, the multi-media libraries at the Robinsons shopping malls.

Success Story of Andrew Tan


Success Story of Andrew Tan
One of the most inspiring new “rags-to-riches” billionaires of Southeast Asia is Andrew Tan of Alliance Global Group, Inc., the new multi-billion peso holding company for his three major businesses – condominium-developer Megaworld, the world’s biggest brandy producer Emperador Distillers, Inc. and 49 percent shareholdings in the nationwide Philippine franchise of McDonald’s fastfood chain. 

The latest 2007 issue of Forbes magazine lists Tan as the country’s fourth wealthiest billionaire after the Zobel-Ayala clan, Henry Sy of the SM Group and Banco de Oro, and Lucio Tan of Philippine Airlines and Philippine National Bank. Forbes estimated Tan’s personal net worth at $1.1 billion dollars.

It is difficult to believe that authentic “rags-to-riches” sagas built on honest hard work still happen in this modern and complex world. The son of poor immigrants from Fujian province, south China and himself born overseas, Andrew Tan grew up in downtown Manila dreaming of someday owning a store or small business like many of his peers’ families. As a child in Hong Kong, he and his family used to share a tenement apartment with four other families, with only one bathroom and one concrete table for all the tenant families’ cooking stoves. Tan recalls the apartment owner even leased out the corridor to another family.

The young Andrew studied accounting and graduated with honors at the University of the East, often preferring to walk to school instead of riding public jeepneys in order to save money. Engineer Conrado Acedillo, himself a self-made man in the air-conditioning business, recalls that he and the younger Tan used to be employees of taipan Leonardo Ty of Union Hitachi, Ajinomoto and other businesses. He remembers Andrew Tan as one of the most hardworking and conscientious employees of the late Leonardo Ty.
Megaworld and Empire East as biggest condo developers
Both still in their fifties, fellow billionaire and realty developer, Senate president Manuel “Manny” Villar Jr., acknowledges Andrew Tan as the undisputed No. 1 condominium developer in the Philippines, surpassing even the old-rich landed clan of the Zobel-Ayalas.

Starting from a residential condominium in Greenhills, San Juan not so long ago, Megaworld and its sister firm Empire East Holdings, Inc. have become trendsetters in large-scale office, residential and other real estate development projects. Tan made a name for himself by redeveloping a former textile mill complex in Libis, Quezon City into the commercial, office, shopping, entertainment and residential enclave known as Eastwood City today.

After the success of Eastwood City, some of his many other urban renewal mega projects in Metro Manila include the City Place complex in Binondo, Manila; the 25-hectare Newport City complex beside the Villamor Golf Course; and the Manhattan Garden City complex at the Araneta Center, Cubao, Quezon City.
Near the existing Makati financial district and next door to the Fort Bonifacio development of Ayala Land, Inc. and the Jose Yao Campos family’s Greenfields Group, Andrew Tan’s Megaworld is developing the 50-hectare McKinley Hill new township. Megaworld is also a leader in the call centers and BPO businesses in the Philippines.

The world’s No. 1 largest-selling brandy
One of the amazing accomplishments of the self-made businessman is his unexpected success in making his homegrown Emperador Brandy into the world’s largest-selling brandy in terms of total number of bottles sold in 2006. This was revealed in a recent issue of Drinks International, a UK-based publication that covers the world liquor industry. Tan’s firm sold 7.2 million nine-liter cases of brandy last year, and plans to soon expand into Thailand and the vast China market.
For years, Andrew Tan has kept this business operation under the radar from his more established competitors such as Ginebra San Miguel of the San Miguel group and Tanduay Rhum of the Lucio Tan group, both liquor brands which have been in existence since the 19th century and iconic brand names throughout Philippine history.

How did Andrew Tan make Emperador brandy and his newer Generoso brandy top brands, poised to soon even outsell the gin and rum liquors in the vast but highly-competitive Philippine hard drinks market? Alliance Global Group, Inc. president Kingson Sian, a graduate of the University of Chicago, explains that Andrew Tan instructed the advertising firms to undertake a totally innovative campaign which shall focus on the concept of “success.”

Instead of following the other liquor brands with their age-old strategy of producing TV and other ads focusing on sexy women and sexy images, Tan wanted the Emperador brand to connote success and all values associated with it such as hard work, drive, ambition, listening to parents’ advice, professionalism and ambition. It was also Tan’s idea to have people wearing only coats and suits in all TV and other commercials of the Emperador brand.

Unknown to most people, when the 1997 Asian financial crisis hit numerous real estate companies throughout Asia, the efficient, fast-growing yet low-key liquor operations of Emperador brandy helped continuously generate the crucial cash flows which kept the Megaworld and Empire East realty firms afloat. Only with the recent public listing of the stocks of Alliance Global Group, Inc. and its acquisition of Emperador Distillers, Inc., did Tan finally reveal the astounding business success and huge sales of his liquor venture.

Alliance Global Group Inc. said it is targeting consolidated revenues of P25 billion in 2007, which represents a 184 percent jump over the P8.8 billion the same firm posted in 2006. In the first half of 2007, the consolidated revenues of Alliance Global rose 254 percent to P12.4 billion and net income increased to P1.23 billion, or representing a 445 percent increase compared to the previous year.
The position of the Philippines’ No. 1 wealthiest billionaire has been changing in the last three annual listings of Forbes magazine, with tobacco king Lucio Tan once being in first place for years, replaced last year by shopping mall king Henry Sy and now the Zobels gaining the top position this year. Based on this flux in the wealthiest roster and in the fast-changing business landscape of the Philippines, it wouldn’t be surprising if the driven, passionate and visionary self-made taipan Andrew Tan would someday become No. 1, and prove himself the new king of the pack.