- Project Manager
About Good Lab
Good Lab is a leading social innovation consultancy in Hong Kong. We are a think-and-do-tank and focus on the social and public sectors – with a mission to bring different minds and actions together for change. Since 2012, we have been working at the intersection of civil society, NGOs, government, and businesses to foster cross-sector collaboration and facilitate co-creation through design thinking. We design and implement social innovation projects and training programmes to raise awareness and tackle some of the most complex social issues faced by our society nowadays, particularly in the areas of youth empowerment, social and community design, civic engagement, service innovation, environmental sustainability, and social venture incubation.
We are now looking for a Communications Officer to design and drive the story-telling of our social innovation experiences from our growing and exciting portfolio of projects and partnerships.
About Communications Officer
With a broad range of projects and partnerships in our portfolio, we need a bright mind to help us form a clear, consistent narrative to help people understand what we do at Good Lab and communicate our vision. The Communications Officer needs to help establish a unique brand strategy for our projects and plan the right actions, from social media management to multi-media production and offline public events, to get that message across and connect with the target audience. They can be young people just coming out of schools, or businesses looking for impact-making opportunities – it is all very versatile. Liaison with project partners and collaborators is also a key function of the role as the Communications Officer would essentially be sowing the seeds for Good Lab’s longer-term partnerships and even alliances.
Your Role as Communications Officer – Our Story-teller
Requirements
Candidates with less experience may be considered for a Communications Assistant position.
To Applicants: please send your Cover Letter and Resume with current and expected salary to hr@goodlab.hk. Application with missing information will not be considered. Only short-listed candidates will be notified. Data collected will be used for recruitment purpose only and personal data of unsuccessful applicants will be destroyed after 12 months.
William received his undergraduate training in University of Oregon in History, Geography and Archaeology and later on obtained his Master of Science in Geoinformation Science in The Chinese University of Hong Kong. His interdisciplinary academic training allows William to be able to “read” a place from different perspective and to learn about the importance of social interaction between people. He believes the relationship between urban space and people. The nurturing of social relations in a community is the key principle to create a good place.
Prior to joining Good Lab, William was involved in projects of different fields including to conduct community researches with students in tertiary institute, found a local NGO to advocate public space issues and launch a social innovation start-up to advocate urban health and well-being and age-friendly urban design. Along his journey, he holds one belief – make this city a better place.
Charmaine believes in empowerment, in how different stories collide, and how we all can learn from one another. As a keen listener and storyteller, she is fascinated by the stories she heard during her studies, volunteering programmes and placements – the underprivileged and marginalised such as women, families with children with special educational needs, and many more. Since then, she has been dedicated to exploring different narratives and new media, seeking ways to shape Hong Kong into a more humanistic, empowering and visionary society. That is how she dived into social innovation and became passionate about making a difference.
Having graduated from the Chinese University of Hong Kong, Charmaine holds a BSSc in Social Work. As part of her undergraduate studies, she spent an adventurous year in Leiden University in the Netherlands studying International Relations, Children’s Rights and Museum Studies. As a film and exhibition lover, you can often spot her in film festivals and cultural venues. She is also a self-proclaimed professional bathroom singer, who records her singing covers every now and then. With her enthusiasm and cheerfulness, Charmaine aspires to enable different voices to be heard in the society, where she hopes “to inspire and be inspired”.
Good Lab Internship Programme (GLIP) is 8 weeks of immersive learning experience and exposure to social innovation. We are looking for enthusiastic spirits with interest in supporting our social consulting projects, communications, and research development.
Role Description - Consulting Intern
Good Lab is looking for a Consulting Intern to be an integral part of our project teams to:
What We Offer:
Programme Details:
Hear More from Our Past Interns:
Click here for more stories from our past interns!
Requirements:
How to Apply:
For any inquiries, please contact hr@goodlab.hk.
Good Lab Internship Programme (GLIP) is 8 weeks of immersive learning experience and exposure to social innovation. We are looking for enthusiastic spirits with interest in supporting our social consulting projects, communications, and research development.
Role Description - Communications Intern
Good Lab is looking for a Communications Intern to be an integral part of our communications team to:
What We Offer:
Programme Details:
Hear More from Our Past Interns:
Click here for more stories from our past interns!
Requirements:
How to Apply:
For any inquiries, please contact hr@goodlab.hk.
Inspired by the Chinese Taoist classic “Tao Te Ching”, Christy believes the greatest virtue is like water, that it “nourishes everything but contends for nothing”.
Aspiring to build a better society, Christy made a career move after working in the field of Corporate Communications for years. She has been exploring the possibility of social innovation with Good Lab, in particular, advancing the avant-garde approach of community and stakeholder engagement in several flagship projects in public service innovation.
Outside of work, you will find Christy at home and in playgrounds learning from and growing with her kids who enlighten her every day with their creativities. She holds a BA in English for Professional Communication from City University of Hong Kong and a MSc in International and Public Affairs from the University of Hong Kong.
Good Lab Internship Programme (GLIP) is 8 weeks of immersive learning experience and exposure to social innovation. We are looking for enthusiastic spirits with interest in supporting our social consulting projects, communications, and research development.
Role Description -Research Intern
Good Lab is looking for a Research Intern to be an integral part of our research team to:
What We Offer:
Programme Details:
Hear More from Our Past Interns:
Click here for more stories from our past interns!
Requirements:
How to Apply:
For any inquiries, please contact hr@goodlab.hk.
Gumgum believes that social innovation is one of the most powerful remedies to heal the mutilated world from neo-liberalism and power greed. The buzzword is “change” – yet, systemic change and mindset change is a dialectic process, and that is what social innovation is about.
Gumgum is a cross-disciplinary cultural advocate who has accumulated knowledge, built social networks and human connections by working in different fields – as a gender/culture teacher in universities, a radio host at RTHK, a District Councillor in Wanchai, an editor, an arts administrator, a feminist activist – and currently a Director of Hong Kong Children’s Musical Theatre and Gaga Icoop.
Gumgum earned her BFA in Communication Arts (NYIT), an MPhil studying women and enlightenment in Buddhism (CUHK), and a PhD researching on the relationship of community building and coloniality (HKU).
Above all, Gumgum is a singer-songwriter and a fiction writer.
About Good Lab
Good Lab is a leading social innovation consultancy in Hong Kong. We are a think-and-do-tank and focus on the social and public sectors – with a mission to bring different minds and actions together for change. Since 2012, we have been working at the intersection of civil society, NGOs, government, and businesses to foster cross-sector collaboration and facilitate co-creation through design thinking. We design and implement social innovation projects and training programmes to raise awareness and tackle some of the most complex social issues faced by our society nowadays, particularly in the areas of youth empowerment, social and community design, civic engagement, service innovation, environmental sustainability, and social venture incubation.
We are now looking for a Senior Project Manager / Project Manager to lead our growing and exciting array of new projects and partnerships.
About Senior Project Manager / Project Manager
As a social consultant at Good Lab, your typical day can involve the following – making phone calls to community members, dissecting information gathered from public engagement activities you designed and facilitated, researching new trends and perspectives in social innovation, co-creating actionable solutions with stakeholders to address community issues…most probably not sequentially but simultaneously. But that also means you will have the opportunities to get very hands-on in every stage of the projects and that work is rarely boring. Every day here, we as changemakers, learn a little something new about our city of Hong Kong and how it can be better designed and run for the people in it.
We are now looking for someone who already looked up the definition of social innovation and is keen to experiment it here in Hong Kong. Specifically, we want a person who is comfortable with managing small teams to plan and deliver consulting projects in the social and public sectors. This person gets to set the tone of how the project team engages with its stakeholders, ranging from youth and elderly to government agencies, as well as organisational partners. Most importantly, we need this person to be able to articulate Good Lab’s vision for the project and flex creative muscles to implement it with the aim to design innovative, user-centred, and grounded solutions in response to the needs of communities and people.
Your Role as Senior Project Manager / Project Manager – Our Project Leader
Requirements
Candidates with less experience may be considered for a Project Manager position.
To Applicants: please send your Cover Letter and Resume with current and expected salary to hr@goodlab.hk. Application with missing information will not be considered. Only short-listed candidates will be notified. Data collected will be used for recruitment purpose only and personal data of unsuccessful applicants will be destroyed after 12 months.
We are looking for a Project Manager to manage an exciting array of training programmes. The Project Manager (Training) will be working with our Director of Training to design, coordinate and deliver training to a wide spectrum of partners.
Working within a small team, the goals of all our training programmes are to encourage, educate and equip leaders in their respective sectors with tools and processes to create positive change in their organisations and the society at large. You’ll be exposed to a variety of challenging opportunities, arranging bespoke and engaging workshops for private and public sector clients and coordinating insightful dialogues between multiple stakeholders in different communities. This position will allow you to be engaged in the whole process, from developing the proposal, designing the training programme, liaising with the client and then executing it in the field. You’ll get a multifaceted understanding of the complex social issues in Hong Kong and attempt to curate experiences that will create solutions for them.
‘I learned more in my first two months at the Good Lab than I did for a whole year in my last job.’ — quote from a team member.
Work You’ll Do:
Your Role as a Training Manager:
Requirements:
Candidates with less experience may be considered for a Project Officer (Training) position. Interested applicants please send your Cover Letter and Resume with current and expected salary to hr@goodlab.hk. Application with missing information will not be considered. Only short-listed candidates will be notified. Data collected will be used for recruitment purposes only and personal data of unsuccessful applicants will be destroyed after 12 months.
About Good Lab
Good Lab is a leading social innovation consultancy in Hong Kong. We are a think-and-do-tank and focus on the social and public sectors – with a mission to bring different minds and actions together for change. Since 2012, we have been working at the intersection of civil society, NGOs, government, and businesses to foster cross-sector collaboration and facilitate co-creation through design thinking. We design and implement social innovation projects and training programmes to raise awareness and tackle some of the most complex social issues faced by our society nowadays, particularly in the areas of youth empowerment, social and community design, civic engagement, service innovation, environmental sustainability, and social venture incubation.
We are now looking for a Project Officer to support our growing and exciting array of new projects and partnerships.
About Project Officer
As a social consultant at Good Lab, your typical day can involve the following – making phone calls to community members, dissecting information gathered from public engagement activities you designed and facilitated, researching new trends and perspectives in social innovation, co-creating actionable solutions with stakeholders to address community issues…most probably not sequentially but simultaneously. But that also means you will have the opportunities to get very hands on in every stage of the projects and that work is rarely boring. Every day here, we as changemakers, learn a little something new about our city of Hong Kong and how it can be better designed and run for the people in it.
We are now looking for someone who already looked up the definition of social innovation and is keen to experiment it here in Hong Kong. Specifically, we want a person who is comfortable with working within small teams to drive the delivery of consulting projects in the social and public sectors. This person gets to manage and engage with stakeholders, ranging from community members to design professionals, as well as organisational partners. Most importantly, we need this person to be a changemaker with a collaborative mindset who is always willing to flex the creative muscles to design innovative, user-centred, and grounded solutions in response to the needs of communities and people.
Your Role as Project Officer – Our Social Consultant
Requirements
Candidates with less experience may be considered for a Project Assistant position.
To Applicants: please send your Cover Letter and Resume with current and expected salary to hr@goodlab.hk. Application with missing information will not be considered. Only short-listed candidates will be notified. Data collected will be used for recruitment purpose only and personal data of unsuccessful applicants will be destroyed after 12 months.
Hedda began her social impact journey as a volunteer in Sweden tutoring refugee students. Through hearing these young people’s stories of leaving home to seek safety in a foreign country, she learnt that regardless of the different backgrounds we come from, what we’re seeking is the same. Such also, is the beauty of social innovation – although the problems each society faces may be similar, there is a spectrum of possibilities in how we tackle them when we work with different people to co-create solutions. After working in the asylum seeker space for six years, Hedda journeyed on to explore other ways of looking at societal challenges and is currently coordinating the design thinking training program at Good Lab. When she’s not building PowerPoint decks, she’ll be pretending to be a hipster at the local café or trying to convince friends to binge watch a Scandinavian detective series.
Hedda holds a BA (Linguistics) from The University of Melbourne and is currently studying a Masters in Social Impact.
Wing is particularly interested to focus on engaging youth to propel community change. She believes that passion and creativity are crucial for social innovation, and both of which are what young people can fulfil. Having infinite potential, the youth are just waiting for a platform to perform – and their own community is the best place to start with.
Outside of Good Lab, Wing mentors a group of kids at church, who motivate her to keep looking for new solutions and methods to mentor in order to better engage with them and unleash their full learning capacity. She is keen on exploring different communities with young people, building social networks, and creating real impact for Hong Kong.
She received her Bachelor of Arts in Cultural Studies at Lingnan University, where she was inspired to explore and commit to her own community more.
Stephany believes in the value of design, and that a good design that places an emphasis on user needs can change people’s daily experiences and even their lives, bringing positive impacts to the world. That’s why she is passionate about exploring and creating human-centred design, an innovative and strategic problem-solving approach that focuses on the human perspective. To her, that is also the key to overcome social challenges nowadays, which involve various deep-rooted problems and people with different backgrounds and beliefs.
Stephany has developed her career in the non-profit sector since she graduated with a bachelor’s degree in History and Comparative Literature from the University of Hong Kong. Before she joined Good Lab, she worked in various non-profit organisations across the fields of education and design promotion.
Stephany enjoys learning and discovering new things in her leisure time, from travelling to meeting a new friend, and from watching a great movie to learning a new language.
Douglas is an intercultural communicator. Graduated from the School of Communication at Hong Kong Baptist University, he loves igniting unusual social initiatives with people across cultures and sectors – be it creating colourful balloon-arts with deaf and hearing youths, or formulating mind-blowing community projects with experts and villagers.
Douglas is a purpose globetrotter. Exploring offbeat places which he cannot even type without a spellchecker, he treasures the moments interacting with locals more than chilling out on the beach with a beer (actually, he enjoys that quite a bit too). From kebab vendors to fellow train passengers, he believes every single person he has connected with will give him some inspirations.
Douglas is a long-distance runner. He puts one foot in front of the other for hours on end. It seems purposeless and boring, but he learns most from it – believe in dreams, never give up, and things will turn out for the best.
“Everything you can imagine is real.”
Lydia finds social innovation fascinating – as it often involves collaboration among the most unusual suspects, turning the unthinkable into reality. She reckons such synergy would tap into resources of different sectors and lead to fresh solutions to the city’s, as well as the world’s many socio-political deadlocks.
She likes to think of her career as a zig-zag journey of challenge. Prior to joining Good Lab, she was a reporter and TV producer at a fast-paced newsroom for about two years. There she worked on feature stories about a myriad of current affairs, from civil society’s utilisation of vacant spaces to low-income families with children with special learning needs. And before that, for her first job out of school, she worked for the government as an officer for a taste of public administration.
Since her years at university, Lydia has taken an interest in urbanism and the built environment. She is curious about the interplay between urban landscapes, communities, and other key actors in the city-or essentially: what does it take to create interesting cities and more importantly, make her home Hong Kong a more livable city through making a difference on local urban spaces? In 2016, she co-founded with her friends at The University of Hong Kong the “Future City Summit”-now an annual convention that gathers local and regional changemakers for conversations on making cities better.
Outside of work, Lydia enjoys taking strolls in the streets of Hong Kong. She also reads a lot of novels and short stories. And above all, she is a food lover so do not hesitate to ask her for restaurant recommendations.
Lydia holds a bachelor’s degree in Journalism from The University of Hong Kong, majoring in both Journalism and Politics & Public Administration.
Etienne, with her training in History at Lingnan University, regards innovation as crucial in all time – as we witness the failure of the old fashioned and the success of the innovators throughout the course of history. She believes social innovation can transform the society with a positive impact through collaborations and dialogues in the communities, and everyone can take initiatives to be a changemaker while influencing each other. She is also concerned about a range of social problems, particularly human rights and environmental issues.
Before joining Good Lab, Etienne developed her career in the non-profit sector of Hong Kong and had spent two years working at a retail business in London. She enjoys travelling, going to the theatre and gym for leisure.
With a sociological mindset developed during his undergraduate study at the University of Hong Kong, Duncan is never satisfied with the “status quo” and any “cliché” solutions to the current problems. Rather, he is keen to explore possibilities and to discover unconventional outcomes.
Duncan believes the best way to understand a community is to walk into it and talk to the people there. So, please talk to him when you see him around! His community-focused journey started from his 10-year-long commitment to volunteering for mentally challenged persons since his secondary school years. He is also a member of the Youth Development Commission, providing youth empowerment advice to the government.
Prior to joining Good Lab, Duncan worked as an evidence-based researcher on various social issues. It is his aim to extend his experience from collecting facts and views from the crowds to providing insightful and user-centric solutions for the community.
Alexa believes “human values are catalysts of social innovation”. To her, users’ needs are the “why”, and co-creation with users are the “how”, for social solutions.
To answer these “why’s” and “how’s”, Alexa dedicates her 9 to 6 life to meeting and working with people from everywhere – youth centres on the Hong Kong Island, universities in Kowloon, rural villages in New Territories – to unleash their imagination of their communities.
Prior to joining Good Lab, Alexa delivered a series of educational programmes for local primary schools and community centres, strengthened the literacy development of more than 1,200 students from low-income families
Outside of work, you will find Alexa in libraries, coffee shops or hiking trails. She holds a BSc in Economics from the University of East Anglia and a MSc in Development Management from the London School of Economics and Political Science.
Elizabeth is a believer in humanity and equality. As a graphic designer, social activist, scuba diver and a podcast junkie, she is always hungry for knowledge and wisdom in life. She believes in the goodness of people and that a well-lived life comes down to being authentic. She is most fulfilled when channeling her passion into advocating social change and making the world a better place for everyone.
Having dipped her hands in the fields of social advocacy at numerous NGOs, social enterprises, advertising and design agencies, Elizabeth dedicates her career to curating cross-sector campaigns for social justice and environmental movements. She is also skilled in strategising public and stakeholder engagement initiatives and empowering communities through awareness-building.
She received her BaH of Arts in Communication & Graphic Design from the University of Leeds. Her degree programme gave her unique perspectives in understanding the cultural texture of society, and equipped her with a creative spirit that touches everything she does.
Warren believes that everyone can be a changemaker and collaboration is fundamental to the creation of lasting social impact and a positive vibe in our community.
Since joining Good Lab in 2017, Warren has been overseeing the organisation’s diverse portfolio of social and public sector innovation projects to blend stakeholder engagement with the co-creation of user-centric solutions. He has also been instrumental in forging new cross-sector partnerships between the civil society, non-governmental organisations and government agencies to strategise and implement large-scale innovation projects through design thinking. In addition, Warren has led numerous start-up incubation programmes and training to inspire and coach young changemakers at universities and in local communities.
Warren is committed to public services and currently serves as a member of the Advisory Committee on Enhancing Self-Reliance Through District Partnership Programme under the Home Affairs Department. The programme aims to promote sustainable poverty prevention and alleviation efforts to strengthen the self-reliance of socially disadvantaged groups through seed grants and advisory for social enterprises in Hong Kong.
Prior to joining Good Lab, Warren was a management consultant specialised in corporate strategy and operations with substantial international experiences in the UK, US, and across Asia. He holds a bachelor’s degree in Economics from UCL and is a LUMA Institute certified practitioner of human-centred design as well as a certified Project Management Professional (PMP).
Besides social innovation, Warren is passionate about performing arts with a keen interest in a cappella music and musical theatre. He loves performing on stage and has been involved in various public concerts and musical productions in Hong Kong and the Greater Bay Area.
Kelvin swims in innovation and loves challenging the status quo to create a better tomorrow. He got his start by setting up FoodCycle, a non-profit that is now in 40 locations in the UK. He’s run a small foundation that incubates start-up innovators and continues to mentor social innovators. He strives to be a constant learner, bringing the knowledge to others in the sector. However, he admits right now he learns most from his two years old daughter, who constantly ‘challenges the status quo’ herself, and reminds him to always be seeking and asking questions. He is married, with a daughter and 3 bicycles, and rides to work when he can.
Kelvin holds a BaH of History from Queen’s University, Canada, and a MSc in International Development from the School of Oriental and African Studies in London, but admits that a lot of his knowledge has been learnt ‘on the go’. He is an experienced public speaker and trainer, having had 15 years’ experience speaking very loudly as an indoor spinning instructor. He’s spoken internationally on a variety of topics including youth development, innovation and social entrepreneurship and currently advises several non-profits in Hong Kong.
Ada has led a varied career as solicitor, educator, social innovator and civil society figure. She is a staunch advocate of social innovation, creative education and cultural development.
Ada founded the Hong Kong Institute of Contemporary Culture (HKICC), a unique non-profit cultural organisation of which the mission is advocating education innovation and a creative civil society. Among other projects, HKICC founded in 2006 the HKICC Lee Shau Kee School of Creativity, a future-looking senior secondary school dedicated to nurturing creative and artistic talents.
In 2010, Ada founded the Make A Difference (MaD) initiative, a regional collaborative platform — where one explores creativity for good, meet cross-disciplinary changemakers and where different sectors synergise for innovative solutions to social challenges. In 2012, she founded Good Lab, which became an important hub where minds and actions meet in the social innovation ecosystem. Good Lab is also a cross-sector capacity builder and currently, consultancy in its new phase, to bring about innovative solutions for a more community-oriented and equitable Hong Kong.
Invited by the Mayor of Seoul, Mr Park Won-soon, Ada has been serving as a member of his “Advisory Group for Seoul Innovation” together with social innovation leaders around the world since 2016.
Ada was an elected member of the Urban Council and Wan Chai District Council between 1995 and 2008 with the final four years as Chairperson of the Wan Chai District Council. Ada has also facilitated the setting-up and development of key arts education organisations and social enterprises in the past 20 years. In addition to the above, she is Founder of the Hong Kong Children’s Musical Theatre, Vice Convenor of the Social Enterprise Summit, Director of Big Silver Community and Social Careers, and one of the founding members of Dialogue in the Dark (Hong Kong). At Ednovators, where she leads as Director, Ada is the chief designer and facilitator of a teachers innovation programme called Innopower. The programme is funded by the Hong Kong Jockey Club Charities Trust with Ednovators as curator and partner.
She received her BA (Hons) from Pomona College, California USA, and M Ed from the University of Hong Kong. She is an Honorary Fellow of the Hong Kong Baptist University, Lingnan University and The Education University of Hong Kong respectively.
Leaving social issues to nonprofits or the government alone is not working anymore. Francis believes a hybrid, a middle ground is needed. His goal is to redefine business success and bring together more people to re-imagine cities and pursue big dreams to make a difference to communities.
Francis is an entrepreneur and venture philanthropist. He is the Founder and CEO of Social Ventures Hong Kong (SVhk), a venture philanthropic organisation, and co-founded several Hong Kong social enterprises, including Green Monday, RunOurCity and Playtao Foreverland. He currently serves as a Board Member of the Asia Venture Philanthropy Network. He has also served as a visiting university lecturer on social entrepreneurship and innovation. He has also delivered talks at events hosted by TEDxYouth@HongKong, the Harvard Club Hong Kong, USAID, Social Enterprise Summit, the Asia Future Enterprise Forum and UK Trade & Investment.
Francis was recognised as The Purpose Economy’s 100 Asia Pioneers in 2014, a Young Global Leader of the World Economic Forum in 2012 and chosen as one of Hong Kong’s Ten Outstanding Young Persons in 2011.
Other than all the contributions he has made in the social innovation sector, he is also an avid marathoner. Francis completed The North Pole Marathon in 2013 and the 250-km Gobi March of the 4 Deserts race series in 2012.
Today, the world is facing complex problems – our economic, social and legal systems, hindered by dated practices and infrastructure, can hardly catch up with the rapid changes brought by technological and scientific advancements. This results in serious issues such as global warming, poverty, social exclusion, and the list goes on. Patrick, however, believes there must be another way to work towards a more responsible, sustainable and inclusive way of living.
Patrick never shies away from challenges in life. Rather, he enjoys tackling some of the seemingly unsolvable social issues and achieves genuine impact at scale. After selling his flexible packaging business, he started a new chapter in life in social entrepreneurship, paying particular care to the disadvantaged groups in the community. In 2009, he brought the world-renowned Dialogue in the Dark (Hong Kong) to Hong Kong – harnessing the transformative power of social innovations, Dialogue in the Dark (Hong Kong) gained an unprecedented success and achieved financial sustainability without donations and government funding. In 2011, he founded Water Drops Foundation to promote social innovation for elderly services. In 2012, he established the Jade Club, a social enterprise specialised in elderly programmes with a sustainable business model. Patrick is also one of the founding directors of Hong Kong Social Entrepreneurship Forum, a leading social entrepreneurship platform in Hong Kong.
In his spare time, Patrick enjoys reading, interacting with people and nurturing young talents.
Today’s biggest social innovation challenge is reinventing capitalism. Human civilisation, Mother Earth and future generations depend on its success. That is why KK has devoted his career to help build the B Corp movement to accelerate capitalism’s transformation.
After retiring from senior executive posts, KK changed his field to social innovation and soon became one of the most renowned in the sector. In 2012, he founded Education for Good with the social cause to “inspire everyone to become a changemaker and enable every business to become a social business”. Providing training programmes and other support, the institution is dedicated to promoting social entrepreneurship and social innovation. He is also the Co-Founder of Dialogue in the Dark (Hong Kong). He demonstrates a business success that a social enterprise can survive and prosper without subsidies.
Apart from that, KK has been actively working on social entrepreneurship related publications. He shared stroies of his innovation endeavour as well as his corporate management experience including 《新愚公移山:十個社會企業創業者的故事》(2007), Everyday Legends: Stories of 20 Great UK Social Entrepreneurs《社會企業妙點子》(2008) and《公益創業: 青年創業與中年轉業的新選擇》. He has been the Founding Editor of the biweekly Social Entrepreneurs Newsletter published electronically since June 2007.
Amidst his busy schedule, he always manages to reclaim mental space to play golf and tennis regularly. He also enjoys taking long breaks in New Zealand, travelling on his boat to remote areas. The peace and tranquility is what he needs to stay sane and sober.
Innovation is the reconciliation of opposing forces. In a city full of dilemmas, Vincent believes social innovation is the only way out, and “solution journalism” is what he is passionately advocating for.
He founded Solution-On-Wheels, a social enterprise promoting solution journalism in Asia, to explore and analyse solutions in the news to solve complex, often intractable, social issues. He aspires to create a positive mindset shift for news professionals – to present social issues through a “solution frame” rather than a “problem frame”, focusing on the practical and human elements of social innovation to allow some of the most divisive views to co-exist in harmony, facilitating constructive dialogues in the community.
Vincent has been trained to think creatively and critically ever since he was young, and he is dedicated to galvanising public, corporate and non-profit partners with the spirit of social innovation. He started his career at Ogilvy & Mather Advertising, and joined the HKSAR Government until 2000. As Administrative Officer, he worked on issues around town planning and social welfare, and had a deep understanding of contending interests across sectors.
Vincent was the Director of Strategic Planning at Hong Kong Commercial Broadcasting Company. He is currently hosting the radio programme “Our Way Out” on Commercial Radio One and television programme “Open Mind” on Open TV. His book, Macro-creativity, was recognised as “Hong Kong Good Book” in 2005, followed by the launch of The Transformation of Hong Kong in 2012. Vincent received his MBA from the University of Cambridge and an LL.B. from the University of London.
“If technology continues along its present course, ignoring the needs of the poor and showering benefits upon the rich, the poor will sooner or later rebel against the tyranny of technology and turn to irrational and violent remedies.” That was written in 1997 by scientist and thinker Freeman Dyson. It accords with Kim’s own reflections on growing up in the UK and US and then living and working in Hong Kong through 40 years, but it raises the question of whether it is possible to divert the torrent of technology driven growth into paths that enrich and give hope to societies? The answer to that lies in innovation: innovation not in technology but in the ways we work together in society. Here again Dyson, a favourite writer, has thoughts to share: “In almost all the varied walks of life, amateurs have more freedom to experiment and innovate. The fraction of the population who are amateurs is a good measure of the freedom of a society”. So, one does not need to be a professional social innovator, it is a role that any of us can play.
Kim has worked as a barman, boatbuilder, factory-hand, warehouseman and archaeologist in the UK before coming to Hong Kong in 1980 and working for 37 years as a civil servant, ending his career running the Efficiency Unit and helping to set up the Social Innovation and Entrepreneur Development Fund. Now retired, he continues to take interest in how cities and societies work and how organizations share knowledge, listen and keep learning. He reads a lot, mostly historical studies and detective fiction, and paints miniature soldiers.
Elsie has extensive experience both as a corporate executive and a management consultant. She has worked for the Asia office of !What If? Innovation Company (now a part of Accenture), based in Shanghai. Specialising in innovation management, innovation capability building through Design Thinking, as well as organisation transformation strategy, she has led many high impact training workshops for the leaders from Fortune 500 companies across Europe and Asia. She has also conducted training sessions in Design Thinking for corporate clients and the non-profit sector in Hong Kong and mainland China.
During her time with ?What If!, Elsie was inspired by the pro bono work done by her colleagues at the London office, which involved applying Design Thinking in creating innovative solutions to solve female circumcision issues in Africa. Understanding the potential impact of social innovation beyond the paradigm of social welfare, Elsie decided to understand more about social entrepreneurship and social innovation by pursuing her doctoral degree in this subject.
Before starting her consulting career, Elsie has worked for Coca-Cola China as the deputy head of the Public Affairs & Communications function. With her passion for teaching, she is now teaching at CUHK Business School. Subjects she teaches include Strategic Management, Social Entrepreneurship and Impact Investment, Design Thinking, and CSR. Meanwhile, she also runs an acceleration program to groom young generation social entrepreneurs in Hong Kong.
Elsie holds an MBA from the Judge Business School, University of Cambridge, UK. She has received a doctoral degree from Grenoble School of Management, France. As a half Thai who has spent her childhood in different countries, Elsie enjoys cross-cultural experience and has worked in Shanghai, London and briefly Athens. As a former drummer in a rock band, in addition to music, Elsie loves listening to podcasts (especially true crime genre) and leads discussion groups among amateur sleuths on thought-provoking (and sometime skin crawling) topics.
Capitalistic business, a profit-making practice, may once have been viewed as unrelated to social improvement. But today, it becomes a growing collective force to tackle some of the most pressing social issues. Erwin believes that, with education and technology innovations, capitalism can be redefined and revitalised to offset economic, environmental and social inequality. For over thirty years, he has been a driving force in advocating changes in education and shaping the social enterprise ecosystem.
His true calling is, in particular, to cultivate the youth with the spirit of entrepreneurship and to actively seek out change. As Associate Professor and Senior Advisor at The Hong Kong University of Science and Technology, he teaches young people how to put innovation into practice; as the Vice-Chairman of Junior Achievement Hong Kong, he helps incubate the next generation of entrepreneurial talents. He also co-founded DreamStarter, a platform providing out-of-school experiences for youth to initiate their own dream projects. There, he nurtures school students to develop a positive mindset and a philanthropic spirit to serve the community via crowdfunding and crowdsourcing support.
Being a curious cat with endless energy, if he is not working on something new, he would likely be looking for new places to visit, new business model to try out, new gadget UX to explore. As the Chairman of VR Educate Ltd., he is dedicated to promoting VR eLearning in schools. To alleviate poverty, he founded Agent of Change Foundation, aiming to provide low-price high-quality daily necessities to the underprivileged. In the charity sector, he saw a pressing need for innovation in volunteerism and therefore, by serving as the Chairman of Social Career, he encourages the public to get involved in social causes by making use of information technology. On top of that, Erwin sits in various companies and Government advisory committees.