Wednesday, November 29, 2023

TP Sharing Session - Understanding Hydrocarbon Phase Envelopes & How they affect Upstream Process & Operations (28 Nov 2023, MTeams): Be the Change.

 


Alhamdulillah, today I was granted the opportunity to conduct a Knowledge sharing session, on Phase Behavior.


The topic of hydrocarbon phase envelopes are one of the most important underlying concepts that are the bread and butter of upstream process engineering. Once I understood this concept, a lot of operational problems started to make more sense, seeing them through a new lens. Wet gas, crude stabilization, sampling problems, CV flashing, PVT fluid characterization - suddenly, they began to click!


But throughout the years, I realized that although there were lots of training materials, classroom sessions and textbooks on the subject, I've never really found many resources that fleshed out the topic from the perspective of practical application in day-to-day operational challenges. For many of us, we learnt the concept through trial and error (mostly error), and we didn't really understand the "big picture" of how they were related. I've always thought, wouldn't it be nice if we had training material that linked these concepts together in our daily work? 


Then it dawned on me: Create our own content lah, bro!

 

Now that I'm in a position of experience, have some knowledge and a platform to share, might as well seize the opportunity: Stop whining, step up & be the change we want to see. To carve out the kind of content that we wished we learnt back in our early years and boost the development of those around us. 


I challenged myself to go one step further: Simplify the concepts and make it easy enough so that even non-engineers (like HR or Finance) could also understand and appreciate. Just as Albert Einstein used to say, "you do not really understand something, unless you can explain it to your grandmother"


The session went a bit over time, at 2.5 hours, but Alhamdulillah we got an overwhelmingly positive participation, with over 150 participants joining the session.


Hope the participants found it beneficial. May Allah make it a source of barakah and benefit for others.

Tuesday, November 28, 2023

๐Ÿ›ก️ Family: The Fortified Shield - Weekend Seminar by The Straight Path (TSP) #thestraightpathconvention 25-26 November 2023, The Club, Bukit Utama



๐Ÿ’ŽINSPIRING GEMS & HIGHLIGHTS

Course Goals : to ignite communities that benefit humanity


๐Ÿ”ญ Building the Righteous Family the Ideal Way. Where do we begin? What’s the first step to building a house? 

Most people would say the first thing is to lay the foundations. Some might talk about raising the pillars. But the first step starts before that: we need a blueprint. What kind of house do you want to build? 

Likewise: You need a VISION that inspires you!

Starting a family begins with having a picture in your head of the world you wish to see, on the day you are on your deathbed.


๐Ÿ’– Marriage is barakah - but it needs a society that raises mature boys and girls


๐ŸŽฏ 5 Core Objectives of Raising a Righteous Family 


1. Follow Allah’s command (an ibadah)

2. Following the sunnah of the Prophet ๏ทบ

3. Having Children - as a sadaqatul jariah (continuous charity) to benefit the ummah and humanity in the long term

4. To help us stay away from Haram: Marriage is the means to protect our honor and chastity

5. Assisting One Another: work together and one another upon goodness and righteousness. 


๐Ÿ› ️ It all boils down to one simple objective: Building Jannah, TOGETHER. Always keep this Goal in mind!


๐Ÿซ The first educational institution a human being will go through is their PARENTS. Listen up, young people: your parents aren’t old school, they are ORIGINAL school 


๐Ÿ‘‚๐ŸผPractice more LISTENING in the household: Acknowledge each other’s feelings, and provide that psychological safety.

A tightly knit family is one that enjoys emotional security inside, to one another. 


๐ŸŽ Appreciation and Gratitude - put in the effort to express gestures of genuine gratitude to one another. You may not recognize this but it has a HUGE impact.


๐Ÿ”ฅ Resolving conflicts - Some pointers:


1. YOU need to take the first step. Put ego aside! Remember your purpose in life: You are reconciling for the Sake of Pleasing Allah - not for the sake of that person. 

2. Conflict demands patience, wisdom and emotional maturity - Be methodical, be systematic. Use that prefrontal cortex, don’t allow your emotions to compromise your good judgment

3. Focus on the core of the problem, not just attacking the symptoms

4. Don’t forget the role that SHAITAN plays, behind the scenes: planting seeds of hatred and enmity, and induces waswas - overthinking, exaggeration, to paralyze you from taking action


๐Ÿชœ Raising a righteous family might seem like a steep hill to climb. Focus on PROGRESS, not perfection. Allah wants to see you taking those baby steps. When you put in a little bit of effort, Allah will open doors of barakah (blessings) for you!

Wednesday, November 22, 2023

SKG16.3 Community of Practice (COP) Final Gathering 2023

 



It was our turn as Sarawak (Gas) Assets region as tuan rumah, to host the final gathering of the year for our Community of Practice for Process Technology fraternity.

I have always supported the idea of COP gatherings in professional circles: By practitioners, for practitioners.
It's a platform to share our lessons learnt, best practices, successes, challenging each other and sparking ideas within the fraternity to try out new approaches, rethink our existing practices, and explore new methods and ideas. It's particularly inspiring when the community makes the time and shows courage to step up and actualize this - as we witnessed in this gathering.

We received excellent participation by all regions and center from IVA and OE, with process technical paper sharing from all regions PMA, SBA, and SKA covering wide range of interesting and practical topics from Dynamic simulation for process safety assurance, and meeting customer demand pipeline survival time during TA, Condensate Recovery system technology selection, Cooling System challenges, and Gas Turbine Generator (GTG) Optimization philosophy.

As the host and organizers, our team did a few little tweaks to enhance the overall experience for presenters and attendees alike to increase the engagement and enthusiasm throughout the learning experience:
 
1. Feedback forms for every presenter - we opened up feedback channels by making customized feedback forms for every presenter, to share their ratings and appreciative/constructive feedback. This allows audiences to play an active role to share their thoughts, for participants to gauge their performance for continuous improvement, and add a dash of competitiveness between presenters.

2. Awards - We introduced three categories of awards: Best paper presentation (by judges), the People's Choice Award (for the highest rated paper, as rated by the attendees in the feedback forms), and Best Participant (for active participants asking questions and contributing to others)

3. Managers as Emcee - To demonstrate our passionate commitment to the event and go the extra mile as hosts, the two process managers from Sarawak (myself & Ee) became the Emcees throughout the event.

4. Special tokens ☕ - As long-term memoirs, we provided custom-made mugs for presenters, game winners, and judges. (Man, wish I had one of those ๐Ÿคค)

Really proud of the team for the successful event. Although we are only a small fraternity of 30-plus - among the smallest in the organization - the community is so active that we achieved among the top performing COP's in the whole PETRONAS.
With communities like these, it builds a solid foundation for us to collectively build sustainable competency development platform: to help each other grow, constantly grooming new experts without having to depend on specific individuals.

Keep up the awesome work! ❤️

Sunday, November 19, 2023

๐Ÿ‘ž Inside the mind of a righteous man with a big heart: The story of imam An-Nawawi's stolen slippers




One time, Imam An-Nawawi finally saved up enough money to buy new slippers and wore them to the masjid. Upon leaving after prayers, he couldn't find his them. 

He kept searching and searching... Until he saw another man walking off with his slippers. 


He walked up to man. Noticing imam An-Nawawi going after him, the man picked up the pace and walked away faster. Imam An-Nawawi began walking faster to catch up with him. The man began running.

Imam An-Nawawi said out loud, "ู‚ู„ ู‚ุจู„ุช" - Say, "I accept!"

The man ran even faster, and imam An-Nawawi ran as fast as he could, until he could no longer catch up.. And finally, the man got away with the slippers. 


The next day, Imam An-Nawawi looked visibly upset and sad. When his students saw his condition, they consoled him, telling him "Ya Shaykh, it's okay we will get you new slippers."


He said, "I am not sad because of the slippers.

I am upset because I intended to give it to him as a gift, and all I wanted was for him to say "I accept". 


So that on the day of judgment, it's counted as a gift between me and him, in the sight of Allah."

(Note: it was the Fiqh view of Imam An-Nawawi in hadiah (gift) - that it's only counted as a gift if they declared they received it from you.)


So why was he upset? 


"Now I'm really sad, because Allah will question him on the day of judgment (because of stealing my slippers), and I don't want to be a means of difficulty for my brother on that Day."


SubhanAllah. Amazing. Truly, a righteous man with a big heart.

Wednesday, November 15, 2023

Tabletop Emergency Tier 3 Exercise, “Ex- Kidurong 2” Magherita Plaza Bintulu, from 14-15 Nov 2023, joint organized by PETRONAS and Majlis Keselamatan Negara (MKN)

 



Alhamdulillah, had the privilege of representing PETRONAS, role-playing as Incident Commander (IC) for our Emergency Management Team (EMT) on duty throughout this Table Top exercise roleplaying for the exercise. The event participated by all major government agencies in Bintulu/ Sarawak who are equally responsible for emergency response & preparedness, simulating a crisis Situation under Arahan MKN No. 18 (PENGURUSAN DAN PENGENDALIAN KRISIS KEGANASAN, @ Act Terrorism).


When the word "Table Top Exercise" was mentioned, I immediately got the impression that it was like the Dungeons and Dragons (D&D) table-top Role Playing Game, where a Dungeon Master played the role of churning out scenarios and storylines and triggering the players, what will they do in the situation. Turns out, that's exactly what it is ๐Ÿ˜‚. 

Tuan Alif from MKN was our Dungeon Master, trigger "what to do" when different situations arise. And wow, this guy is good. He really put us under PRESSURE, man!


It was an awesome learning experience for me, for our organization, for all stakeholders on the effectiveness of our response coordination, revealing a lot of learning opportunities and rooms for improvement. 


Here are three of my big lessons learnt from the exercise: 


1. Tactical Communication


During a crisis situation, EVERYONE wants updates: leadership team at the center, next of kin, mainstream media, and pretty much anyone who wants a shot at "going viral" on social media. Who should you respond to? HOW should you respond? 

It's important to know WHO are your primary recipients of information. By extension: Everyone else is irrelevant. Learn to filter the noise, know how to respond respectfully, and stay focused.


Also, turns out that what you DON'T say is sometimes just as important as what you DO say. 

Keep communications simple, and stick to the facts, without adding opinions, speculation or story. And, as much as it is important to convey as much information as possible, it's important to keep only facts which are relevant to the stakeholders around you, so that they know exactly how to respond. 


2. Have your go-to SOP References ready - and a great team to back you up

Having comprehensive SOPs really gave us the confidence to make decisions as a coordinated team. Yes, real life situations almost always call for improvisations - but we always have foundational fall-back plans, and correct ourselves as we go.


3. Remain Calm

Finally and most importantly: Remain calm. All the above can be completely thrown out of the window if we are emotionally compromised. 

This was "just" a table top exercise, but boy, was that stressful! Being put on the spotlight: "okay, IC - now the situation has escalated to so-and-so. What will you do? How will you respond? Who will you contact?"

The key to making sure we make rational, good decisions, is to keep our emotions in check so we can think straight. Be firm, bue decisive, but keep it steady. When you're playing the role of a leader, as IC, this emotional stability is important to inspire OTHERS around us to also keep steady. 

But of course, it's easier said than done. I'm grateful for those who gave positive feedback of how well I did and how calm I was. Though, truth be told, i was absolutely exploding with panic deep inside LoL. 

Truthful indeed are the words of our Prophet ๏ทบ who said, "true strength isn't in overcoming others by physical strength. True strength is controlling ourselves when we are in a state of anger" (Al-Bukhari)

Friday, November 10, 2023

Managerial Excellence (ME) Cohort 7 FINALE: 9th November 2023, Park Royal Collections, KL

 


Alhamdulillah it was great meeting everyone again, especially my awesome team members of Group 10: Amplifiers @ team RED ๐Ÿ”ด (yes, we came color-synchronized, and even did a WhatsApp poll to vote the color ๐Ÿ˜‚). 


Unfortunately, only half of our Amplifiers could make it to the finale. But despite the manpower shortage, the team really pulled our weight for the final presentation. Even though we had the least team members, the team delivered a phenomenal and explosive presentation that drove us to win the Outstanding Presentation Team Award. You guys are the best! ๐Ÿ‘๐Ÿผ❤️


Coming into the finale, I was immediately greeted by many classmates who claiming - and 100% confident - that I was going to be awarded "Best participant".


In the end, no, I didn't win the award (that honor went to my good friends Adzmin and Azuria), but it was very touching and heartwarming to know that many of my colleagues were rooting for me and showing so much appreciation. 

A few of our colleagues outright vented their frustration and wanted to protest the result ๐Ÿคฃ


Perhaps my workplace colleagues and subordinates rarely see this side of me, but in every training course and engagement I attend, I always make it a commitment to show up 100%, give it my best to create an exciting learning environment, uplift and get to know others around me, get relentlessly curious by asking lots of questions, sharing and contributing whatever knowledge I can from the books I read, and of course, don't hold back on my silly humor. (Or at least, my lousy attempts at humor, anyway ๐Ÿคฃ). I was inspired by another junior colleague many years ago: This was his attitude during trainings and I always look forward to attend trainings with him. Every time I attend trainings with him, he just elevates the whole learning experience and leaves a mark. 

Prophet Muhammad ๏ทบ said, "never belittle or consider insignificant any good deeds that you do, even if it is to meet your brother with a cheerful face" (Muslim) 


The finale marks the end of a 4-month development journey for us managers. And what a great learning and networking experience it's been! A lot of the stuff in there really elevated my perspective in leadership, especially the concepts of Multipliers vs. Diminishers. It really challenged the "traditional" manager mindset, providing a total paradigm shift to our long-term goals as leaders: Multiplying others. And about being more mindful of Accidental Diminishers: how our actions might accidentally "diminish" those around us, despite our "good intentions"!


But of course, it doesn't stop here. In fact, if anything, it STARTS here. ME may have ended, but our leadership journey has just begun. And knowledge is only "information" until we act upon it. 


I end this post with the closing words in our team presentation:

It’s time to walk the talk, step up and BE the MULTIPLIERS that PETRONAS needs.

Thursday, November 02, 2023

Knowledge Sharing & Being the Change we want to see: How Adib made a huge positive impact on me and my career

 



Whoa.. has it really been 15 years? 


This week is Adib's last day at PCSB Sarawak Assets (SKA), and will be continuing his career in KL.

Adib & I, we go way back - We both reported duty the same year in 2008 here in Miri, formerly known as SKO. 


Adib has played a very important role and had a huge impact to my career, and as a tribute to him, I’d like to share how he influenced my thinking, attitude, and aspirations. 


1. Knowledge Sharing Role Model 


Although he joined later, Adib actually got promoted to senior engineer before me. But he doesn’t keep the knowledge to himself - he puts in the effort to go the extra mile in upskilling and teaching others. 


And I can clearly remember the defining moment:

The year is 2016. I was desparate, and my self-esteem was at an all-time low. Still a junior engineer after 8 years, I was severely demotivated from my consistently poor performance in my ACD technical competency, as I was witnesssing my peers - and even juniors - getting promoted to managers and TPs. At that point, the Capability teams were about to revise the competency ruler again which would set my progress back even further, unless I made a progression in this one final assessment. This assessment in March 2016 would be the turning point that would either make or break my career. 


Seeing my troubled circumstances, Adib, recently promoted to senior, reached out to me and offered: why not, let’s spend this Saturday for a coaching and ACD? I can guide you in some of the basic concepts. Perhaps that would help.


We spent the entire day on a Saturday - from morning to evening - doing thorough coaching and study group. We covered topics like phase envelope, crude stabilization, separator adequacy, Stoke’s Law.


Thanks to his weekend coaching, I scored the best ACD result I've ever received. It gave me such a strong understanding on process engineering that it grounded my fundamentals the helped in so many other aspects, that eventually I ended up teaching these subjects to others, conducting classes of my own, and even developing in-house engineering tools.


In that one day, this guy, more than any other TP or SME at that point, had inspired me that teaching others, sharing knowledge, it can make a whole world of difference to someone's career and life. He didn't have a rank or authority. Neither did he get any credit or reward. 


All it takes is sincere drive and passion to develop others.

This is the legacy I want to leave behind: One that helps develop and amplify others around me, long after I leave. 


He inspired me to constantly step up my game to carve out opportunities to share knowledge and teach others, and as I stepped into the Managerial role, drive the team to conduct knowledge sharing sessions and platform for the engineers to help and develop each other.  


Whatever good that comes from these sessions, this is definitely his legacy. The Prophet ๏ทบ said, “Whoever introduces a good practice that is followed, he will receive its reward and a reward equivalent to that of those who follow it, without that detracting from their reward in their slightest.” (Ibn Majah)


“When a person dies, all of his deeds are cut off except for three: a continuous charity, knowledge that is benefitted from, and a righteous child who supplicates for him” (Muslim)


 


2. Be change that we want to see: The seniors and TP's we've never had


Have you ever heard of, or been in a toxic work environment where the seniors trash the juniors, because that’s how they were treated by THEIR seniors. They perpetuate the toxic cycle, with the excuse that “that’s how I was treated by MY seniors, and I survived. And now it's your turn"


Adib is the opposite. His philosophy, if you’re in a toxic work environment: Break the cycle. Take the high road. Be the change you want to see. 


Recently, he said something that surprised me: “Let’s be honest la Faisal, back in our early years, our seniors didn't really do a good job (in terms of guidance).”


His statement surprised me. It was a hot take, but I totally agree with him. With all due respect to our seniors, I’ve always felt that they didn't really bother about us in our early years. They worked in silo, focused on their own deliverables, and we're left to figure stuff out by ourselves. 


But here’s the twist: When he made that statement, he wasn’t just whining. He was saying it to emphasize an important point: “Now this is our time to step up. To be the seniors we've always wanted and needed.”


And it wasn't just idealistic talk. He walks the talk. When he was given more autonomy to lead his team, he really embodied that aspiration. 


He consistently assists the juniors - including those outside of his team - to ground them in the basics, the fundamentals, grasp the big picture of the "why" we do our engineering work. He prompts them, proactively inquiring progress, organizing "focused discussion" sessions: to go through the work together. He proactively prompts other juniors on what they are working on: which eventually ends up becoming mentoring sessions. I remember walking pass by a junior engineer’s desk and seeing papers with scribbles of some graphs, formulas, and diagrams, and I immediately said, “this looks like Adib’s work”. The junior confirmed, “yup, that’s him alright”. 


But what’s inspiring is that his guidance goes even beyond that. He doesn’t just spoon-feed them: he challenges them, gets them thinking, grants opportunities to step up, take the lead, make presentations to high-level leaders, and gives them the spotlight to take the credit. 


I’m glad we could provide these opportunities to our young engineers, and to stay long enough to spark the change we’ve always wanted. Here’s hoping that they, too, return the favor to their juniors when they become leaders in the years to come.


During staff farewells, people often mention that we “lost” someone. Some have expressed their sadness that we lost Adib. But I prefer to see it differently: He is graduating into another phase of his career and life. And after 15 years, it’s about time. As for us here, it’s time to make space for new Adibs to rise, as we honor his contributions by carrying the torch of his legacy.


Adib will be missed, indeed. At the same time, we are happy for him, and wish him well, and all the best for his future endeavors.

Tuesday, October 31, 2023

Fighting off the Recency Bias: Year-End Performance Reviews

 


Do you have an inclination to form judgments only on “current” observations?


Do more recent achievements, incidents, or even frustrations form the basis of your overall opinions, despite more impactful or significant events happening in the past that are forgotten or neglected? 


This is what psychologists call the “Recency Bias” - it’s the tendency to over-emphasize the importance of recent experiences or the latest information we possess when estimating future events.


In other words, when it comes to forming an opinion towards something, our human tendency is to take the most recent events to shape our overall judgment. 


Just because it’s fresh of the oven and occupies a large space in our current state of mind, we have a tendency to think that this is a good representation of the “big picture” - whilst forgetting that we are fundamentally flawed creatures who forget a lot, and therefore most likely have forgotten many other important events of the past. 

The danger: Subconsciously, we think that because we have “forgotten” about it, perhaps it’s not as important or significant.


This is particularly dangerous when it comes to this time of the year for working professionals: Year end performance reviews. 


What should we do? Here are five steps I personally adopt to counter the recency bias: 


1. Be Aware of it. We need to overcome our own personal biases, whilst at the same time, take more pre-emptive steps to produce a more wholesome and holistic year end report, recognizing that other people - leaders, managers and subordinates alike - have this tendency, too. 


2. Get a holistic picture & Retrace your history. Dig up archives, emails, documents. Do your research to make sure you get the facts right, without neglecting the great (and not-so-great) stuff that happened in Q1 and Q2. 


3. Don’t get blindsided by recent events - The running gag among managers is that October is “year end sale” - the time of the year where WhatsApp channels are exploding with messages of achievements. On one hand, we need to be objective about achievements and give credit where it’s due - on the other hand, we need to make sure we don’t allow ourselves to form a judgment from a limited perspective. 


4. Get into the practice of journalling - Making references to the book, “Building a Second Brain”: Every time there is something worthy of being highlighted, write it down. Use simple, cloud-based digital apps that can help us quickly store and retrieve info such as OneNote or Notion. Also, what I found was that focused recognition was incredibly helpful: If you’ve archived them well, just look that up! 


5. Seek feedback from others. As human beings, our judgment will always be limited. We need third party perspectives to help us see our blindsides. 


Hope that helps! 


Do you - or others around you - experience the Recency Bias? How do you overcome them?

Friday, October 27, 2023

Majlis Tilawah Al-Qur'an Peringkat PETRONAS 2023: "Al-Qur'an Asas Kelestarian" | 25-26 Oktober, INSTEP, Terengganu

 



"Kalau tak dapat Naib Johan pun, Johan pun jadi lah"


Demikian lah kata-kata semangat "reverse psychology" yang saya selalu ucapkan kepada sahabat2 saya yang turut serta dalam MTAQ. 


Plot twist: Tahun ni, dua2 saya tak dapat ๐Ÿคฃ


Alhamdulillah, tahun ni bagi kategori Murattal, saya dapat meraih tempat ke-3 ๐Ÿฅ‰. Persaingan tahun ni amat sengit.. Saya ingat saya dah beri yang terbaik dan minimize kesilapan dah, siap habis pidato sebelum buzzer. Tapi tewas juga dengan dua peserta hebat.. Saudara Hazwan (Zon Tengah, KL) dan Firdaus (Zon Pantai Timur), Masha Allah, terbaik.. allahumma barik. Semoga tetap terus istiqamah dalam Al-Qur'an. 


Alhamdulillah saya ucapkan ribuan Terima kasih kepada sahabat se-kontinjen saya dari Zon Sarawak atas sokongan, dan saya bagi focused recognition kepada tuan Rumah INSTEP atas hospitality mereka. Mantap, sangat terurus, dan banyak effort extra mereka buat untuk tetamu.. Sediakan bas dan jadual untuk jalan2 tour local attraction, hidangkan makanan local yang lazat, termasuklah ICT. 

Saya pun baru belajar istilah baru ni.. ICT. 


Amende ICT? 

La, Ikan (goreng) Celup Tepung Rupa2nya ๐Ÿคฃ๐Ÿ˜‹


Note to organizers. Ada baiknya juga venue MTAQ di INSTEP ni Jauh dari hotel penginapan peserta (Paya Bunga Hotel di Kuala Tganu) di tempat yg tak byk sgt servis E-hailing.

Biasanya kalau venue MTAQ sama tempat dengan tempat penginapan, selalunya peserta ada tendency buat hal masing2 n tak layan sangat majlis lain. Datang untuk giliran, baca, ciao.   


Jadi utk MTAQ tahun ni, peserta terpaksa ikut jadual bas, dan "terpaksa" turut serta stay kat majlis sepenuhnya, sampai habis. In a way, mcm kurang convenient. Tapi result majlis: Ramai quorum, Meriah la jadinye. Well played ๐Ÿ˜. Kita pun seronok dpt berkenalan dan networking dengan sahabat2 baru.. Mengambil inspirasi dari Sahabat2 lain yang hebat2 dalam kompetensi Al-Qur'an, dan yang cemerlang mendidik anak2 mereka dalam Qur'an.


Tahniah & Syabas kepada semua pemenang, terutama sekali kepada sahabat2 saya saudara Awang, juga kepada bapaw hebat, Syahnaz, Adzmin, dan Madzalan atas kejayaan anak2 mereka dalam kategori Hafazan ❤️. Allahumma barik. Semoga kita semua sentiasa istiqamah dalam Kitab Allah dalam mempelajarinya, menghafalnya, mengamalnya, dan mengajarkannya.  


Jumpa lagi tahun depan insha Allah. Bapak2 pun, join skali jom. Kalau tak dapat tempat ketiga, dapat Johan pun jadi la.. ๐Ÿคฒ๐Ÿผ

Thursday, October 19, 2023

"In Search of Excellence: My Story" with Ir. Abd Rahim Bahruddin




Alhamdulillah great learning session in today's leader career sharing from Ir. Abdul Rahim Baharuddin, TP Custodian Engineer for Construction, from PD&T Division PETRONAS. Here are some interesting takeaway points I got from the session:


1. Growth mindset: Consistency is the Key 

Clearly, Ir. Abdul Rahim has an amazing list of credentials and professional certifications under his belt. But his credentials and achievements were all gradual, spanning years, even decades. They were not in one shot. What we can learn from this is that we all have what it takes to keep growing. The key is to take ownership of our own development and keep moving forward, step by step. Certification by certification. The sky is the limit, if we put our hearts and minds to it with consistency!


2. The top 3 skills of "highest importance" for engineers to survive and thrive: Communication skills, creativity, and design thinking.


I like that he confessed that this skill of communication was totally outside of his comfort zone. Especially those of us who tend to be more shy and introvert, communication isn't something that comes naturally; nor is it something that is systematically taught in typical university degree programs. We need to put in a deliberate effort to improve it!


He shared that one of the biggest priority as a new manager was communication: How to put ideas into a solid management plan (e.g. Project Execution Plan or PEP). How we can shift emotional thinking into priority, and specify business needs to fulfilling management objectives, and seeking feedback from key stakeholders to align expectations with them - focus on how our idea aligns with governance / project objective


3. My favorite takeaway: The Mental Model


Ir. Abd Rahim reads and learns a lot, and as he rightfully pointed out something which I can totally relate with: as we keep reading books, attending courses, and learning from different sources, it can be disorienting. So many methods, so many techniques, so many acronyms... which one to use? How and when to apply them?


What he did personally, and shared with us was something kinda cool: arranging them, and compartmentalizing the areas of knowledge into a mental model to reconcile all these pieces of knowledge and how they are inter-related, to make sense of it in terms of application in daily life. His approach was by anchoring them in Steven Covey's 7 Habits, funneling them into how this yields positive results.


It was a unique approach on personal knowledge management. While we may not have read as much as he did, we can use that same line of thinking to organize our areas of knowledge, so we can make them practical without getting lost or disoriented in this era of information overload!

Thursday, October 12, 2023

✊๐Ÿผ Have the Courage to be disliked, and stand up for what you believe in

 



My management coach once shared some powerful advice as a "heads up":

“Throughout your career, you will find people around you who will disappoint you, and continue to disappoint or oppose you. You will not have 100% bosses supporting you - some of them might not even like your guts.

And that’s okay.
You are not here to build a fan club. You are not here to please everyone.

Stand up for who you are. As long as your intentions are clear, you know it’s value adding, and you are doing the right thing, continue doing what you do.“

Amazing & timely advice! We are not here to be people pleasers. Don’t just be a yes-man, copy-paste what others do and blindly conform. Have the spine to determine what is right from wrong, and stand up for your own principles and values.

This immediately reminds me of something said by Prophet Muhammad ๏ทบ:

ู„ุงَ ุชَูƒُูˆู†ُูˆุง ุฅِู…َّุนَุฉً ุชَู‚ُูˆู„ُูˆู†َ ุฅِู†ْ ุฃَุญْุณَู†َ ุงู„ู†َّุงุณُ ุฃَุญْุณَู†َّุง ูˆَุฅِู†ْ ุธَู„َู…ُูˆุง ุธَู„َู…ْู†َุง ูˆَู„َูƒِู†ْ ูˆَุทِّู†ُูˆุง ุฃَู†ْูُุณَูƒُู…ْ ุฅِู†ْ ุฃَุญْุณَู†َ ุงู„ู†َّุงุณُ ุฃَู†ْ ุชُุญْุณِู†ُูˆุง ูˆَุฅِู†ْ ุฃَุณَุงุกُูˆุง ูَู„ุงَ ุชَุธْู„ِู…ُูˆุง

“Do not be a “yes-man” imitator, without a will of your own. Just like those who say “if people behave well, then we too, will behave well. And if they oppress, we too will (follow the flow, and) oppress others.”
Rather, accustom yourselves to do good if people do good, but if they commit sins, you refrain from committing oppression”
(At-Tirmidzi #2007)

The Prophet ๏ทบ also said:

ุทูˆุจู‰ ู„ِู„ุบُุฑุจุงุกِ، ูู‚ูŠู„: ู…َู† ุงู„ุบُุฑุจุงุกُ ูŠุง ุฑุณูˆู„َ ุงู„ู„ู‡ِ؟ ู‚ุงู„: ุฃُู†ุงุณٌ ุตุงู„ุญูˆู†َ ููŠ ุฃُู†ุงุณِ ุณُูˆุกٍ ูƒุซูŠุฑٍ، ู…َู† ูŠَุนุตูŠู‡ู… ุฃูƒุซุฑُ ู…ِู…َّู† ูŠُุทูŠุนُู‡ู….

"Glad tidings for the strangers: A people who rectify (themselves and others), whilst they are amidst (the majority of) people who are involved in much evil! Those who disobey them are greater in number than those who obey them."

(Ahmad, At-Tabarani & Al-Bayhaqi)

In many situations in life, and especially at the workplace, sometimes, being a person of integrity and principles will put us at a disadvantage. Sometimes, it’s much easier to keep quiet and stay in mediocrity, rather than be the one who steps up and attempts to “challenge the norms” and achieve genuine greatness.

People will be people, and there will always be people who prefer what’s convenient, easy, or comfortable. Don’t compromise to fit in, and sink in the quicksand.

Remind ourselves that if we stand up for our religious principles, God Himself will help us:

ู…َู†ِ ุงู„ْุชَู…َุณَ ุฑِุถَุงุกَ ุงู„ู„َّู‡ِ ุจِุณَุฎَุทِ ุงู„ู†َّุงุณِ ูƒَูَุงู‡ُ ุงู„ู„َّู‡ُ ู…ُุคْู†َุฉَ ุงู„ู†َّุงุณِ ูˆَู…َู†ِ ุงู„ْุชَู…َุณَ ุฑِุถَุงุกَ ุงู„ู†َّุงุณِ ุจِุณَุฎَุทِ ุงู„ู„َّู‡ِ ูˆَูƒَู„َู‡ُ ุงู„ู„َّู‡ُ ุฅِู„َู‰ ุงู„ู†َّุงุณِ

“Whoever seeks the pleasure of Allah by incurring the anger of the people, Allah will suffice him from the people.
And who ever seeks the people's pleasure by obtaining the wrath of Allah, Allah will leave him to the people (i.e. without His Help).'"
(At-Tirmidzi)

Be a person of integrity and virtue, and have the courage to be disliked.

Wednesday, October 11, 2023

๐Ÿ”Š Tatkala Ustaz kena "sound" dengan driver bas - Isilah masa lapang anda dengan Zikir ๐Ÿ—ฃ️



Ustaz kami pernah berkongsi pengalamannya, ketika beliau membimbing jemaah menunaikan umrah. Semasa membawa jemaahnya ke pasar kurma, beliau menunggu  atas bas, lepak2 & termenung.


Driver bas memandangnya, kelihatan tak puas hati. Dengan muka annoyed, dia tanya dengan isyarat tangan dan mulutnya, "weh, ape kau buat?!"


Ustaz confuse. Apahal? Aku buat salah ke? 


Dengan isyarat, dia "sound" ustaz - Cubalah kau Zikir sikit, SubhanAllah ke, Selawat ke. Ni amende, duduk lepak termenung je! 


Wow. Mengenangkan kisah ni, Ustadz cakap, "Kita ustaz bawak jemaah pegi umrah, boleh kena sound dengan drebar"๐Ÿคฃ


Abang driver kita mengingatkan kita untuk sentiasa mengisi masa lapang dengan berzikir kepada Allah. Banyak je waktu "menunggu" dalam aktiviti harian kita yang ada peluang berzikir. Waktu tunggu naik flight, tunggu lift, Otw pegi kerja, naik lif, tunggu order makanan sampai.


Tunggu, tunggu, tunggu.. 

Time macam ni, biasa kita buat apa? Bukak IG? Layan tiktok? Scroll group WhatsApp berkali2? Termenung layan jiwang? 


Daripada duduk habiskan masa Doomscrolling di media sosial atau usha2 orang, baik kita berzikir. Rasulullah ๏ทบ bersabda, 

ู„َูŠْุณَ ูŠَุชَุญَุณَّุฑُ ุฃَู‡ْู„ُ ุงู„ْุฌَู†َّุฉِ ุฅِู„َّุง ุนَู„َู‰ ุณَุงุนَุฉٍ ู…َุฑَّุชْ ุจِู‡ِู…ْ ู„َู…ْ ูŠَุฐْูƒُุฑُูˆุง ุงู„ู„ู‡َ ูِูŠู‡َุง

"Ahli syurga langsung tidak akan rasa penyesalan, kecuali detik2 masa yang telah berlalu di mana mereka tidak berzikir kepada Allah" 

(al-Mu’jam al-Kabīr lil-Ṭabarānī 182, dinilai hasan oleh as-Suyuti) 


Gunalah waktu yang ada - berzikirlah sebagai pelaburan anda untuk akhirat. 


ูˆَุงุฐْูƒُุฑُูˆุง ุงู„ู„َّู‡َ ูƒَุซِูŠุฑًุง ู„َّุนَู„َّูƒُู…ْ ุชُูْู„ِุญُูˆู†َ

"Maka berzikirlahlah kepada Allah banyak-banyak, agar kamu peroleh kejayaan" 

(Al-Jumuah, 9)


Antara pengajaran sampingan juga adalah pentingnya kita membuka hati dan tabahkan jiwa untuk Terima teguran dgn baik, tak kira dari siapa. 


Driver ni juga meningkatkan kita tentang keberkatan dakwah. Dia tegur Ustaz, Ustaz pula sampaikan kepada kami (walaupun agak "memalukan"), & dapat saya kongsikan dengan anda. Dan saya berharap, kalau peringatan ini bermanfaat, anda juga akan terus share. BarakAllah fikum

Saturday, October 07, 2023

Majlis Tilawah Al-Quran PETRONAS Peringkat Wilayah Sarawak 2023M / 1445H - Kuching, 6-7 Oktober 2023

 




ุงู„ْุญَู…ْุฏُ ู„ِู„َّู‡ِ ุงู„َّุฐِูŠ ุจِู†ِุนْู…َุชِู‡ِ ุชَุชِู…ُّ ุงู„ุตَّุงู„ِุญَุงุชُ

Alhamdulillah, segala puji dan syukur kepada Allah yang telah menyempurnakan segala nikmat-Nya dan segala kebaikan.

Dengan izin-Nya, dapat peroleh keputusan yang baik pada MTAQ PETRONAS di Sarawak.. buat kali pertama, berjaya peroleh Johan untuk dua kategori, Murattal dan Hafazan Dewasa.

Alhamdulillah, Ibu juga menang Johan bagi kategori Hafazan  perempuan. Allahumma barik.


Tahniah juga kepada saudara Syahnaz dan isteri atas kejayaan kedua-dua anak mereka, Muhammad dan Khadijah, memenangi kategori Hafazan Kanak-kanak, dan akan turut serta mewakili kontinjen Sarawak bagi peringkat Kebangsaan di INSTEP, Terangganu pada 25-26 Oktober ini, insha Allah. 


All the best, dan semoga Allah menjadikan kita istiqamah dengan Al-Qur'an!

Wednesday, October 04, 2023

Leading Forward: Conversations with Nooruddin on Leadership 03/10/23

 



“If you lived during the time of Moses, would you most likely be a follower of Moses or Firaun?”

This - and many other points - were powerful insights and wisdoms shared in today’s sharing session with Nooruddin Abdullah, VP Group Strategic Relations & Communications.

Here are some awesome (sometimes hillarious) takeaways

๐Ÿ’–Prioritize your health, and your family. Company will come and go - but family can never be replaced. “Kita ni takde la hebat sangat. Without you, PETRONAS akan jalan jugak. Tak payah perasan lah”

๐Ÿ’ธ“Live within your means. Kalau you hanya mampu beli Ferrari, jangan beli helicopter”

๐Ÿ’ฉ๐Ÿฝ️ ๐Ÿ™Š A reminder on integrity: Would you want to serve a piece of “crap”  to your chilren? "Just a small piece, no harm right?" That’s what you do when you take bribes and “provide” for your family. You are essentially feeding them with filth.

๐Ÿค Live with integrity. It gives you peace of mind. Siapa yang tak mencuri, takkan risau kena potong tangan. Those who have no integrity issues, you get to live with a clear conscience, without the fear of "getting caught".

⏳ Think Long Term, Play the Long Game

When asked about his greatest challenges/achievements throughout his career, he once shared  an experience at a country in Africa. Initially, the contract stated the government would not be charging any additional expenses to PETRONAS. However, after seeing production, the government got a bit… greedy. The President wanted to impose a form of a fee or tax, costing tens of mlilions of US dollars, violating the contractual agreement.

The team got together, and the decision was almost unanimous: Fight. Defend our rights. We have all the legal documents in our favor. It was obvious.

But Nooruddin saw it differently. If we fight, yes, we might win. But this will be a case of Fight & Flight: We save millions of dollars, but we burn the bridges. We will never be able to operate here again. But let’s look long term: if we stay the course, is it still worth it? What if we pay up these millions, once off - and reap the collaborative benefits, in the long run?

The president agreed with this unconventional decision. They took a calculated risk: "Lose the Battle, win the war" .

Years later, in hindsight, it was a decision that resulted in a Net Investment Position (NIP) of billions of dollars.

(Mic Drop)

✨And finally, my favourite takeaway:
“If you lived during the time of Moses, would you most likely be a follower of Moses or Firaun?”

When he asked that, the hall remained silent. And someone spoke up and said “Firaun”.

He said, “yes. The reality is, if we were alive in those days, we would have most likely followed the tyrant Firaun.”

On the surface: Firaun had it all: military might. Economic strength. A total system in government. Some of the greatest monuments and structures ever built in the history of mankind.

Compare that to Moses. This man with no army. No political, economic, or military strength. Just a stick, an ideology, a mindset, and immense determination. An ideology that, if exposed by Firaun, would have been punishable by a horrible death through crucifixion. This man would have had, at most, probably a handful of followers.

Yet fast forward today. Thousands of years later. People name their children after this man: Moses, Musa. From Muslims, to Christians, to Jews, even aethists.

But no one names their children "Fir'aun".

Stories in the Quran are for us to ponder and take lessons from. The lesson of Moses teaches us, the real human asset is the human capital. The real substance. What every leader needs to have. 

At the end of the day, what truly matters? How will YOU want to be remembered?

Wednesday, September 27, 2023

๐Ÿ…Long Service Award @ 15 years in PETRONAS Employee Awards & Recognition Night (EARN) - Miri Marriott, 25 September 2023




Alhamdulillah, what a great ride it has been for the past 15 years. It was nice meeting up with friends who reported duty around the same time, early 2008 - Syahnaz, Maliq, Fendi, Gan, Larissa, Miza, Meimoan, and others. It was such a humbling moment to see how far we've all come since the first day we set foot in Miri beginning our careers - and surprisingly, how "loyal" we've been over the years: still here, and still got it! Nang steady, ktk org tok ๐Ÿ’ช๐Ÿ”ฅ


I am grateful for the opportunity to meet such awesome people, professionals and friends throughout the journey. To undergo tremendous growth, learning and development, challenged outside of our comfort zone, bringing out the best in us. To be driven with passion and purpose, unified through shared values, holistic cultural beliefs. To explore places I never thought I'd have the opportunity to go. To be a part of this great organization as we bear the ups and downs together. 


And of course, for opening up the opportunity to experience living in this awesome city of MIRI. When I first received the offer letter at PETRONAS Carigali Sarawak Operations (SKO), I remember I was hesitant and reluctant to move to this city, so far from home, in a place where I barely knew anyone. Little did I expect that this little city would be the place I would call home for the majority of my grown up adult life and raise a family here in this beautiful city, and meet some of the best friends in my life - including my awesome podcast brothers at @thebarakaheffect 


A huge shout out and thank you - jazakumullahu khayran - to all my friends, colleagues, peers, and leaders who have contributed to my professional and personal experience throughout this amazing journey. Much Love and Respect to you all! ❤️๐Ÿซก

I hope I too, am given the opportunity to give back, to inspire and nurture future leaders. May Allah bless our efforts together, open up opportunities to leave behind a great legacy for our future generations to come. ๐Ÿคฒ๐Ÿผ