<
Jun
16
2008

A New Dream for Dawei

David Degeest

It has been a short two years since I first encountered David DeGeest. I met him shortly after he came to an exchange program’s rescue by traveling to China to replace a teaching fellow who could not accept the annual honor. The volunteers from Grinnell College, one of America’s top liberal arts schools, are competitively selected by Grinnell’s office of Social Commitment and spend one to two years in cultural education pursuits around the world. In order to come, David had to first surrender admission to a law school in America and then join Grinnell’s long tradition of International humanitarian service–unequaled in numbers by any college of any size.

Within a few months of his arrival David was forced by local immigration laws to leave his duties because host and parent institutions had failed to make the proper arrangements for his visa. He spent four months of uncomfortable nights on my sofa in Guangzhou waiting to return and finish what he had started. During his layoff David made use of his time in ways that would soon change him, and those around him, forever.

david degeest and ms yue

“Dawei ” as he fast became known by his admiring students, fervently studied Chinese, gave freely of his time to help an insecure translation student edit several hundred pages in a world-class set of books on Chinese Penjing (the parent art of Bonsai), served as an administrative assistant for the interim CEO of China’s top corporate leadership training company, studied Taekwondo with Macau’s Olympic Team players, wrote articles on his experiences in China for the Blogger News Network and became the beloved “American Son” of the Unsinkable Ms Yue, the cancer survivor who, along with The League of Extraordinary Chinese Women, would become the inspiration for this blog.

During his stay in Guangzhou his association with Ms Yue inspired his voluntary, and uncompensated, co-teaching of college classes on blogging, SEO and International e-Business. It was in in concert with his students that he co-developed the Dreamblogue and helped write and promote the Onemanbandwidth blog that won the Best Blog in Asia prize at the annual Weblog Awards in 2006.

david s degeest

By the time he returned to Guangzhou, after finishing his fellowship assignment, he had a deep and abiding love for China, one that permeated his personal and professional aspirations.

Within a few months David, once again sleeping on the sofa, had written more than 50,000 words in support of the Dreamblogue in the form of: grant proposals to Global Voices Online, and the Knight and MacArthur Foundations. He drafted sponsorship support proposals for colleges in the UK and the US; authored PR Web releases about our mission; sent out hundreds of e-mails to potential supporters (not donors as we decided never to accept funds directly); developed project profiles on social networking sites; created several successful groups on Facebook; corresponded and coordinated activities with intended recipients of our charity; edited and revised over 22 articles about the mainland provinces we intended to visit; and trained handicapped and able-bodied interns in the subtleties of SEO and online networking.

david scott degeest

David helped transformed my apartment into a two-man hermitage where he literally spent 15 to 20 hours a day, carpals to the keyboard, in preparation for dreamblogue adventures. The only breaks he took were to watch reruns of House, M.D. (while he kept editing and planning) and to play an occasional round of online Scrabble. Chinese studies continued and Mr. DeGeest devoured dozens of books on Chinese history, business, language and culture while learning podcasting, photography, HTML coding and more. He spent a few weekends traveling the roads running through rural China and wrote beautifully of the magical work of the Library Project, the Volunteer English Program and the US-China Medical Foundation.

David made his spending and food money by teaching corporate communication classes for one of China’s top companies. Later, the generous support of students and staff of the best pound-for-pound MBA program on the planet, Cal Poly, kept us traveling, writing and promoting…

DAvid DeGeest, Rebecca Mackinnon, Isaac mao

…until David realized that a more sustainable income was needed. Being in a country where non-governmental charities cannot be officially sanctioned, David pointed us toward creating money the old-fashioned way: earning our keep by giving something for something and then turning any profits into good works. He suspended travel in hopes of bringing in much needed funds.

We started offering SEO services to SMEs and Multi-nationals. It was during this time that David learned that Corporate Social Responsibility (CSR) has a long maturation period ahead of it and is not always born of true good will or altruistic intentions. David was lied to, cheated and humiliated by some of the most high-profile advocates of engagement and good on the Internet. It was enough, at times, to make a saint doubt his world-view. But, he always looked for the good that came of his efforts and the fantastic people he met along the Internet Superhighway

d degeest

Years ago, there was talk of a self-perpetuating machine…If he could have figured out a way to not take a food break daily he would have.

After we were contacted last year by a Fortune 100 company in Silicon Valley, David was certain that we would have the money we needed to help our interns and continue this blog’s original goal to promote rural education, literacy, charity and a positive understanding of China through travel and blogging.

The call I mentioned, and subsequent promises from Silicon Valley, were cleverly crafted lies that cost both of us hundreds of hours of labor and all of our savings. Culture Fish Media was born to accommodate the wishes of a company that we now know never meant to follow through with assistance. But, David learned much from the ordeal and undaunted, kept right on writing the blog, managing the photo group on Facebook (it now has amateurs and professionals lending him their work), writing business plans and teaching 20 hours a week at a college as a China certified foreign expert in education and culture –did I also mention he filled in for free when graduate professors in South China’s best University needed a replacement in Literary Studies?And he tirelessly campaigned for a chance to carry the torch in the Olympic relay (a glitch in the Lenovo voting software cost him a slot) as a tribute to the cancer victims to whom he had dedicated so much time (his essay is still in the top five results that come up on Baidu for “Olympic Torch Dream”)… He did all of this while negotiating with respected country and international marketing managers, answering digital marketing request for proposals, and optimizing small and formidable websites with only two, 3-day vacation breaks the entire time: one was to Yangshuo where he spent half of his time working on the computer and the other half in playful contemplation…

david degeest in thailand

David went from reticent, inquisitive new graduate to passionate liaison engaged in negotiations with world renowned companies, service providers, Internet luminaries and educational institutions. He practiced and succeeded at tasks, with a BA in Math and English, that MBA students only dream of tackling….No, it wasn’t all work and no play–almost–and yes, there were cherished moments of complete frivolity:

david degeest at mcdonaldsdavid degeest movie stardavid degeest ireland
There is more, but I will save that for future posts and maybe even a book. Many of his well-researched proposals are still making their way through the digestive tracks of various commercial and organizational enterprises–and anything that is achieved by the BOD, or its soon to be retired offspring, is directly due to David’s perseverance and dedication.

I’ve read several stories on the Internet this week bemoaning the lack of medical care in China, the widening gap between rich and poor, and descriptions of the continuing disasters in north and the south that have devastated China. We have a “surviverthon” scheduled for October that will aid the blog’s regular charities and contribute to cancer and disaster survivors. While some people may think the fforts are new others know that David started work two years ago trying to make life better for those challenged by cancer, flooding, poverty, earthquakes and lack of educational opportunities. Just ask Thomas Stader of the Library project what part David’s viral marketing gifts played in the building of numerous libraries this year in orphanages and rural communities throughout China. The first 400 members of the Facebook group devoted to their project were in some way connected to David and the BOD. And he has never asked for credit.

David has been my colleague, student, family member, friend and valued counsel. The only thing he has ever wanted in return for his efforts is that people would socially network his honest requests, give a few minutes of time and space on blogs (which he knows are valuable), and share when and where they could of their time and talents.

And before he sounds a little too altruistic to be true, you need to know what has been in this for him: He has selfishly wanted Ms Yue and the League of Extraordinary Chinese Women to live longer, he has wanted a new prosthetic leg for “Coffee” and he has wanted Chinese students to be able to achieve dreams of a better life.

He is off now to graduate school in pursuit of an MBA en route to a finance/Business PhD so he can teach at the University level. Some farsighted college needs to be putting in an early bid for his services.

Thanks David.

David DeGeest

Post Script:

One of my favorite stories of the year was David’s first short return to the US after the visa issues. It involved his bewly learned ability to communicate with his adopted Chinese mom, Ms Yue, and her unique language. It seems appropriate to end with it here:
Read on »

Share Your Dream
Apr
01
2008

The Top Business Schools in the U.S.

The Top Business Schools in the US for Chinese Students
Best B-Schools in America

After a year of interviews and research we have started to compile our lists of top business schools and Executive MBA (E-MBA) programs for Chinese students looking for study opportunities in America, Australia, Canada, UK, Singapore and New Zealand.

We will be listing the top five schools in each country in no particular order. The criteria used to evaluate schools differs greatly from that used by US News and World Report and others. We queried parents and prospective students during our travels about those issues that most concerned them and most affected their choices before and after admission. The rankings displayed are unbiased and were not affected by our affinity for any program despite one of the schools being a strong supporter of the Blog of Dreams.

Criteria:

  • Openness Toward Foreign Students/Ethnic Diversity
  • Financial Assistance
  • Post Graduation Placement Assistance
  • Faculty to Student Ratio
  • Overall Reputation of Graduate School
  • Campus Safety
  • Ease of Application/Admission Office Attitude
  • Affordability: Living Costs, Tuition
  • Curriculum
  • Student Life
  • Internship Options
  • Salary After Graduation
  • Alumni Network

Top Five Business Schools in no particular order:

  • Purdue: Scored highest in Ethic diversity (Chinese students make up 2nd largest population), Alumni Network, Graduate School Reputation, and Curriculum
  • Ohio State: Scored highest in Student Life, Ease of Application and Financial Assistance

  • Cal Poly: Scored highest in Affordability, Campus Safety, Faculty to Student Ratio, Graduate School Reputation (Top Overall Masters Degree Granting Institution in the West) and Post Graduate Placement

  • Harvard: Scored Highest in Reputation, Alumni Network, Salary After Graduation, Faculty to Student Ratio, Ethnic Diversity, and Internship Options

  • University of Minnesota: Scored highest in Ethnic Diversity, Curriculum, Campus Safety, Ease of Application

Other schools close to making the cut: University of Arizona, Columbia University, UCLA, University of California at Berkeley, University of Pennsylvania and the University of Iowa…

We will publish results of other surveys intermittently throughout the next few weeks.

Share Your Dream
Feb
26
2008

Cal Poly: the Movie

Cal Poly, home of one of the best international MBA programs, and a great China MBA blog, has arrived. On youtube, at least. The video offers a peak at the ten-day trip the 40 intrepid MBA students and professors took across China and into Beijing, Macau, Shanghai, Shenzhen, and Guangzhou and features such places as the forbidden city in Beijing, the Sands Casino in Macau, and Shenzhen and Shanghai factory visits.

Thanks to Steve Rodger and Kooltree productions for putting this together.

Share Your Dream
Jan
07
2008

International MBA Study Abroad:Cal Poly

China MBA: Cal Poly State University

MBA留学:Cal Poly

中文:

One of the dreams of many Chinese and International students is to study abroad. Part of the mission of the Dreamblogue is to help individuals realize their dreams through information and financial support when and where we can offer it. This is part of a series of posts that will spotlight schools we believe to be the best in China, America, Canada the UK and Australia for overseas learning.

Top boxers are always being sized up against others outside of their weight class and are referred to by sports pundits as, “pound-for-pound” the best puncher, or overall fighter in the game. The same metaphor can easily be applied to International MBA Programs and especially those with China as their primary focus.

The China Dreambloue Team below as translators for Cal Poly Visitors to Zhongkai University. For more visit their popular blog CAL POLY MBA TRIP

Cal Poly MBA

 

Long before Cal Poly became partners with the Dreamblogue, Dawei had a chance to interact with students and faculty from the Orfalea College of Business: the best pound-for-pound International MBA program based in America. Cal Poly State University in San Luis Obispo, California via The Orfalea College of Business offers a 1-year program for qualified students from China and the world: The MBA program with a focus on international business in China, concludes with a 1-month tour of Chinese culture and business. Prospective graduates visit small and medium-sized”expatraneurs” and China manufacturers, educational institutions and renown multi-nationals like Walmart, Lenovo, and The Sands/Venetian. This year they climbed the Great Wall, toured the water village of Zhouzhung, and visited the UNESCO sites in the former Portuguese colony of Macau.

And the entire MBA program, located in one of the safest and most scenic areas of California, costs less in total than does a semester at a school with more recognizable branding. Despite named #1 by US News and World Report as the top Masters Degree granting institution in the west, Cal Poly is bit of a a well-kept secret, but that is not likely to last. Their leadership via Professor Chris Carr (Interviewed by the China Business Network Here) continues to innovate with its world-class faculty and curriculum.

You can download information in Chinese or English about Cal Poly’s programs here, as well as information about how to prepare and study for admission:

 

In addition to their MBA program there are other international options and several concentrations, such as finance, accounting, or agriculture available; one of the most successful has been their degree in Industrial Technology that provides students with lucrative and professionally fulfilling job opportunities in high demand in the private sector:

 

China MBA Admission Info, Cost Info, and Deadlines

 

Cal Poly Masters in Industrial Technology

 

Masters in Industrial Technology Admission Info, Cost Info, and Deadlines

 

Pound-for-pound we think the Cal Poly MBA is the best in the world….

 

To speak to us about any of our sponsors or just to chat you must first allow pop-ups from Geesse.com where we host 24/7 Live Help. Please share your dreams with us….

Read on »

Share Your Dream
Dec
03
2007

China Search Engine Marketing and CultureFish

Cultural SEO

There is a new kid on the China SEO Block! Well, actually it is a group of old hands who have pooled their talent to create a powerfully needed new company: Culture Fish Media. CFM supplies work for the internship program that enables the Dreamblogue, in addition to the generosity of folks like the Cal Poly Business School, to continue on its way.

A bit about CultureFish:

CultureFish Media personalizes their China-US business partnerships with emerging and established companies to create recipes for growth in new market media using language and approaches sensitive to local tastes. CFM is a talent trust of friends dedicated to introducing ethical and passionate ideas effectively and sensitively into any cultural medium through Cultural SEO (CSEO) and SEM.

CultureFish has secured many solid connections like the one we are fostering with Baidu and  Madhouse, China’s leading mobile advertising group as well as Alibaba the world’s largest B2B portal. All of them   understand that CultureFish not only knows the Chinese market, but the sub-markets inside of China, so we will create higher ROIs and higher return advertsing rates.

So, as a result: a new standard in digital advertising in and from China has opened for business: CultureFish Media has joined together the world-class talents of an artistic and tech-savvy team to create culturally sensitive SEO (CSEO), SEM,Branding and Identity Management, Social Media Marketing & Tracking, Content Creation and Management in multiple languages, Ad Campaign Management: Print, Film, Digital,Interactive and Conventional (PPC, Banner, RSS, CPM…) Marketing while providing cost saving analytic Reports and ROI Maximization for emerging and established companies.

News Image

CSO, a new approach in on line content management and advertising and involves: Culturally Sensitive and Appropriate Keyword Programs for Countries and Targeted Regional Campaigns, language specific writing and editing, native translation and foreign language content management like website translation services,

CultureFish, whose clients include pizza parlors, camera shops, vacation clubs universities such as Cal Poly and Fortune 500 concerns like Oracle, can: Design Logos, Banners, CSS, and Total Campaign Management including China Web Design and other International Set-up, Email Campaigns, Feed Management, PR Releases and Optimization and Interface and partnerships with country portals and ISPs like the above mentioned Baidu, Naver, Alibaba, and Madhouse.

CultureFish (文化鱼), via its slogan, “如鱼得水” (Like a fish in water), implies skill and dexterity at a task. Our English slogan, “Making Digital Waves,” speaks to our use of sophisticated content management, cutting edge networking, interactive and visual media, paid ad campaigns, organic search empowerment and public relations to pursue excellence through new media that will best reach consumers in their native tongues. The team, together fluent in more than 10 languages, offers world class services to bloggers, SMEs and multinationals in any geographical region.

Each member of the diverse CFM team, hailing from America, Canada, China, Israel, and Singapore, is ethically and socially bound to best practices in SEO/SEM, and all aspects of business. Some profits are set aside for environmental and humanitarian causes: The , Charity and Overseas Education site The Blog of Dreams, our digital internship program, the online Olympic Souvenir Store for shopping online in China are three such projects. CultureFish will always provide generous time and talent to nurture promise, especially in individuals or enterprises facing socially difficult challenges or, through an affiliation with the China Business Network, SMEs doing business in China and other important digital markets.

Share Your Dream
Oct
30
2007

Dawei Goes to Shanghai

中文

Shanghai China Signal House

This past weekend I traveled to Shanghai in order to attend the 2007 China Education Expo, an annual traveling expo showcasing international study abroad opportunities for Chinese students. While there, I also had the chance to catch up with several bloggers, speak with Steve Feld, the Executive Director the University of Maryland’s Smith School of Business, and spend some time with Christine Lu of the China Business Network. I have to admit that serendipity seemed to follow me as I met up with a number of people, from a helpful and friendly group of Casablancan businessmen on the plane to the Chinese watch salesman that helped me find an Internet Bar when I needed it most.

This week I’ll be writing stories about my adventures and some of the fantastic dreamers I met in my few short days in Shanghai. Photos and maps will follow. Unfortunately, my camera battery died a quick, painless death on this trip, but others have been generous enough to donate their own photos.

Photo courtesy of Ken Yip.

PS–My regrets to missing Chris Carr of Cal Poly MBA Trip’s latest visit. He was in Beijing and I was not able to meet up with him to hear about the latest on his MBA program in California.

Read on »

Share Your Dream
Oct
10
2007

Dawei and the Olympic Torch

We’ve been encouraging our readers to send us their dreams, and now I want to share my dream with you to carry a torch for the 2008 Olympics. You can help us out by voting here. Here’s my essay about why I’d like to carry the Olympic torch:

yangshuo china mountain

中文

I want to carry the torch for Ms. Yue. A year ago, I came to China on a fellowship from Grinnell College in America. My commitment was to teach English and engage in cultural exchange for groups of college students. And while I met many remarkable and people during my time there, Ms. Yue stands out. Offering to be my adoptive Chinese mother (or “中妈”), she took me into her home, taught me Chinese, offered me home-cooked food, and showed me how to enjoy everyday Chinese life: I want give back to her and China and pay my respects by running and by writing on my website, the China Dreamblogue. I will travel with Lonnie B. Hodge, a Zhongshan University professor, and write about the amazing dreams of China’s people. I want to create a place for positive engagement between the East and West, and share a place where I can speak about my great respect for this country.
I also want to show Ms Yue respect by carrying the torch for her Olympics. I believe in the spirit of the slogan: “One World, One Dream”. It rings true for me: Professor Hodge has worked and trained Olympic-level athletes, and during my year in Macau I acted as a language liaison for their Olympic Tae Kwon Do Association. I was privileged to train with members of Macau’s Olympic team. Part of my journey will include stories from Olympians and include medalist’s dreams from around the world. I support the Olympics as a forum for international understanding and the promotion of cross-cultural appreciation.

Lien Chan once said, “The Chinese nation is confronted with unprecedented opportunities of development. Well-being and prosperity that the nation has long aspired after will never be a faraway dream.” In order to help China achieve its dream for prosperity for its people, and I dream of a positive network of engagement for China and the West, I am working tirelessly to create ways for people to interact with China: not everyone gets their own Ms. Yue.
I see my work as community service, helping others to make connections, tell the world about their dreams, and give ordinary Chinese people a voice with which to speak and to show their truest face to the world. I work with The China Business Network, a site which offers help and information to business leaders; California Polytechnic University, and its MBA program with a business study plan actively engaging China; and The Library Project, which builds libraries for orphanages and rural schools. I’ve given over 1,000 hours in community service work to provide the world a chance to share China’s greatest dreams.
My favorite proverb from Chinese culture is “the beginning of wisdom is to call things by their right names.” I hope that my carrying the torch will help others to appreciate the Middle Kingdom and call China by its right name: an engaging culture with extraordinary dreams.

Read on »

Share Your Dream
Oct
08
2007

The Yangshuo Voicethread

 中文

We just discovered a fantastic new utility called Voicethread. It allows you to create slide shows with sound and a load of other features I am still learning.

It is surprisingly simple to use. I put together the presentation in less than 15 minutes (ya, I know it shows)….

You can zoom in on the picture, add audio or text notes yourself (after signing in with spamless Voicethread) to the picture. What an amazing tool to capture moments in time and keep them updated and living via input from viewers.

This is one of several multi-media tools that we wil employ here to chronicle out adventures and allow people to add to our stories–and correct our mistakes!

[voicethread b=9663]

[poll=12]
Read on »

Share Your Dream