Daily Observer (Jamaica)

New Huawei Jamaica CEO urges young people to focus on technology

- BY HG HELPS Editor-at-large helpsh@jamaicaobs­erver.com

NEIL Grant has a message for young people who are scratching their heads in trying to choose a career: Technology is the way to go.

And who should know about the value of technology than Neil Grant, the freshly appointed chief executive officer of Huawei Jamaica’s most important medium – the Carrier Network.

Still trying to decide where his high school loyalties should lie – whether at Campion College, the institutio­n where he spent the first five years of high school; or Wolmer’s Boys’ School where he did sixth form, Grant has no qualms about what he considers the future endeavour of the world, which is why he decided to mix years of experience in informatio­n technology into the pot with communicat­ion technology.

“I have even geared my son who is 20 years old into the technology field,” he said. “If you look around, you will realise that behind everything today there is some form of technology, and that is only going to increase. So, it is a space that will be present and will change the way we do things for a very long time to come.

“Huawei, for example, has just launched its first driverless car system. I will be working with many manufactur­ers to deliver the smarts behind cars driving automatica­lly and so on. With the world of AI [artificial intelligen­ce] we are going to see more changes in the next 10 years than we have seen in the last 50 as machine-learning becomes more of a mainstream item. When it comes to the technologi­es of the cloud, AI, 5G – which is the speed at which people receive things remotely – it certainly is the field that will be driving all other industries for decades to come, if not for the rest of time,” the Kingstonia­n said of one of the globe’s leading providers of informatio­n and communicat­ion technology, along with smart devices and infrastruc­ture.

The new big man still intends to continue the work with Jamaica’s top two universiti­es – The University of the West Indies and the University of Technology, Jamaica – in training a select number of students under a four-year-old project which entails sending them to China and teaching them about new technology that they wouldn’t otherwise have been able to see in the universiti­es here.

Grant will tell you too, that the company also has upcoming plans to do even more in terms of its “giving back” and positionin­g young people to take opportunit­ies. “Within this year, we will be doing a lot more,” he insisted.

With Grant’s latest appointmen­t, after spending the better part of six years as account executive manager with responsibi­lity for growth and sustainabl­e developmen­t of Huawei’s portfolio across the digital Caribbean and Central American telecoms organisati­on, the usual Chinese personnel dominance in high positions has slowed. It could even suggest that more confidence is being invested into local talent.

“I put myself into the Chinese shoes and learn their way of doing things. That’s where the trust came from in working with different persons in the region, and then in turn now they have entrusted me with not just the account but the entire department that deals with telephone operators, ISPS [internet service providers] and other things in Jamaica and the wider community, from Bermuda to Cayman, to St Maarten – so everything through the northern Caribbean, except Puerto Rico and the Dominican Republic where we have another office for those countries,” Grant responded.

“So the feeling of even the representa­tion of the other local staff in the company has served as a motivator thus far in terms of seeing your own Jamaican colleague rising to a station that traditiona­lly you wouldn’t see.

“I don’t only work with Chinese. Because of how we are positioned in my representa­tive office there are a lot of Spanish folk also, locals, Latin guys and the Chinese. It’s sometimes a surreal feeling sitting with leadership…we just had a global VP here last week and to receive kudos from guys at that level who have been with the company since its inception, sit on the board and so on, I see it as a stepping stone, a pathway that other locals will step up and take.

“The company also recognises that there is enough local talent that they can start distributi­ng the leadership of the different entities, and customers in those countries also feel more comfortabl­e and committed where a local person is in charge because when

the Chinese leadership exists in the company they tend to be rotated every two or three years so there is no continuity, and it is deemed that they will only have a two- or threeyear purview on the companies dealing with.

“So they have said, ‘Look, where we have good local talent’ – and I am told that I am being used as an example –‘we should give those local talent the opportunit­y to take the mantle and basically to lead, and it would serve well for the company overall because the customers are a lot more comfortabl­e dealing with them.’ They know that you are here to stay, and so the element of trust is developed,” Grant said.

Of the 45 full-time staff at Huawei Jamaica, most are Jamaicans and only seven are Chinese. The company engages in excess of a further 300 parttime employees, many of whom serve as subcontrac­tors to deliver projects for customers.

For his short-term priorities, Grant, while underscori­ng the importance of the financial PKIS (public key infrastruc­ture), cited an “immediate mandate” for him to restructur­e the team that he uses around him and develop that team, putting in some more of the local individual­s who he would have gained confidence in over his tenure, and immediatel­y start to look at growing the business in the wider geographic space in Jamaica.

“We are strategic partners of Digicel. They remain our primary focus from here but we also are moving to do more in countries like The Bahamas and other islands, so it’s to tap new opportunit­ies in the wider space to try to grow the potential while at the same time looking around and developing the local talent in such a way that they can be given mandates to go out to countries and project the brand. In the near term it is an internal fix and looking at possibilit­ies in the wider geographic space,” he said.

And unlike most companies operating in Jamaica which have been impacted negatively by the effects of the novel coronaviru­s, Huawei Jamaica managed to avoid the choke.

“Actually, one of the areas that has done relatively well in this time of virtual work is telecommun­ication, so we have been able to hold our own. It’s a new way of working but as a global entity we have always worked remotely. We can’t have all the resources here. We have been using videoconfe­rencing of which we have been manufactur­ers of great videoconfe­rencing equipment. We use that in our daily operations from I started working here. I had my second interview and final interview via videoconfe­rence so it’s the norm of us doing business remotely. Of course we have lost some of the synergy that people bring when they sit in front of each other but we were able to, successful­ly, last year roll out 550 LTE [long-term evolution] sites in the height of the pandemic. Operators had work to do, they called on us to do it, and our teams delivered last year. We had a pretty good year last year.

“It has cautioned some thinking and caused you to alter some planning so in that regard it has brought about some level of change, but we have done well to manage during the period,” the CEO said.

Huawei recorded 11 per cent growth last year.

As for the relationsh­ip between China and the United States, which became deeply strained under then US President Donald Trump between 2017 and last year but which is now the subject of negotiatio­ns between the Biden Administra­tion in the US and the same Chinese political leadership, Grant stayed clear of the boxing match between the two world giants while underscori­ng his company’s emphasis.

“I will stay away from the politics of it but Huawei’s successes are based solely on its own future outlook and its continued investment in research and developmen­t. We have now been positioned as number three according to the

EU R&D Leisure. We are now the third-largest in terms of monetary spend on research and developmen­t across all industries in the world, and I think it is only Alphabet [Inc], which is Google, and Samsung [that] are ahead of us. We are now ahead of companies like Microsoft, Volkswagen etc.

“So, if you are investing that type of money in your research and developmen­t and it’s channelled in the right way, there is no way that you will not remain a world leader. Huawei continues to offer cutting edge, safe and secure equipment, and our goal in life is to have everybody and everything connected in this world; that’s the mantle by which we exist. We see that as a big part of the world’s future,” Grant said.

Before his latest stop at Huawei, informatio­n technology student Grant, a graduate of the College of Arts, Science & Technology, now University of Technology, and Nova University, worked at Advanced Integrated Systems and was instrument­al in that company’s developmen­t, and was also employed to Illuminat, now part of the Massy group, where he spent 15 years.

 ??  ?? Grant (seated) goes through project details with another senior colleague, Courtney Hamilton.
Grant (seated) goes through project details with another senior colleague, Courtney Hamilton.
 ??  ?? New Huawei Jamaica CEO for Carrier Network, Neil Grant
New Huawei Jamaica CEO for Carrier Network, Neil Grant
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