I am CEO and co-founder of Ushi.cn, a private and invitation-only business social networking platform connecting China’s influential professionals and entrepreneurs via mobile phones and PCs. I also founded WorldFriends.tv, a website with over 1.3 million members from 200 different countries. I was born and raised in Toronto, Canada and I am ethnically Chinese-Filipino. I have lived in Shanghai, Toronto, Hong Kong, Manila, Sydney, Jakarta, Nanning and Xiamen.
I love China. I first arrived in China at the age of 23 in 1993 and lived in Nanning and Xiamen. I did not speak any Chinese when I arrived, and I found that learning Mandarin is like snowboarding. It's very easy to get started, but difficult to master and easy to have an accident. My most embarrassing moment in China was when I was making a public speech at an inauguration ceremony and I said that the company's warehouse was full of chun huo (idiots), when I was supposed to say cun huo, (inventory). Everybody in the crowd laughed -- except me.
My Mandarin rapidly improved and I began making my own flashcards to help me remember my vocabulary. Language exchange became a lot of fun; never in my life had I felt like a rock star until I went to my first 'English Corner'. I met many young Chinese people so eager to learn English and "be global" especially at the English Corner in Nanning University where every Thursday night we would gather to shyly practice English conversation in the dark. In early 2000, the hunger to learn English that I witnessed in China inspired me to start my own business called HungryForWords.com, enabling Chinese and Japanese speakers to get their own personalized flashcards via email, providing language education free of charge.
Seven years later, I am living in Shanghai and still running the same company, which has launched my new website to promote international friendship. Every day, thousands of members are "meeting their neighbors in the global village", for example, Japanese exchanging travel notes with Koreans, or Spaniards doing language exchange with Chinese.