Table Of Content(v1.c), updated manuscript)—for the AIM ALMagazine
The Thirty‐Year AIM Jubilarians:
The 1980 MBM CHARGERS
of Professor Horacio “Junbo” Borromeo Ph. D.
Compiled and Written By Gel Tamayo
And Edited by Gen. Vic Batac
(January 12, 2010)
“A fool sees an enemy. A wise man sees a lesson to be learned”.‐‐‐‐‐
Mahatma Gandhi
We are presenting this collective article anchored on several parameters,
among which are: our privilege to reminisce on our two‐year sojourn; our
Alumni ideas about AIM; and our “pass‐in‐review” as MBM 1980 Cohort.
Lest we be misunderstood, allow us to clarify at the onset that, in this
write‐up, like in a “talk‐show magazine”, we do not intend to
demonstrate ersatz bravado or brazen braggadocio. We simply want to
reminisce those days in AIM as young, carefree people of that era, then
release little bragging rights in a good light, and tell the truth as we saw
and experienced it.
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We also wish to put in proper perspective that, given a sampling of
people, a number, in the course of human existence, would tend to have
a bit more in life. Expectedly, some would become Chairmen, CEOs,
COOs, CFOs, CMOs or CIOs of reputable business conglomerates,
while others would turn to be “successful” entrepreneurs. Some would
have less in ranks, titles and net assets. C’est le vie.
What is important to us, MBM Cohort of 1980, is one’s inner growth as a
person, and that one is always willing to get back on track and move
forward in life. We have no desire to irresponsibly compare each other,
or insinuate about another’s plight. This is merely our way of
celebrating thirty‐two years of our lives.
As we have been evolving as AIM alumni and as business practitioners for
the past thirty plus two years, we believe we have earned the right to
provide inputs as well as constructive remarks and expect that appropriate
people in the AIM hierarchy will take heed.
The last portion is our way of updating each other. To those who would
care to read on, it provides tidbits on where we have been and where we
are now, thirty years after graduation.
Our MBM Cohort’s Coordinator
Before, we lose ourselves in reminiscing, we want to focus the spotlight on
a key person in our two‐year sojourn in AIM.
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Our Cohort’s Coordinator at that time was a young professor named
“Junbo” Borromeo, one of the “stars” in the MM Program. His college
orientation was in Behavioral Science at the Ateneo De Manila. We were
pleasantly surprised to learn that he is again the MBA Program
Coordinator (i.e. the “Father Rooster”) for the MBA Class of 2010. This is
historic in the sense that in so doing, Prof. Junbo is uniquely bridging,
perhaps for the first time, two classes that are more than a generation apart.
How was Prof. Junbo in our time?
As MBM Coordinator, Prof. Junbo was strict and deliberate in
communicating policies and reminders. But he was well balanced in
dealing with us. He was not wont to compromise the high standards of the
MBM Program at that time. He was like a stern and acerbic boot camp
drillmaster, but with a marshmallow heart.
Somehow, Prof. Junbo was omniscient on what was happening at the
dorm, day in and day out. (We did suspect that he had people going over
our garbage or taping our phone conversations, then.) He knew who were
really studying and spending time with their can groups and those who
were just playing backgammon or ping pong. He knew about the night
escapades and those who sneaked back to the dorm early the next
morning. He joined us in our periodic beer pubs. In many occasions, he
found time to sit down with us during mealtimes at the cafeteria. He could
detect in‐campus problems and he knew how to push the right button or
give the right motivation to an underachieving, downhearted, or frustrated
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student. Occasionally, he strummed his classical guitar in a corner
somewhere, while little huddles of us tolerated or actually listened to his
renditions that were not that bad, really. But we knew how to “keep the
distance”.
After an exhaustive survey among classmates, we found out that in those
two years, many of us remember Prof. Junbo most for the following:
1) His booming, eloquent, deliberate voice, especially in convocations
and in the case room discussions;
2) His trademark high‐pitched “whistle” which he often resorted to
when we were on the edge of “verbal chaos” during case discussions
and convocations, after which we would all be silent and one could
actually hear a pin drop; and,
3) His favorite line: “You are supposed to be graduate students, not
kids. Don’t get caught, if you want to do something funny or
dysfunctional.”
Today, we once again proudly salute and raise a toast to Doc Junbo for
his passion and patience, tolerance and talent to guide and hone
graduate business students for more than thirty two years, during which
he even found time to earn his Ph.D. Indubitably, he is one of the few,
ever loyal, senior faculty members of AIM who is much revered and
respected by students and alumni alike.
He still joins us on a regular basis during our Cohort’s get‐togethers at the
Malacca Restaurant which specializes in Malaysian cuisine. It is located
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along Jupiter Street in Makati City and is owned by a classmate Philip KC
Ng. It is undeniably our favorite watering hole.
We wish Doc Junbo all the happiness and the best of health… in the
same spirit that we convey the same wish to all our MBM Mentors.
So Here We Are Again, After 30 Years
Thirty years after graduation in May 1980, here we are once again, happy
to look back, carrying a plurality of mind‐sets, work experiences, and
bringing layers of varying emotions, opinions, and visions.
For Starters, Highlighting Our Cohort’s Contributions
At this point, within the context of history and the MBM’s raison d’êtres, we
highlight a number of meaningful, (nay outstanding, or remarkable at the
very least) achievements and contributions by certain members of our
Cohort to their respective communities, to society and to the world of
business, hopefully, to encourage and inspire young AIM MBA aspirants
and the more recent MBA graduates, and to let them see AIM MBM 80 in
the context of becoming Managers and Business Leaders,. After all, we
came to AIM for the MBM degree, and people would like to know what
many of us had or have done. We opted to omit the names of the achievers
in the enumeration below, so that readers can focus on the achievements.
Can you guess who they are?
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1) The ever passionate Filipino CEO of a premiere NGO established for the
protection of the environment and endangered species, about global
warming and reduction of carbon emissions, and related concerns. He
takes pride in taking the lead on related or relevant educational initiatives;
2) The Filipino investment banker in that major financial team, who in the
early 90s succeeded in co‐packaging and strategically assisted in the
launching of the now burgeoning and very progressive Bonifacio Global
City, beside the Makati Central Business District;
3) The Indian (now American) investment banker who quietly but
significantly helped in co‐packaging the hefty funding for the first modern,
toll Skyway project in the south of Manila;
4) The young corporate banker in the early 80s who was the author of the
initial study for the Monetary Board of the Central Bank of the Philippines,
that became the basis for attracting and harnessing dollar remittances of
the Overseas Filipino Workers into the Philippines;
5) The Filipino global CMO for furniture exportation that carved in the
world map the now world‐renowned Filipino furniture / interior designer
and the furniture brand which is now among Asia’s best and the most
reputable for “progressive Asian design fusion”;
6) The erstwhile Undersecretary of the Department of Trade and Industry
(DTI) and Head of the Board of Investments, who after over a decade as a
prized Senior Officer in one of New York’s top banks, came back to Manila
and pioneered the investment‐promotion work that led to the boom of the
Business Process Outsourcing Industry in the Philippines;
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7) the Filipino COO who pioneered in wholesale funding of SMEs and
middle class businessmen in terms of legitimate and respectable mode of
middle‐class financing and micro‐financing in the country;
8) the Malaysian who at a relatively young age became the CEO of the
world‐renowned and no. 1 ASEAN conglomerate that is a leader in the
rubber industry and is also into consumer and industrial goods,
agriculture, motoring, and energy, among others;
9) the unassuming Filipino classmate who has been the South Asian
Region’s President of one of the world’s largest and most profitable
pharmaceutical conglomerates;
10) the key member of the original core group of young, reform‐minded,
military officers in the mid‐80s that sparked the 1986 EDSA People Power
revolution which resulted to the toppling of the Marcos dictatorship;
11) the smart Filipino duo that is undertaking the establishment of a chain
of reputable, modernized and streamlined hospitals in the Philippines;
12) the Malaysian CEO who, among his other entrepreneurial ventures,
successfully and sustainably introduced to the Philippine market the
ergonomically designed executive and office chairs and a complete line of
quality office furniture and furnishings;
13) the Singaporean CEO‐entrepreneur‐engineer that succeeded in having
his company listed in NASDAQ in the early 1990s. He was recently
awarded by the mainland Chinese Government the title “National
Friendship Award”; and he has recently launched a computer‐IT firm that
is known to have the most advanced microprocessor in the world;
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14) the Malaysian senior executive that made waves for almost a decade in
a multinational consumer conglomerate, while assigned as GM in
Malaysia, the Greater China VP (based in HKG) and the VP in Russia
(based in Moscow);
15) the Filipino classmate, who has stayed for thirty‐four years, and is now
a Head Partner in Tax Consulting in the respectable firm, SGV Group;
16) another Filipino classmate, who has remained for over thirty years in a
Filipino‐Chinese conglomerate, and is now the overall Group Head of
Corporate Procurement in the mother firm that is publicly listed (i.e. in one
of the most trusted, higher positions);
17) the Korean finance genius classmate, who after being successful for
over a decade in a high Corporate Finance position in a big Seoul company,
finally preferred to take an HRD lead position in order to understand more
and appreciate better actual human behavior in the organization and in the
process have a more human view of his fellow Koreans;
18) the Canadian/Pakistani classmate who successfully owned, established
and then sold the Dow Jones‐Telerate franchise in Pakistan and served as
its CEO;
19) a number of Cohort mates who had been assigned as expatriates in
other countries and succeeded in their roles as CEOs, COOs, CFOs, CMOs,
Chief Country Officers, GMs and Regional Heads, in many ways whereby
AIM could stand proud of them;
20) the lady classmate who took over a family business and was
responsible for exporting Philippine marble and succeeded to supply halls
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of five‐star hotels and resorts in the USA, a commendable feat vis‐à‐vis the
traditionally preferred Italian marble;
and finally but not the least,
21) the passionate Deputy Fire Marshal for Eastern Metro Manila of the
Association of Volunteer Fire Chiefs & Firefighters of the Philippines, who
risked his own life in order to save hundreds of people in Marikina at the
height of the flood onslaught of Typhoon Ondoy in late September 2009.
What Matters To Us Now?
To most of us, age no longer matters. Or at least, we tend to down play our
having peppery hair, receding hairlines, balding pates, double‐vista lenses
and visibly defined paunches. Some of us already have kiddy
grandchildren‐‐‐“Ouch?” or “Is it Cheers?”. The mind makes us prefer to
stay young.
Oh, yes, as humans, we also care about comfortable living and putting
aside some funds after we retire, at the very least‐‐‐and who wouldn’t?
But, we also rather not talk of who has stashed the most millions among
us or who has the biggest mansion or the flashiest and most expensive
car. We rather help, for example, in a quiet manner, an MBM classmate
in dire and immediate need‐‐‐as the Cohort has proven.
To us, success is having true happiness as a person, or something close to
that, especially if one has been meaningfully contributing to his family
and his immediate community.
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Given our druthers, we jocosely muse that scotoma may be our best ally‐‐‐
that is, we only believe in what we prefer to think of, and we like to see
what we want to see (he, he). Talk about attitude and simply enjoying life to
the fullest.
What We Want To Impart Now?
This portion should have been placed in the latter stage of this “talk”. But,
we are apprehensive that the readers might not finish reading our article.
Who cares about thirty‐year Jubilarians, anyway? Thus, we bring up now
these six, main, grouped messages. They are worth reading.
First Message: Too Much Cutting Down One’s Classmates
We want to convey to all, especially the Trustees, the Governors, the
Faculty, the Alumni and Students, that in our time, AIM emphasized so
“much protecting one’s own position” and “so much fending for one’s own
swim”, especially in the case rooms. The effect was that there was so much
of “cutting down each other” inside and outside of the case room, in the
guise of “may‐the‐best‐idea‐win”, and then having to put on “calesa‐eye
blinders” in order to survive, or to speak out more often for one’s self to be
noticed, especially in the first year.
Then, each of us had to carry on with the “paper chase ” in order to finish
the MRR on time for graduation in the last year. (Was there at least another
choice at that time? Our answer is Yes. Many among us think so in categorical
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Description:along Jupiter Street in Makati City and is owned by a classmate Philip KC. Ng. It is .. Rafael Azanza had an MBA from Harvard. But he did not . Mayo Lopez, and in front of the entire class, he asked the inscrutable Mayo to simply . was a direct student of the famous marketing author, Philip Kotler)