Welcome to Alive Connections

Who We Are

Welcome to Alive Connections! We are a global consulting and coaching company specializing in human talent development. We work with leading organizations to provide consultancy services to corporate, education, and social sectors. We are passionate about what we do and help clients to improve, innovate their practices to become the leader in their own field.


Our Vision

Our vision is to become a global leading consultancy company on human talent development and help clients attract, develop, and retain their outstanding people.


Our Mission

Our mission is to help clients develop optimum and sustainable improvements to their business performance through professional integrity, delivering excellent results, creating innovative solutions, and caring deeply for their organization.


We Practice Values of Integrity, Excellence, Innovation, and Care

We believe every client is unique. We give our full and equal attention to technicalities and relationships. We work with our clients on a collaborative manner, using our expert skills to help them improve the business. We also work with our clients to tailor-made the solutions, develop their capabilities, and to continue building on our commission, thus helping them to become self-reliant.


Integrity: We promise to be authentic and observe total confidentiality with our clients.


Excellence: We provide outstanding quality services to our clients.


Innovation: We aim to use new and proven cutting edge ideas and knowledge in our services to our clients.


Care: We have deep regard and thoughts for our clients.

Our Team

We believe in team-work. We recruit like-minded people who embrace our philosophy wholeheartedly. Our global partners are from United States, Singapore, Hong Kong, and Britain bringing their own expertise and experience to our clients. We work with our global partners as a fully committed team to provide seamless services to our clients.

Our Consulting Services

· Assessment Tools - Leadership/Personality/Career

· Strategic Leadership Development Programs

· Executive Coaching Programs

· Soft Skills Training Program






Monday 5 January 2015

Does this happen to you?

"You’ve Changed! Why Didn’t Anyone Notice?" by Marshall Goldman

It’s much harder to change others’ perceptions of our behavior than it is to change our own behavior. People’s perceptions of us are formed when they observe a sequence of actions we take that resemble one another. When other people see a pattern of resemblance, that’s when they start forming their perceptions of us.
For example, one day you’re asked to make a presentation in a meeting. Speaking in public may be the greatest fear among adults, but in this instance you don’t choke or crumble. You give a great presentation, magically emerging as someone who can stand up in front of people and be commanding, knowledgeable, and articulate. Everyone in attendance is impressed. They never knew this side of you. That said, this is not the moment when your reputation as a great public speaker gels into shape. But a seed has been sown in people’s minds. If you repeat the performance another time, and another, and another, eventually their perception of you as an effective speaker will solidify.
Negative reputations form in the same unhurried, incremental way. Let’s say you’re a fresh-faced manager looking at your first big crisis at work. You can react with poise or panic, clarity or confusion, aggressiveness or passivity. It’s your call. In this instance, you do not distinguish yourself as a leader. You fumble the moment and your group takes the hit. Fortunately for you, this is not the moment when your reputation as someone who can’t handle pressure is formed. It’s too soon to tell. But again, the seed has been sown—people are watching, waiting for a repeat performance. Only when you demonstrate your ineffectiveness in another crisis, and then another, will their perception of you as someone who wilts at crunch time take shape.
Because we don’t keep track of our repeat behavior, but they do, we don’t see the patterns that others see. These are the patterns that shape others’ perceptions of us—and yet we’re largely oblivious to them! And once their perceptions are set, it is very difficult to change them. That’s because, according to the theory of cognitive dissonance, people see what they expect to see, not what is there! So, even if you finally do choke a presentation – people will excuse it saying you just had a bad day or they will think it was great because that’s what they expect. And, even if you save the day in a crisis, it will not change people’s perceptions of you. They will consider it a one-off event or they will not notice your part in it at all.
So, what do you do? The challenge is that just as one event doesn’t form people’s positive perceptions of you, neither will one corrective gesture reform their views of you. Change doesn’t happen overnight. You need a sequence of consistent, similar actions to begin the rebuilding process. This is doable, but it requires personal insight and, most of all, discipline. A lot of discipline.
You have to be consistent in how you present yourself—to the point where you don’t mind being “guilty of repeating yourself”. If you abandon the consistency, people will get confused and the perception you are trying to change will get muddied by conflicting evidence that you are just the same as you were.
Finally, you have to follow up with those whose perceptions you are trying to change. Go to them every month or two and ask, “Ms. Co-Worker, It’s been one month [two months, three months] since I told you I was going to try to change this behavior. How am I doing?” Your co-worker will pause and reflect, “You’re doing good Co-Worker. Keep it up!” In this way, they will repeatedly acknowledge that they are seeing a change in your behavior. And, if you do fall back into an old behavior one time after a few months, they will remember how you have been doing great for such a period of time and will likely let it slide!


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Friday 12 December 2014

Why You Need To Hire A Coach In 2015  by  Contributor. Forbes

Do you have a coach?
If not, you could be limiting your career success. That’s because coaches help you identify and focus on what’s important, which accelerates your success. According to coaches.com, good coaches:
  • Create a safe environment in which people see themselves more clearly;
  • Identify gaps between where the client is and where the client needs or wants to be
  • Ask for more intentional thought, action and behavior changes than the client would have asked of him or herself
  • Guide the building of the structure, accountability, and support necessary to ensure sustained commitment

http://www.forbes.com/sites/williamarruda/2014/12/09/why-you-need-to-hire-a-coach-in-2015/

Thursday 27 November 2014

Leading the Way to Successful Change by Janice Tan


Hey friends,

Do check out my article in the Malaysian Institute of Management - Leading the Way to Successful Change, 2014, 49(2), p. 60-63.
http://www.mim.org.my/index.php/publications/management-magazine

How to predict future business enivronments and drive a company ahead of itsMalaysian Institute of Management competitors. By Janice Tan Leading The Way To Successful Change By Janice Tan

Thursday 16 August 2012

Join Chaplaincy Training (certified by IACET & ICISF, USA)

Speakers:  Don Cramblit, Dr Evelyn Biles, Willnette "Cookie" James, & Dr Jeff Jernigan.
Date: 17th (Mon) - 22nd (Sat), 2012; 9.15am - 5.00pm
Venue:  Metro Tabernacle Church, 1 Jalan Samudera Utama, Taman Samudera, 68100 Batu Caves, Selangor.



Come Join Life Coach Training (certified by IACET, USA)!

17th (Mon) -21 Sept (Fri), 2012; 7.30pm - 10.00pm
@PJ Luther Center, 4 Jalan Utara, 46200 Petaling Jaya, Selangor

Saturday 7 July 2012

Join Basic Intensive Training - Choice Theory Reality Therapy
Date: 23 - 26 August, 2012
Venue:  
Training Room, Bukit Utama 1, No.3 Changkat Bukit Utama,
PJU 6, Bandar Utama,
47800 Petaling Jaya, Selangor.
Fees:



RM1,390 (discount RM100 per pax for min. group of 3)
(inclusive of teaching materials, certificate, & 7 tea breaks)