8 things i wish someone had told me before i signed my scholarship agreement.docx
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8 Things I Wish Someone Had ToldMe Before I Signed My Scholarship
AgreementbyBOBBYONGon May 19, 2013,4 comments
Some of you are aware that I was awarded the Sime Darby Foundation Scholarshipafter my A-
Levels and I am currently serving my 5-year scholarship bond. A few days ago, I commemorated
my 7th month on the job and I would like to spend some time writing about the things I wish I
was more aware of when I was 19 years old before I inked my signature on the contract some 4
years ago.
1. The Scholarship Value is a Very Large Amount of
Money
When I signed my scholarship agreement in mid-2009 to UCL, I just knew that studying in the
UK is expensive. What nobody tried to put into sense to me was, IT IS VERY VERY
EXPENSIVE. For my 3 years of studies in the UK, it is worth about US$150,000 (RM450,000)
as it covered tuition fees and living allowances.
The scholarship value could buy a double-story detached house in the suburbs of Kuala Lumpur
or a massive bungalow in one of the smaller towns of Malaysia. With starting salary of about
RM2,500-3,000 per month (~RM30,000 per annum) for a fresh graduate in Kuala Lumpur, it is
worth nearly 15 years annual salary for a fresh graduate to fund the cost of studying in the UK.
2. The Scholarship Bond Period is a Very Long Period
of Time
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My scholarship bond period is 5 years and many people will say that it is short compared to other
scholarships bond period. But 5 years is a very long period of time. It represents 50% of your
twenties. Being tied down to a single company in a single location for 50% of what is supposed
to be the prime of your life removes a lot of freedom associated with your twenties. You cannot
just simply move to a different country, company, job type or lead an alternative lifestyle
because you have essentially tied down your future to that job.
3. You Will Change a Lot After Going Through
University
Your interest and aspirations will very likely change after going through university,regardless of
where or what you studied, with or without a scholarship. What you thought would be a
perfect job or opportunity as a late teenager may differ from your point of view of a perfect job
as a fresh graduate. Your horizons will broaden and your interests change and you will feel like
doing a different thing post-graduation. With a scholarship bond, you will be placed in a job that
requires your skills due to business demand and sometimes you may not fancy the job role,
company, industry or subject matter any more after university.
4. It Does Not Make Business Sense To Sponsor A
Student for Overseas Education
It costs about RM400,000 to RM1 million to sponsor a student to US, UK or Australia for
studies. This does not make business sense to any organisation at all. A simple returns on
investment calculation will suggest that you need to create discountedbusiness value throughout
your scholarship bond period over the amount invested on you for the investment to be
worthwhile.
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It is highly unlikely that any scholar could generate that much business value from an entry level
position during the bond period. If it makes business sense to sponsor students abroad, all the big
firms would be doing it. Besides, the risks are high as many scholars fail to perform at school
and at work. That is why most scholarships are given from the Corporate Social Responsibility
budget i.e. in other words, you are a charity.
5. Your Parents Want What is Safe for You, Not What
is Best for You
This is perhaps the biggest revelation to me. Your parents will tell you they want what is best
for you, but really, what they mean to say is they want what is safest for you. Your parents
will urge you to take up the scholarship while playing down the long bond period because that is
the safest option. Its an overseas education experience versus working experience tradeoff. You
get immediate benefits while deferring the payoffs to a later date. You get a free US$150,000
education without having to worry about money and you are sorted with a job after graduation.
That is safety to most people.
6. There Is No Free Lunch In The World
When I applied for scholarships post A-Levels, I viewed scholarship bodies as banks giving
out free money for me to go study. What I definitely forgot to factor in was banks DO NOT give
out free money. They give out loans and you are expected to pay back what you borrowed plus
interest.
In many sense, the scholarship bond has taught me a lot about debt and its crippling effect if not
used properly. When you buy a house or car on loan, the bank essentially owns the purchase
because it is a collateral by itself. In a scholarship agreement, you are essentially a resource to
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the organisation and can be deployed to any business unit according to the business requirements.
The unfortunate part is, your deployment may or may not be to your liking.
7. You Are Very Lucky
If you received a scholarship, the first thing you should do is count your lucky stars. Do not even
try to rationalise that you deserve the scholarship because frankly you dont. Winning the
scholarship simply says that you fit all the criteria that the scholarship bodies are searching
for. Im sure there are many other smarter people who just do not fit the scholarship criteria.
8. Pray That You Join a High-Performing Team with aGood Boss
This is probably the single biggest factor in whether you will feel happy serving your scholarship
bond. Getting into a high-performing team with a great boss is really a matter of luck. If
you found a good fit, you will be able to perform on your job. Very importantly, be nice to the
HR personnel handling your scholarship file. They know which departments fit your personality
and they know the vacancies available in good teams.
The corporate world is not created equal. Good bosses and jobs with good prospects are not
found everywhere. So far, I can say that Ive been one very lucky guy to join a dynamic team in
HR Systems pioneering HR Analytics in the Group. We are probably one of the earliest
companies in Malaysia to dabble in HR Analytics and being a pioneer in your industry is almost
always a good thing. I can only count my lucky stars every single day that Im serving this bond.
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Now dont try to misinterpret this by saying that Im not grateful for the opportunity to study
abroad provided by the scholarship. The fact is I cant be grateful enough for the opportunity. I
would have had a very different life and would not be able to expand my horizons meeting all the
interesting people in London and travelled extensively across the world had it not been for the
scholarship.
At the end of the day I think the scholarship decision is really about the positives of having an
overseas education versus the negatives of being tied down with a scholarship bond. I
wished I was more aware of the other side of the scholarship coin so I could better appreciate my
university experience. ThisSingapore Scholarship GuideI bumped into a few months ago is
pretty useful and talks about roughly similar topic in greater detail.
In Economics, it is a basic assumption that people optimise their utility (happiness) subject to
their constraints. This is not always the case in real-life because the rationality and perfect
information assumptions do not always hold true. I can safely say that in my case, there is no
way I can optimise any further with my career so far.
Anonymouson May 19, 2013 at 6:11 pm
I agree with some of the points here but I think a lot of this is based on your experience. This was my
experience:
- Its an overseas education experience versus working experience tradeoff: Disagree, my working exp
much better because of my academic experience. If I did not take the scholarship, I would not be where
http://singaporescholarshipguide.com/http://singaporescholarshipguide.com/http://singaporescholarshipguide.com/http://singaporescholarshipguide.com/ -
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today in the working world.
- It does not make business sense for companies: Debatable. Companies get tax incentives/savings and
companies who know how to spin it well also get good PR. The company that gave me my scholarship
great because they have really good talent in their firm now unlike the competition. Hard to put a dolla
on all these soft benefits, but I for one just made a critical decision that saved the company a few millio
dollars, and Ive worked less than 5 yrs.
- Your parents want what is safest not best: Your parents gave you the best academic experience, it is u
to capitalize on it. I studied in the US and have friends who did extremely well in school with their sch
They were able to get six figure (USD) jobs. They paid off their bond in 2-3 yrs. Within 5 yrs most of t
have gone on to triple their salary. If you are not as lucky as them, you could still at least score a decen
salary (USD) job. Many bonded scholarships give you the option of breaking your bond and paying ba
discounted portion or a fixed monthly amount. In the end there are many ways you could have used yo
education to get a better job / pay back ur bond.
Reply
Adrianon May 20, 2013 at 12:06 am
Hi Bobby,
http://bobbyong.com/blog/8-things-i-wish-someone-had-told-me-before-i-signed-my-scholarship-agreement/?replytocom=1003#respondhttp://bobbyong.com/blog/8-things-i-wish-someone-had-told-me-before-i-signed-my-scholarship-agreement/?replytocom=1003#respondhttp://bobbyong.com/blog/8-things-i-wish-someone-had-told-me-before-i-signed-my-scholarship-agreement/?replytocom=1003#respond -
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Nice article, however some comments.
2. The Scholarship Bond Period is a Very Long Period of Time.
Yes indeed it is a very long period of time [Depending on what you do during those years]. For those st
single entity company then it probably is true that they cant shift around, at most in different departme
in a conglomerate, at least there are different fields to choose from, and although they are owned by Sim
have Simes culture in then [to a certain extend]. And you can move to another country, if that entity w
hire you, its not impossible but highly unlikely cause its easier for them if they hire one of their own.
4. It Does Not Make Business Sense To Sponsor A Student for Overseas Education.
This I have to disagree.
Under INCOME TAX ACT 1967 (ACT 53) Part 1 Paragraph 23
- Any sums paid by way or in the nature of a scholarship or other similar grant or allowance to an indi
whether or not in connection with an employment of that individual. are tax exempted. So technically
certain extend [cause this just reduces the taxable income and not the taxable amount] the company isn
that much.
It is more costly to steal someone from a different organisation to fill in a particular role, with the com
paying the resignation cost, for immediate transfer, re-train them and instills the companys culture to
As a scholar, attending various camps and trainings, we have the culture drilled into us, moulding us
ideal human resource for the company.
Of course they are investing for the later stage [in which they hope you will stay after you have finish s
your bond], and thats where their return really comes in exponentially. [Of course within the first 5 ye
would have contributed to somewhat of the invested value].
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All in all, I hope people reads this more before deciding on accepting a scholarship. The question then
deciding to accept the scholarship] will be, which company can actually benefit me most during my bo
years?
Theres no free lunch, however I believe we can eventually turn it into a win-win situation for both par
Reply
massive_attackon May 21, 2013 at 12:51 pm
Hi Bobby I can feel your emotion writing this article but allow me to share with u some of my thoughts
First of all, I am a post A-Levels student too. Maybe u think that this scholarship is not the best choice
had taken. Perhaps u think that holding an A-Levels cert, u should have opt for better opportunities, bu
mind u, I think it iwill be acceptable to say that A-Levels itself is a very competitive level of study, lots
fabulous people are doing A-Levels. To get a sponsorship, I would say is 50% performance & another
on luck. So, be grateful that u are capable enough to convince others to offer u a scholarship.
Secondly, studying overseas will definitely be expensive. Maybe u are complaining because of the fina
burden that your family needed to face for your study. But the most valuable thing was the opportunity
abroad, can u buy that even if u are rich? Do u think that the huge amount of money debt that u are tied
doesnt worth u going abroad? Again, be grateful that u had the chance, and to be honest, that 5 years b
not really much. My advice to u is dont take it as a bond & u will leave after that, might as well try to
if u can develop your career from there in the future.
http://bobbyong.com/blog/8-things-i-wish-someone-had-told-me-before-i-signed-my-scholarship-agreement/?replytocom=1004#respondhttp://bobbyong.com/blog/8-things-i-wish-someone-had-told-me-before-i-signed-my-scholarship-agreement/?replytocom=1004#respondhttp://bobbyong.com/blog/8-things-i-wish-someone-had-told-me-before-i-signed-my-scholarship-agreement/?replytocom=1004#respond -
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Lastly, I read your complaints about the university life & working now. Im currently an undergrad stu
abroad too. Like u said, our interests change when we enter university, that Im doing a field that I nev
expected, it is not my interest as well, but thats life, u cant always get what u want, instead, we shoul
accept whatever that comes & see how we can turn it around into our own favour. Having said that, I d
sorry for u if the company was trying to make u their assets through the study cause I find that unaccep
too. About your current working life, I can tell it will be hard, again, thats life, itspart of learning. At
got a job now when the unemployment of fresh grads is quite high out there right now.
At the end of this, my view is that life is about balancing the gains & losses. We cant always hope that
work the ways we wanted, accepting the unwanted is how we learn. Like u said, there is no free lunch
world, u gain benefits from the oversea study, now is time for u to face the losses. I took A-Levels too
noy good enough to gain a scholarship, yet after my study, whether or not I can get a job after my study
another question. So take a look at yourself, someone helped u to study abroad & now u got a job, u ar
right track my friend. Have u ever asked yourself where will u see yourself right now if u didnt accept
scholarship? Look at the good sides & think less about the bad sides, thats the way for people to move
happy. What will come in the future? We dont know, so just do your best in whatever u are doing now
that your hardworks will pay off someday. Good luck my friend. =)