This latest business trip lasted 12 days and was a little different from past trips. Instead of conducting meetings in multiple cities in each country, we had centralized training camps in Malaysia and Taiwan. The result was that I did not have to spend as much time traveling from city to city and still got to meet with our managers and top sales people from each country.
Here are some things I learned:
- Take a picture of your hotel room number, because you WILL forget after a day of meetings.
- Laksa in Malaysia is not the same as in Singapore.
- Google Maps, especially Street View, is your friend. I saved so much time by looking up locations ahead of time and not having to wander around.
- Meeting up with friends (outside of work) keeps me grounded and accountable.
- Sulfur hot springs smell like durian, and now I know I don’t care for either.
- Traditional Taiwanese breakfast places are disappearing from Taipei Downtown.
- Google Translate can’t help you translate offline documents (at least not yet), particularly restaurant menus and subway maps.
- Next time I go to Yangmingshan, I bring a bike! Whether it’s paved or dirt, it’s bound to be a good ride all the way down.
- Ximending is worth checking out, especially for hard-to-find Japanese mecha models.
- New favorite dessert place, MeetFresh, tasty old-style shaved ice.
- Jetlag is more than just the physiological adjustment, there’s also the social, emotional and psychological.

Oh yeah, that's right, you mentioned that last time. That's where we held our training camp. Nice area to visit, but not sure I'd want to be there for more than a day, very peaceful and quiet.
hey Emmanuel! you went to Taiping! That's where my mother in law grew up. We went to that lake too. We stayed there for 2-3 nights last year with my wife's grandma when we visited Malaysia. I prefer the city, but being out in the countryside wasn't a bad experience.