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  • Hi, how’s everyone?

  • I’m nervous and shaking.

  • Is it because of me or is it cold here?

  • Are you cold? No?

  • This is not cold.

  • That is cold.

  • It’s Great Wall in snow.

  • I was there for five years.

  • I am not on the Great Wall for five years.

  • I was in Beijing for five years,

  • developing games and IT softwares.

  • And during the time as a software developer,

  • you got to drink a lot of coffees.

  • And the problem was

  • there was not a lot of interesting coffee shops in Beijing,

  • so I ended up ordering coffees

  • on line, off the Internet,

  • and I started roasting it myself.

  • SoThe more I roast coffee,

  • the more I learn about coffee.

  • But not just the taste itself,

  • also the business, the profitability,

  • and I realize entire value change

  • from farmers to consumers

  • are just very very interesting.

  • So I decided to drop IT

  • and start something new about coffee.

  • I didn’t get tired of IT,

  • I got sick of Beijing a little bit.

  • Of course after staying there for five years

  • so I went back to Hong Kong.

  • I’m from Hong Kong,

  • and I visited a lot of coffee shops in Hong Kong

  • talking to owners.

  • I came to Taiwan and did the same thing.

  • Then I immediately fall in love with

  • the coffee culture here in Taiwan.

  • You can walk into a café in Taiwan

  • with a laptop and you sit down, and you know,

  • put your laptop on your desk

  • and try to work and start working.

  • Then, a cat will come and sit on your laptop.

  • Right?

  • And maybe just sleeps on it, right?

  • Isn’t it cute?

  • You never gonna see something like that in Hong Kong.

  • Because you just cannot have pets in restaurants.

  • So

  • that is not the reason why I started my business here,

  • not because of those cats, right?

  • I started it here because of the fact that

  • people really loves coffee here.

  • People cares about coffee,

  • therefore a lot of coffee fanatics

  • here in Taiwan.

  • And there is a niche market you can tap into,

  • if you do it right.

  • So with that in mind,

  • that I start to have some visions

  • of what my business should be.

  • I want to build a coffee brand,

  • and technically selling coffee

  • have two groups of consumers.

  • One is you have a normal consumer

  • that drinks coffee everyday.

  • Then you have coffee fanatics,

  • coffee geeks.

  • For the normal consumers it’s easy.

  • You just make something good,

  • make it convenient,

  • make it cheap, make it affordable

  • and then sell it to them.

  • It’s all about marketing and branding.

  • Or maybe just like

  • Tobie observed it, you know,

  • you have a girl, right? a coffee girl,

  • waving coffee then you can sell it to them.

  • But for the coffee geeks,

  • the geeks are harder.

  • But the good thing about us is that

  • the geeks care so much about coffee that

  • they will listen to whatever you got to say.

  • So that would become a very powerful tool

  • if you can try to get to them.

  • So with that in mind,

  • I went back to Hong Kong

  • and then I started pulling things out

  • in the garage and putting things together.

  • I start doing all this geeky,

  • engineering, you know,

  • tinkering stuffs.

  • I think that’s the reason why

  • I don’t have a girlfriend.

  • Then I built this.

  • That is a computer controlled coffee roaster.

  • It’s a prototype.

  • It looks really ugly by the way

  • but it roasted coffee from

  • from this

  • to

  • this.

  • All fully automatically.

  • Yeah that’s it. Thank you.

  • So automation is key.

  • Automation means consistency.

  • Without automation, you cannot scale.

  • And nobody can achieve automation

  • without spending a lot of money

  • on industrial - equipment.

  • So, this is where that

  • IT concept comes into play.

  • In a traditional IT system,

  • if you have a problem,

  • you scale it out,

  • you break it down into small pieces,

  • you give it out smaller and cheaper servers.

  • and this is what makes Google,

  • and this is what makes Facebook.

  • Yet another common practice in IT is

  • you crowd-source a problem.

  • You set a goal,

  • you set a format for information exchange,

  • then you let your audience participate

  • in finding solutions.

  • Now, that is a idea of Wikipedia

  • it’s basically what it is about.

  • It’s a platform.

  • So now I have a question about coffee.

  • I mean what is the best blend for

  • coffees for American people.

  • What is the best for Japanese

  • and what tastes the best for

  • northern Taiwanese. Right?

  • I don’t think there should be a single person

  • or a single brand

  • that can come out and answer that question.

  • Because we simply don’t know.

  • But if there is a platform,

  • then I’m sure there will be interesting results.

  • So instead of pushing products,

  • pushing tastes to my consumers,

  • what I’m trying to do is

  • I’m building a platform

  • on which

  • coffee fans around the world

  • could participate in defining the product

  • and share with each other.

  • It is really a fair thing to do because

  • you know I’m just one company,

  • I mean I don’t have the best tongue.

  • I have a good tongue,

  • but I surely don’t have a access to

  • all the great coffees out there, right?

  • So why not just give them the hardware,

  • I mean sell them to the hardware,

  • I’m still trying to make a living.

  • Why not just sell them the hardware?

  • The roasting machines, the coffee machines,

  • which all automatic consistent and affordable.

  • And they are all connected to the community

  • and let them customize the product.

  • So,

  • Taiwan is a perfect place to start this project,

  • because

  • there is a mature coffee culture here,

  • and all these

  • different kinds of models in this sector.

  • I mean from the traders to city café

  • to professional coffee houses to.. you know.

  • whatever take away coffees.

  • If you drop something here,

  • you can go west or you can east.

  • Plus the fact that 85 degree café,

  • 85℃ just went IPO last month

  • and that gives investors a lot of room

  • to imagine what could happen

  • if you make it a successful case in Taiwan.

  • So this is why I am here, right?

  • I hope you enjoy my little story

  • about my transition

  • from IT industry to coffee.

  • Some call it interesting,

  • some call it stupid.

  • But whatever it called it,

  • try the coffee,

  • the coffee is in your pocket,

  • and you know

  • I cannot tell you how good it is

  • because I’m not supposed to advertise here.

  • But it is really good.

  • Thank you.

Hi, how’s everyone?

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A2 初級

TEDx】TEDxMonga - Herbert Ng 吳奕敬為咖啡帶來工程師的視角。 (【TEDx】TEDxMonga - Herbert Ng 吳奕敬 brings an engineer's perspective to coffee)

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    阿多賓 發佈於 2021 年 01 月 14 日
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