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Andy Choi and Michael Chang of Greystripe: Is the Bamboo Ceiling Coming Down?

By Susan | Monday, July 16, 2012 | 3 Comments

Bamboo Ceiling by walledplayground 600x450 Andy Choi and Michael Chang of Greystripe: Is the Bamboo Ceiling Coming Down?

Bamboo Ceiling? Not anymore.

At least, not for Greystripe cofounders Michael Chang and Andy Choi. Although there have been several stories about the Bamboo Ceiling and how it plagues immigrant Asians because a lack of self-promotion, now there’s a happy ending: Andy Choi and Michael Chang, founders of the mobile ad network Greystripe, have taken the helm of the digitization company YesVideo.

The pair’s new company focuses on the digitization of old videos and photos, creating what could be the throwback version of Google’s “Dear Sophie” video. This move follows a massive payout of $70 million once Greystripe had been bought out by ValueClick.

However, is the picture really this rosy?

In the corporate, non-startup world, the Bamboo Ceiling still exists. Asian Americans typically view their companies less favorably over time, and have a hard time moving up the ranks. While Choi and Chang should definitely be lauded for their self-starting attitude and vision for the future, they might also serve as a sign of the still-ailing status of the corporate world for minorities.

Would they have worked in an office, given the choice? Or did they feel pushed away by the hierarchical limitations that many Asian Americans have felt?

Both Choi and Chang started their careers in the tech sphere, with Chang at a storage networking company and Choi at a telecom OSS company. Yet, both left this to found what was to become the startup Greystripe.

Their departure from the corporate world could very well be because of a multitude of reasons. For some, it’s more enjoyable to work in a smaller environment than the hustle and bustle of an established company. For others, riding the leading edge of technology puts a smile on their faces and makes them want to go back to work day after day. Perhaps this, or a similar reason, could explain why they chose to leave.

But there still exists the possibility that, until they were in charge of their own company,  they felt burdened by the Bamboo Ceiling.

Maybe the shift is a optimistic omen, showing that Asian Americans are on their way up in companies, especially startups. But I’ll be taking this with a grain of salt until there are more signs of cracks in the Ceiling.

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  • LTE2

    “Would they have worked in an office, given the choice? Or did they feel pushed away by the hierarchical limitations that many Asian Americans have felt?”
    .
    Back in the stone age of publishing (1970) I used to read a writer named John Kneiling. He was an abrasive sort and would send today’s sensitivity and politically correct crowds right through the roof. Ole John took no prisoners as he discussed his experiences in the business world.
    .
    He said something that has stuck with me to this day… That no man worth his salt will ever work for another.
    .
    America was NOT built by people willing to wait their turn, but by people who had an idea and then capitalized on it. The transcontinental railroad, Bethlehem Steel, Bell Telephone, General Electric were not built by those who waited their turn or wanted to play it safe and fair. These companies were built by risk takers and gamblers. America was not built by feminized wimps.
    .
    Somewhere in all the chatter about diversity, fairness, equal opportunity this lesson seems to have been lost. What made America America was not endless environmental impact studies.
    .
    Choi and Chang follow in the footsteps of the men who built a nation. May they do well enough that they are cursed as 1 percenters.

  • m_wei

    it’s ironic you mentioned the railroad, but neglect the racist history of the building of it

  • LTE2

    Within every event in human history I can find negatives. Finding them is not hard to do.
    .
    None the less, the building of the Central Pacific and Union Pacific railroads were a remarkable achievement for their day.

 
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