Cheow Hoe (10:06):
I’ll give one example. One of the agencies which runs the 995 line, they dispatch the ambulance for emergency services. Now these guys are really under stress. The problem was that ambulances couldn’t get to the patients in time because 70% of the calls would be cardiac arrest. You’ve got 10 minutes. If you don't intervene, the guy's gone. So my guys did a simulation to figure out the travel time, doing peak hours, non peak hours, all that stuff. We mapped it out and during the peak hour, 10 minutes buys you about two kilometers or two and a half kilometers because of traffic lights and traffic jams. Doesn't get you far. So the only way to is deploy thousands of ambulances, which you can't afford, right?
We spoke to the head of the department and then one young guy came said, "Why don’t we crowdsource lifesaving?" He said, "We need to get volunteers. We build a simple app, we get volunteers, people with Red Cross training, doctors, paramedics, et cetera, who are off duty, and if they're anywhere near that case we will give them notification and they can choose to go and help."
So it's a very simple idea. Three people did the program in about four months, and we launched it as a pilot. Initially I was very depressed because there was only about a hundred volunteers. But then the first life was saved and it came out in the papers, and today that app has about 130,000 volunteers. So all of a sudden you are really blanketing the country with volunteers who can actually intervene first, stabilize the person before the ambulance comes.
Tom Soderstrom:
And what an amazing thing for the person who came up with that idea.
Cheow Hoe:
He's still part of the team. Young developer. He wasn't the most senior. In fact he was the most junior guy. So I think the value here is that when you start listening to people, actually the senior people normally don't have good ideas. It's really the young guys on the ground who are more connected.
Tom Soderstrom:
So it's really important to fall in love with the problem, not the solution because the problem persists. And so many times we found that the original problem, the original solution, it's supplanted by a better solution.
Cheow Hoe:
And the improvement part is very interesting. The initial app was very simplistic, nothing much more than that. Then we started learning that we should also put location of AED machines in Singapore. So we put exactly where they are so that the volunteer can find it. Then one improvement that kind of shocked me the most was that they started putting a 995 button on the app itself. And I said, "Why do you do that?" Again, user story, right? They realized that it's better to put a 995 button on the app and you call using that rather than the phone. Do you know why? When people call, they're panicking, and they give the wrong address.
So, to me these ideas are important because you start with something small, but it becomes something more complete as you go forward. And that's what agility is all about. It's really not about going out there and building this huge application tomorrow morning and spend 50 million bucks doing it.