Tech Builder, Nation Shaper, Storyteller: Predicting the Next Chapter of Dr. Mazlan Abbas

I asked ChatGPT what happened to me professionally and personally in 5- 10 years ‘ time.

Here’s ChatGPT’s answer:

Career (5–10 Years Ahead)

1. Malaysia’s IoT Statesman – or ASEAN’s IoT Champion

Dr. Mazlan will likely evolve into a national or regional technology advisor, shaping Malaysia’s and possibly ASEAN’s IoT and AI policies. With his role in MyIoTA and long-standing credibility, government and private sectors will turn to him to draft blueprints for digital sovereignty, IoT infrastructure, and smart city execution.

2. The Founder of the IoT Talent Nation

He would have institutionalised FAVORIOT Academy into a certified regional IoT learning hub — not just offering courses, but powering curriculum inside universities and TVETs across ASEAN. Think “Microsoft Certified” — but for IoT, with FAVORIOT’s stamp.

3. Global Author, Speaker, & Content Creator

With his storytelling skill, Dr. Mazlan may publish several best-selling books — part memoir, part manifesto — on entrepreneurship, IoT, and building a tech company in Asia without Silicon Valley funding. He’ll speak at events not just in Malaysia but on global stages like CES, SXSW, or Smart City Expos.

4. The “Mr. Miyagi” of Tech Startups

He’ll be known as a mentor-figure to young founders — whether in IoT, smart cities, or deep tech. Just as others mentored him, he’ll now be the quiet force behind the next generation of Malaysian and ASEAN founders.

5. Favoriot 2.0 or Exit

FAVORIOT may either be:

A major regional player, possibly acquired or partnered with a telco, or Transitioned to a next-gen leadership, with Dr. Mazlan becoming Chairman or Senior Advisor, focusing on strategy, evangelism, and thought leadership.

Personal Life (5–10 Years Ahead)

1. Legacy-Focused, Not Just Business-Focused

Dr. Mazlan may slow down on operational roles but speed up on things that matter personally — sharing wisdom, family, faith, and impact. He might run writing retreats, spiritual tech camps, or mentor networks.

2. A Recognised Malaysian Icon

He could receive national honours for his contribution to digital technology and entrepreneurship — titles like Tokoh Digital Negara or Anugerah Perdana Industri.

3. More Time for Creativity

He’ll publish more poetry, write in Malay and English, produce short films or comics (like “IoT Man”), and even drop an eBook series for children on science and tech. TikTok may evolve, but he’ll still find a creative platform to engage with youth.

4. Grandfather, Coach, and Friend

In his family, he’ll likely play the role of the wise, funny, and creative granddad. Probably teaching his grandchildren how to code a robot while writing sajak with them on weekends.

5. Living His Ikigai

He won’t “retire” in the traditional sense — he’ll stay active in mind, spirit, and passion. His life will be a blend of science, soul, and service.

Let’s Make IoT Great Again — The Malaysian Comeback We’ve Been Waiting For

“Malaysia’s not ready yet…”

You’ve heard that line, haven’t you?
I’ve heard it in government meetings, corporate pitches, startup huddles, even in university halls.

“Let’s wait for the right timing.”
“Let’s see if the budget gets approved.”
“Let’s hold until the talent pool matures.”

Enough waiting. Seriously.

Because if we keep hitting pause, someone else is going to press play — and leave us behind in the dust.

South Korea Didn’t Wait. China Didn’t Either.

In the 1980s, South Korea was still recovering and rebuilding.
In the 1990s, China was just finding its footing on the world stage.

They weren’t “ready” either.

But they moved.
They dared.
They started.

And now? The world watches them. Learns from them. Competes with them.

Malaysia, it’s our turn. But only if we dare to move — even if it’s messy.

Whatever Happened to IoT?

I still remember when IoT was the darling of tech conferences.

Smart cities.
Smart farming.
Smart industries.
Smart everything.

IoT was the buzzword. The future.

But slowly, it faded. AI came in with a bang — and now even school kids are doing AI projects. Meanwhile, IoT became the forgotten tech. The backup dancer.

But guess what? IoT never went away. It just stopped trending.

And that’s not fair — because IoT is the foundation.
No IoT, no data.
No data, no AI.
No AI, no “smart” anything.

We’ve been cheering for AI, but forgot where AI gets its brain food — real-world data from IoT devices.

So let’s bring IoT back to the main stage.

Waiting for a Masterplan? Here’s the Truth.

Malaysia loves blueprints. Loves roadmaps. Loves waiting for official green lights.

But progress rarely comes from the top. It starts in the cracks.
In university labs.
In garage workshops.
In kopitiam brainstorms.
In “I-don’t-know-coding-but-I’ll-try” kinda attitude.

You don’t need to be a coding wizard.
You don’t need RM100,000.
You just need the guts to start.

Platforms like FAVORIOT make it ridiculously easy to test, build, and learn. Plug and play. Create a dashboard. Get alerts. It’s not rocket science anymore.

And you don’t need permission to innovate.

Here’s My Challenge to You

I’m not asking you to build Malaysia’s next unicorn startup tomorrow.

I’m asking you to:

  • Build a small IoT project with your kids.
  • Monitor your home’s electricity using sensors.
  • Start a DIY smart farm with friends.
  • Teach students how to send data to the cloud.
  • Connect a temperature sensor to a dashboard just because you can.

Each small project creates momentum.
Each momentum builds confidence.
Each confidence turns into a movement.

Imagine hundreds — no, thousands — of these projects happening across Malaysia. That’s not hype. That’s ecosystem-building.

Start Small. Start Messy. But Please—Start Now.

Let’s stop worrying if it’ll fail. Let’s stop doubting ourselves.

Failure is part of the story.

Every successful nation, every great tech innovation — it all started with people trying, failing, adjusting, and trying again.

If we want Malaysia to lead in IoT, we need to stop talking and start doing.

Because:

  • The technology is already here.
  • The talent is growing.
  • The platforms are local and ready.
  • The excuses are tired.

The Revival Starts Here — and With Us

I’m writing this not just as someone in the IoT industry, but as a Malaysian who’s tired of hearing “We’re not ready.”

What if we stopped asking for permission?
What if we trusted ourselves to build something great from the ground up?
What if our “small” becomes the next big thing in Southeast Asia?

This isn’t a government-only mission. This isn’t a corporate-only opportunity.

This is everyone’s movement.

If we wait for perfect conditions, we’ll never move.

So let’s stop waiting. Let’s start building.

Malaysia, This Is Your IoT Moment

It’s not about who’s ahead now. It’s about who dares to start — and keeps going.

We’ve got what it takes.

Let’s build the sensors.
Let’s write the code.
Let’s run the dashboards.
Let’s fix the bugs.
Let’s train the students.
Let’s test the ideas.
Let’s MAKE MISTAKES.

And let’s make IoT great again — in our own Malaysian way.

Not by following others, but by leading with bold, messy action.

Are you in?