Dalveen believes that more than just empowering individuals to think creatively and expose themselves to different peoples and cultures from around the world, the industrial training component that is present in almost all of Limkokwing University’s programmes is essential for the student who wishes to pursue a profession in public relations.
“Students have to take it seriously even though at first many may feel reluctant to go through it, because industrial training is indeed the eye-opener in your transformation from student to professional,” she said.
Students have to take it seriously even though at first many may feel reluctant to go through it, because industrial training is indeed the eye-opener in your transformation from student to professional
The public relations industry in Malaysia is, according to Dalveen, a good industry to bank one’s future on. “It is growing rapidly because everyone, from big corporations to even smaller businesses, is now realizing the value and necessity of public relations.”
“Public relations have been around in the United States and Australia for more than twenty years and is now blossoming in Malaysia as more and more companies today need public relations to manage the relationship with their clients and to assist in internal communication,” she explained, “But if you plan to enter the industry, do not join just because you think it’s going to be glamorous.”
“It is a very demanding job that requires you to always be on your feet while you get used to churning out press releases all the time. You need to know your clients very well and if you have to provide solutions for them, say for a crisis, you need to keep thinking out of the box.”
But does Dalveen have any advice for those who wish to follow her footsteps in another direction – that of winning beauty pageants? In fact she does, as she explains, that people entering beauty pageants should not have too high hopes on winning or becoming famous.
“Not everyone who is going to go on stage will end up being noticed while live on air, so don’t think of it as a competition that you have to win. Instead, take it as an experience of a lifetime meant to be enjoyed.”
Perhaps her personal regimen and hobbies might be worth adopting, too: Dalveen wakes up as early as 6 am to go to the gym and exercise four times a week, and spends whatever free time she can get reading. Although some of her top reading material are novels like Cecelia Ahern’s P.S. I Love You, Dalveen also highly recommends non-fiction books that promote self-empowerment such as those of Osho, a professor of philosophy in India, whose books include titles like Walk without Feet, Fly without Wings, Think without Mind and Osho on Zen, as well as Barbara Taylor Bradford’s The Power of a Woman.
Believing that ‘everyone is equally important’, that living for the present is a definition of success, and that one must learn to love oneself before one can love others; it is small surprise that she is labeled as a person who is simply bubbling with positive energy by her colleagues. Dalveen closes our interview with an anecdote that she has of her years prior to enrolling in Limkokwing University.
Born in the month of February under the star sign Aquarius, Dalveen fully believes that her star sign is one that is inspired with creativity.
“That’s what I told my dad to further persuade him to enroll me in Limkokwing University. I told him – that’s where I have to be, it’s written in the stars!”