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When
Yusak Setiawan read in the EXPLORER that the top recruiter
in last year's AAPG membership drive would receive a trip and registration
to the AAPG International Meeting in Barcelona, Spain, he thought,
"I think I can do it. Yeah. I'm going to Barcelona."
Since this
interview took place in Barcelona, after attending technical sessions
where he was also a judge, it is obvious that the quiet, unassuming
Setiawan is a man who not only sets high goals -- he meets them.
"It was
fun," he said of his recruiting of 48 new members.
How did
he do it?
"For the
geoscience community, it was easy. They know about AAPG and what
it's all about. I would just ask, and make sure they had an application,"
he said. "And, I'd make sure they sent it in."
For the
non-geoscience community, Setiawan used a different approach.
"They would
say, ‘I'm not a geoscientist,' and I would have to explain what
(AAPG) is and that you don't have to be a geoscientist to join.
"I would
explain that, in my opinion, it is related to your profession,"
he continued. "At a minimum, you receive two monthly publications
-- and some practical information about the oil industry.
"I would
give them a copy of the EXPLORER. They would read it and say, ‘Hey,
I think I can use some of this,' and they would join."
Setiawan
joined AAPG in 1992 as a master's student at the Colorado School
of Mines, attending on a scholarship provided by the education monies
collected as part of the licensing/production agreements in his
native Indonesia.
"As a student,
I wanted to be in a professional organization that could help me
in my profession," he said. "AAPG is quite practical in terms of
work-related information."
Setiawan
also cited the "professional contact" potential as a career resource
to the new recruits.
He said
he chose to pursue a profession in geology "almost by accident."
"I was
hanging around with some older friends and I couldn't decide what
to do," he recalled, "and they said, ‘Try geology. It's fun.' So
I did. They were right. It opened my mind.
"It's a
good profession," he added, "and I like to drill wells."
That's
working out for Setiawan as well, since in his position as senior
geophysicist with Unocal in Jakarta, he is helping to develop the
West Seno Field, Indonesia's first deepwater field. Setiawan said
the field is in about 3,200 feet of water offshore Kalimantan, and
a 28-well program is scheduled for the first phase of development.
Congratulations,
Mr. Setiawan. But what next? Are you going to continue to recruit
at the same pace -- and win a trip to Cancun in the 2003-04 membership
rewards program?
"No," he
said. "I have to let other people win."
Then he
smiled and said, "But maybe not."
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