Categories
Selected Articles

Jordan Love and his wife are pumped for Micah Parsons’ trade to Packers

Both Jordan Love and his wife, Ronika Stone, were thrilled about the Micah Parsons trade that added a jolt to the Packers.
Categories
Selected Articles

These are the outrageously radical DSA-NYC policies Zohran Mamdani refuses to say he rejects

Newly unearthed platforms from the DSA’s New York City chapter paint a shocking picture of the potential radical shift in policies in the Big Apple if Mamdani is elected as mayor in November.
Categories
Selected Articles

Joe Alwyn spotted for the first time since ex Taylor Swift and Travis Kelce’s engagement

Alwyn was spotted while walking the streets of London the day after Swift announced her engagement to the NFL star.
Categories
Selected Articles

My date sent me a Venmo request for a ridiculous amount of money — I can’t believe how petty it was

The age-old question of who should pay on a first date has been reignited.
Categories
Selected Articles

Coco Gauff breaks down in tears mid-match in emotional scene

Coco Gauff welled up with tears early in her second-round match against Donna Vekić on Thursday night under the Arthur Ashe Stadium lights.
Categories
Selected Articles

Viktor Orban’s HUGE estate with two swimming pools sparks outrage amid corruption claims

The Prime Minister of Hungary and his family are apparently living large as seen in a viral video filmed on their sprawling countryside estate in Felcsút, just outside of Budapest. Prime Minister Viktor Orban has downplayed the luxurious property, known as Hatvanpuszta manor, and has even described it as a humble family farm owned by…
Categories
Selected Articles

Judge rejects Saudi Arabia’s bid to dismiss claims it supported 9/11 hijackers

Judge rejects Saudi Arabia’s bid to dismiss claims it supported 9/11 hijackers [deltaMinutes] mins ago Now
Categories
Selected Articles

Journalist’s final images show the Gaza hospital stairwell where she was killed by an Israeli strike

Journalist’s final images show the Gaza hospital stairwell where she was killed by an Israeli strike
Categories
Selected Articles

Chiropractor sentenced to life for poisoning his wife with lead-tainted vitamins during divorce battle

“I believe this was a good glimpse into Brian Mann’s character. I don’t know if he took this seriously or if he takes anything seriously outside of himself and his pursuit of money. It’s a peek into his soul.”
Categories
Selected Articles

He quit his 6-figure tech job in his 20s to run a funeral business with his wife. It changed how he sees work and life.

Rachael Tay and Leon Lim Casket Fairprice
Leon Lim joined Rachael Tay’s family funeral business after seeing her guide people through loss and lead with purpose and tradition.

  • Leon Lim left a six-figure tech job in his 20s to run funerals with his wife.
  • Seeing her work in the funeral business made him rethink the impact he wanted to make.
  • In funerals, “nothing is expected” — a sharp contrast to tech work, Lim said.

When Leon Lim finished a computer engineering undergraduate degree at the National University of Singapore, his career path seemed set.

In 2020, he joined a government tech agency, specializing in cybersecurity. Within four years, he was earning a six-figure salary and on track for a managerial role.

But in 2024, he left to join his wife’s family-run funeral business as an operations development manager.

“It was a very difficult decision,” the 30-year-old told Business Insider.

Watching his wife, Rachael Tay, up close — meeting families, managing operations, and modernizing the business — made him rethink the kind of impact he wanted to make. While he spent his days behind a screen, she was helping people through loss and running a company rooted in purpose and tradition.

“You don’t really interact much with people,” Lim said of his former job. “It’s hard to define what’s meaningful.”

The switch came with financial trade-offs. Lim said he took a 20% pay cut, but he sees the work as far more rewarding.

“Fulfillment isn’t just about income,” he said. “It is also about the difference I make and the professional growth I gain from tackling meaningful challenges.”

Different hours and a much different customer

The shift from cybersecurity engineer to funeral operator wasn’t just a career change — it was a mindset reset, Lim said.

In tech, everything is structured and predictable. But in the funeral business, “nothing is expected,” he said.

Instead of lines of code, he now works with grieving families. There’s no textbook for handling loss: Some arrive composed and ready to plan, others break down at the mortuary door.

“We have to stay calm, stay collected, stay composed, be there for them,” Lim said. The hardest part is striking a balance — showing compassion while moving quickly to get things done.

“This industry is not just about the logistics, it’s also the human touch,” he added.

It’s been a steep learning curve, but Lim credits Tay and her family for guiding him from the ground up — from speaking to grieving clients to coordinating a wake.

He also said the hours are “definitely longer and more irregular” compared to a typical office job.

There isn’t a fixed time to “clock out,” he said. “Death is unpredictable, so we are always ready.”

“That’s what makes the work energizing, as every day is different,” he added.

Despite the longer hours, emotional toll, and pay cut, Lim said he has no regrets. He now sees funerals as a tech opportunity hiding in plain sight.

The funeral industry is “like an untapped market,” he said. “It’s traditional, it’s slow to modernize, and then that is where that gets me very interested and really makes me wonder, like, what possibilities are there?”

Casket Fairprice
Rachael Tay said Leon Lim brings his expertise in the tech domain to the multigenerational business.

Using AI to bridge the gap

Tay, now the corporate development manager, joined her family’s multigenerational business, Casket Fairprice, at 19. Tay’s grandfather founded the business in 1993.

Tay said she and Lim complement each other.

“He brings in his expertise in the tech domain,” the 25-year-old said. While she is “more on the creative side,” Lim is very “logical” and “structured.”

Lim said their working dynamic mirrors how he used to approach building software: breaking down complex problems into smaller, manageable ones and solving them step by step.

In the past, families just knew what to do when a loved one passed, Tay said. But younger generations, those in their 20s to 40s, often don’t know where to start.

The couple said technology could make the funeral planning process more accessible to younger clients.

Their company has launched two AI tools: a chatbot that answers common questions about funeral customs and an AI-powered planner that guides families through arrangements virtually. Lim spearheaded both, drawing on his tech background to design and run the projects.

The couple also said they’re exploring how AI can help preserve legacies — compiling memories, tributes, and photos into digital memorials that can be passed down for generations.

Do you have a story to share about an unconventional career pivot in Asia? Contact this reporter at cmlee@businessinsider.com.

Read the original article on Business Insider