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FEATURE-12-year-old CEO to join Canada trade trip
to China LONDON, Ontario (Reuters) - The 12-year-old boss of
a Web site design company will be one of 300 business and political
leaders accompanying Canadian Prime Minister Jean Chretien on a trade
mission to China next month. Keith Peiris, who founded award-winning Cyberteks
Design in June 1999 and now has some 25 clients in North America, insisted
in an interview that he is "just like any other kid." But few kids face
his decisions, like whether to sell out to U.S. or Hong Kong investors for
several million dollars and what to do about would-be clients scared away
by his tender years. He and his father will spend nine days on the Team
Canada trip to Beijing, Shanghai and Hong Kong, where Chretien aims to
showcase the best of Canadian business in the most populous country in the
world. Sitting in his office in the basement of his London,
Ontario, home, Peiris told Reuters he discovered his passion for Web
design when he was 10 and was "playing around" with software downloaded
from a Web site. Bored with singer Britney Spears and the Pokemon cards
and TV reruns his peers enjoyed, he experimented with interactive tools as
a hobby. "There was nothing else to do," the dark-haired boy
said in a serious voice. Demonstrating his music- and animation-laden
interactive Web sites, he summed up his strategy: "You find the best sites
out there and you see if you can do better. Of course, I am not the best
designer out there yet, but I will strive to be." A glance at the complex, elegant animations on his
www.cyberteks.com site shows both the extent of Peiris' talent and why
news agencies and broadcasters like CNN, the Canadian Broadcasting
Corporation and Australian television are calling daily to ask for
interviews. "He doesn't want to be No. 2," his father Deepal
said proudly, his eyes sparkling behind square glasses. Impressed by his
son's first Web site, the former accountant, president and marketing
manager for Canadian computer companies presented him with a complete kit
of Macromedia applications for his 11th birthday in February
1999. A few months later Macromedia Chairman Robert
Burgess introduced Keith to the public as the youngest user of Flash
animation and interactive tools. PLAY BECOMES WORK That launched his career as an entrepreneur and led
to the creation of Cyberteks Design. "It was his idea," said his father, who is now vice
president of operations at Cyberteks. "I am teaching my son what I know.
We make decisions together. I haven't done anything my son disagreed with.
He makes the final decision." The family business is already thriving. Cyberteks
grew an astounding 600 percent in the last seven months, thanks in part to
publicity over its young founder and the inclusion of the Web design
company in the gallery of Macromedia clients, along with Kodak, MSNBC and
Cisco Systems. With a revenue the family coyly admits is in six
figures (in Canadian dollars), the company has seven offices in the United
States and five part-time employees who, like the Peiris family, work from
their London homes. Keith says he enjoys being able to work in his
pajamas but scoffs at suggestions that he might eat in the office. "It's
my loss if I drop cola on the keyboard. It's my work that is going to be
ruined, so I am taking it seriously." An eighth grade student who wins top marks for his
school work, he also plays three times a week as goalie for the London
Knights ice hockey team and works nights and weekends on Web design
contracts. "I really don't consider it work, I consider it fun.
I just had to rearrange a few things," he said casually when asked about
his heavy schedule. He admitted some potential clients change their minds
when they learn about his age, but the well-informed not-yet-teenager
tries to ignore them. "There are a few people who don't understand me, but
I try not too think about that. It's just one person in 6 billion (in the
world)," he said. "Suddenly, I've been known as the whiz kid or geek,
which I can't say I am too happy about. Some people -- very, very few --
have asked if they should call me 'Mister,' but I try to stay as casual as
possible, simply because I am a kid still." But when offered a children's menu in a local bar
and grill, he looks offended and asks for a normal menu. Already planning ahead, he is saving money to study
business and computer engineering. "People who take things for granted
will be left behind eventually. You have to continue to work hard to be
part of the new era," he said. His parents, Deepal and Sryia Peiris, left war-torn
Sri Lanka in 1981 to settle in Canada -- first Montreal, where Sryia was
working on a doctorate in organic chemistry, then London, a city of
300,000 125 miles (200 km) southwest of Toronto. Now the family admits it is at a crossroads, mulling
whether to sell Cyberteks or keep it. "The question is whether to grow slowly or expand
very fast," said Deepal, adding that the family may leave Canada but would
leave their head office in Toronto if it did. "We don't know where we are
going to be in the next few years." ( (nasdaq: MACR
- news
- people))
Rtrs10:46 01-25-01 Copyright 2000, Reuters News
Service.
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