Early years Ricky's entrepreneurship started as early as 17, when he claimed to have started the first private tutoring school for students in Hong Kong, and earned HK$40,000 (US$5128 in the 60s). Also reported in many other interviews by local press through the years, was that Ricky Wong had the business idea of bringing in non-taxed engineering textbooks from Taiwan when he was 21, at his 3rd year at the Chinese University of Hong Kong, which earned him a good fortune and helped fellow undergraduates, at a time when textbooks are rare and expensive locally.
IDD Ricky Wong was instrumental to the introduction of
callback IDD service to Hong Kong. In the early 90s, IDD was a luxurious service in Hong Kong, costing HK$12 (USD1.5) per minute and was monopolised by
Hong Kong Telecom. At the time Ricky Wong migrated to Canada, where the Canadian Government liberalised the telecom market using callback, Ricky Wong and his cousin then wrote to the Hong Kong Government about it, and with the government's confirmation, the cousins brought callback to Hong Kong. With this new competition, IDD price started to drop over 50%. In March 1998, after lengthy negotiation with the government, Hong Kong Telecom International surrendered its exclusive licence for provision of certain external telecommunication circuits and services, eight years earlier than the scheduled expiry, in return for a cash compensation of HK$6.7 billion. According to official data, cumulative savings resulting from competition in the mobile and IDD service markets have also been substantial, while savings from IDD service were estimated at HK$25.5 billion between 1999 and 2002.
Broadband Ricky Wong was also credited for bringing broadband internet to Hong Kong. At the time when the whole city is still wired by traditional copper wires using legacy technology (
ADSL), with service speed limited to 1.5 Mbit/s to 6 Mbit/s, Ricky Wong acquired a fixed line service license and began a ten-year project of building an all new network in Hong Kong using
fibre optics, of which accumulatively invested over HK$3 billion (US$400 million). The audacious investment decision was considered impossible by the market and investors, and Ricky Wong's company had lost money for seven years. As the investment project went on, with equipment and technical support from
Cisco Systems, Ricky Wong successfully built the largest
Metro Ethernet in the world, and launched probably the first 100 Mbit/s & 1000 Mbit/s broadband service for residential use in 2004 & 2005. His company became the second largest service provider in Hong Kong in 2008, the fastest growing service provider in 2009, and targets to overtake the incumbent in 2016. In 2010 he was awarded the
Ernst & Young Entrepreneur of the Year China in the 'Telecom' category.
Asia Television On 3 December 2008,
Linus Cheung originally hired Ricky Wong to be the chief executive of
Asia Television (ATV), which had long been recognised as pro-Beijing. On 4 December, it was announced that both of them would lead the TV station's reform. The station was losing
HK$1 million a day after racking up losses of
HK$300 million in 2007. After just 12 days Ricky Wong was reported to have resigned from his ATV position., with himself denying that he had ever quit. Wong and the public blamed the government for using a vague and generic phrase "a basket of factors" to refuse its application. He then sought another way for the company to survive. In December 2013, HKTV acquired a mobile TV licence and the spectrum needed to broadcast, and planned to launch services on 1 July 2014. However, in March 2014, the government refused to accept HKTV's technical proposal on the deployment of
DTMB, the mobile TV standard deployed in China. Such matter was brought to court for further judgment. Despite all these, Wong's actions made him to be named
Radio Hong Kong's Icon of the Year in 2013. In February 2015, Wong led HKTV to seek business opportunities in internet shopping and launched online shopping platform "HKTV Mall". Wong aimed to build the largest and the most diversified in terms of brand names, products and services e-shopping mall in Hong Kong, providing one-stop shop & 24 X 7 services. HKTV Mall lost HK$200 million a year in the first two years of its operation. In October 2016, Wong launched a physical store of HKTV Mall in North Point to boost its online shopping business, targeted to its 1.23 million registered subscribers. ==Personal life ==