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Growth

Building on recent nation branding efforts and featuring a line-up of talent diverse in both thought and sector, the Ingenious Together films promote innovative Kiwi businesses and well-known ‘friends of New Zealand’ with ties to Kiwi business, exploring why such homegrown thinking attracts the world’s attention.

There is a 1-minute film for five key markets including the USA, Australia, Singapore, Japan, and China, with each film bespoke to the region. The Singapore and the USA films are the most global, so can be used for other markets.

The films will be used online across New Zealand Story’s social media channels and will be supported by paid media in their key markets to showcase New Zealand’s ingenious way of thinking to a global business audience.

They are also available to download from the New Zealand Story Toolkit and use within business meetings, events, and presentations to reinforce the unique way of thinking that sets New Zealanders apart.
 
At a time when our borders are closed growing perceptions of New Zealand as an ingenious nation is critical as our weightless export sectors such as technology, gaming and the creative industries are still very much open for global business.

Find out more about the campaign here.


HOW KEA CAN HELP YOUR BUSINESS GROW

Kea Connect

Kea Connect is a free service that will help your business grow offshore. We connect you personally with regional, sector-specific experts and peers.

READ MORE

Resources

Kea is here to help New Zealand businesses grow offshore. Be inspired and hear advice from businesses who have created their export path.

READ MORE

Jobs Portal

Looking for the right talent for your team? Reach our global Kiwi community through the Kea international job portal. 

READ MORE

Filed Under: Businesses going global, Businesses growing at home Tagged With: Business Growth, Export, Growth, Ingenuity, NZ Story

Kea press release for the results of the Welcome Home Survey

The data within this report was gathered via Kea’s ‘Welcome Home Survey’, launched in August to enable New Zealand to better understand its offshore Kiwis. Within this research, Kea sought to understand returning Kiwis timeframes, skills, industry experience and wealth, as well as their needs.

‘The survey was met with an “overwhelming response” and Kea chief executive officer, Toni Truslove says the resulting data reveals surprising insights about this group and their potential impact on New Zealand, both economically and socially.

“It is clear that the pandemic of 2020 is causing a once in a generation opportunity for New Zealand, as many of our one million-plus expats look to return home seeking safety, family and a new future,” Truslove said.

“Kiwis are coming home as they always have, but the new trend identified sees a high volume of Kiwis returning at the height of their careers, with many of the skills that New Zealand as a nation is in genuinely in need of. 

Truslove says the report indicated that the top industry for returners is technology. “And we also see a desire to return from teachers and healthcare workers, giving New Zealand a potential edge over countries with less distributed populations in this closed border era.

“And with a large majority planning to stay permanently, bringing family, pets and investment as well as a desire to give back to their communities, this group has the potential to be incredibly transformative for New Zealand, now and in the future,” Truslove said.

Highlights of the report include:

  • Over 15,000 people completed the survey, from regions including the UK, Australia, US and Canada.
  • 49% are planning to return, with half of those planning to arrive within the next two years.
  • The majority of those intending to return stated that Covid-19 was a key factor in their decision.
  • 75% of those intending to return plan to stay permanently.
  • 75% of respondents have been away for 5+ years, and are primarily aged between 35 and 54.
  • A large majority of respondents will potentially be looking for senior positions, stating their employment category as Senior, Manager, Director, Owner, or C-Suite.
  • 20% of respondents want to invest in a business and 11% intend to start their own business, with 8% intending to employ between 2-5 staff.
  • While 32% intend to reside in Auckland, the remainder are looking to return to regional New Zealand, with 22% leaning towards a region they haven’t lived in before.
  • Nearly a third are returning with a spouse, some bringing children and pets.
  • 65% of returning kiwis indicated they identify with progressive rather than traditional values.

The report’s analysis was supported by Distinguished Professor Sir Peter Gluckman, Economist Julie Fry and Distinguished Professor Paul Spoonley.

Sir Peter Gluckman said he believed that Covid-19 is having an undisputed impact on the volume and calibre of returnees.

“Clearly New Zealand’s response in contrast to global impacts has triggered many offshore Kiwis of vast experience and talent to think about returning to contribute to New Zealand. This includes a significant number in an age range and talent pool at the height of their game, that previously had been assumed to be unlikely to return,” he said.

Anna Curzon, Chief Product Officer for Xero agrees, saying that as senior and experienced Kiwis return home, it will be imperative that we make the most of this ‘brain gain’.

“Their experience overseas means they can bring new perspectives to the problems we need to solve. They will help reinvigorate the employment market both as potential employees and employers, and ultimately, give us the ability to continue to innovate and produce world-class products and services,” Curzon said.

On social aspects of the report, the respondents have primarily been away from New Zealand for a not-insignificant amount of time. And for some of the respondents, they will be arriving back to a very different New Zealand from when they left.

Distinguished Professor Paul Spoonley said we need to welcome these overseas Kiwis home.

“New Zealand has more of its skilled population overseas than any other OECD country. But they are coming home, bringing with them skills and experience that make them an extremely important addition to our economy and society.

“It is critical that if this is to happen, then employers and others need to embrace these new arrivals and use their skills and experience – and their willingness to give.”

 Toni Truslove agrees.

“This has never been more true and it seems that New Zealand’s pandemic response, contrasted with the ongoing challenges being faced by those offshore, has reminded Kiwis everywhere what an incomparable nation, environment and culture we have. New Zealand has a unique opportunity to make the most of this strong brand and to adequately plan on how we welcome these Kiwis home’

“To those remaining offshore, please stay in touch, and to those returning, we say, Nau Mai, Haere Mai, welcome home”.

Notes on the Research:

The survey and the analysis have been supported by:
Distinguished Professor Sir Peter Gluckman
Economist Julie Fry
Distinguished Professor Paul Spoonley
Survey analytics, strategy and design by TRA Research

For more information contact:

PR Representative: Paul Blomfield, 021 970 871, [email protected] 

Kea: Ele Quigan 027 773 7779 [email protected] 

About Kea

Kea is a Public/Private partnership, supported by NZTE, MFAT, MBIE and Tourism New Zealand

New Zealand has the second largest offshore community per capita in the OECD.  Kea was founded in 2001 to connect and engage our global people, for the benefit of Aotearoa.

Almost two decades on, Kea nurtures a vibrant and diverse community who share a strong passion for New Zealand and the success of its people and businesses.

Our mission to connect New Zealanders has never been more important. See keanewzealand.com

Filed Under: COVID-19 recovery, Kiwi coming home Tagged With: Coming Home, Economic Recovery, economy, Growth, opportunity, Welcome Home Survey

New Zealand is unique in this opportunity – with one of the largest offshore populations of any developed country, we’ve dealt with an ongoing ‘Brain Drain’ for several decades. Now, we’re facing a sudden injection of much-needed skills and talent that other nations only dream of.

This week Kea had the pleasure of releasing our latest report; Unleashing the Potential of our Returning Kiwis, and it reveals that the pandemic has caused many of our million-strong diaspora to rethink their plans for the future and to return home.

This report suggests we’re facing a ‘once in a generation’ opportunity to bolster our labour market in sectors where we need volume, such as education and healthcare, as well as sectors where new ideas and global perspectives fuel growth such as technology and construction. Coupled with a strong desire to give back to charities and their communities, these returning Kiwis present enormous potential for transformation across the entire social and economic fabric of New Zealand.

The statistics are striking – in the period March 2019 to end March 2020, New Zealand saw the highest homeward migration in recorded history with 42,800 New Zealand citizens arriving home. Looking to the future, 49% of respondents to the Kea survey indicated their intention to return, 24% in the next 12 months and the remainder over the next four years – signalling a long-term trend. Many of these returners are Kiwis who have been away for 10+ years, on average aged between 35 – 55 and many holding senior positions in high-value sectors. 

These are Kiwis that, before 2020, would have been unlikely to come home – 77% stating that their intention to return has been directly influenced by COVID-19. Due to global instability and a desire to be closer to family, these affluent senior professionals are bringing their international ideas, experience and perspective back to New Zealand, with the majority planning to stay permanently.

This wave of returning migrants is what Distinguished Professor Peter Gluckman is referring to as “a once in a lifetime, seismic, Kiwi population shift”. It presents New Zealand with an unparalleled advantage in the global skills race: 12% of those intending to return are in the technology and science sector; 10% are in academia, 9% in infrastructure and 3% in agribusiness. 

Distinguished Professor Paul Spoonley said this week that these skilled expats “are coming home, bringing with them skills and experience that make them an extremely important addition to our economy and society.”

Kea was created in 2001 to maintain New Zealand’s connection with the then thousands of expats who were leaving our shores for greener pastures.  Through cultivating this community, we have introduced expats to thousands of New Zealand businesses with global aspirations and watched them generously offer market intelligence, advice and networks. Now, 19 years later we’re seeing an incredible reversal as these same passionate Kiwis arrive home. Many have supported New Zealand from afar and now they’re here and more willing than ever to roll up their sleeves.

As a nation, we need to welcome these returnees, and enlist them to help us rebuild our economy, to create new opportunities for the long-term growth of New Zealand.  

Kea believes it is time to initiate a taskforce to look at how best we welcome these Kiwis, how we integrate them into our communities and businesses, utilise their skills and how we prepare ahead of time for any resource challenges. 

CONTRIBUTOR

Toni Truslove

Chief Executive Officer

Kea

Kea member

Filed Under: Global Kiwi, Kiwi coming home Tagged With: Coming Home, Economic Recovery, economy, Growth, opportunity, Welcome Home Survey

Tell us about yourself and what Re-Leased is?

Re-Leased is a cloud-based commercial property management software that automates and centralises the accounting and lease administration for commercial property managers. Our founder and CEO, Tom Wallace, was in the commercial property industry and observed that the status quo for landlords and property managers was to manage multi-million-dollar property portfolios on out-dated legacy software and spreadsheets. Re-Leased is a modern approach to managing commercial property that leads with automation, centralisation and mobility.

I started with Re-Leased in 2015 after a stint as an accountant with Fonterra and having a few small businesses. Tom and I were buddies from winning the under 7’s soccer league together in Palmerston North and going through part of university together. We happened to bump into each other at an airport in 2015 and I was really impressed with his ambition and approach to running Re-Leased, so I jumped on board! After spending time in New Zealand with Tom, I moved to London to set up the UK office. It has been an amazing journey, building a fast paced business with great people. The UK is Re-Leased’s fastest growing market with 30 staff across an office in London and Birmingham.

Did you and your team have global ambitions from day one?

Absolutely. We have always set Re-Leased up to be able to scale globally. We have developed our software, internal tools and processes with a long-term global mindset – intentionally avoiding shortcut decision making. We are very proud to be selling Re-Leased on the global stage.

Tell us about your experience with Kea Connect

We reached out to Kea when we landed in the UK as we knew we had to build our support networks as soon as possible. Tania Bearlsey and Kea have been invaluable for us. As well as introducing us to mentors, influencers and industry CEO’s; just having a familiar support network that you could call on was huge. Kea has:

  • Introduced us to Ross McEwan, who at the time was CEO of Royal Bank of Scotland and made various other introductions to their World Class Network. These meetings were hugely valuable and assisted in guiding Re-Leased early on in respect to strategic decision making;
  • Played a key role in connecting us to Kent Gardner and Paul Kendrick, Chief Executive and Chief Investment Officer at Evans Randall, who became one of our strategic investors;
  • Introduced us to Former All Black Anton Oliver and Owen Eastwood, who have been or will be keynote speakers at our respective annual customer events;
  • Organised for Re-Leased to host a breakfast with Kane Williamson where we invited our key clients and prospects;
  • Held valuable networking events with World Class New Zealanders who are excelling on the world stage. These events are great for inspiration and networking

How has Re-Leased grown since first reaching out to Kea Connect in 2016?

From 2016 – 2020, UK Re-Leased has experienced a compound average growth rate of 115%, and grown from one staff member to a team of 30.

What are the key challenges, and mistakes (if any) you have faced in relation to Re-Leased?

Growing a global business very quickly at scale always has its challenges! However, we all encompass an entrepreneurial mindset where we learn and act decisively and are open to changing tack if it’s the best decision for the business. We make decisions with data and are always researching and learning from businesses and people that have been successful before us. Of course, we make mistakes. However, they are not seen as ‘failing’. We adapt quickly until we have it right and then move onto the next challenge/opportunity.

What was your approach to funding?

Our desire has always been to grow very fast but not at all costs. Although growing as fast as possible with our customers funding us has always been our number 1 option, we have also leveraged available government grants and have a handful of strategic investors. For example, Evans Randall who are respected Real Estate Investors that used to own the Gherkin in London are one of those strategic investors. They help our in-market credibility, open doors for us and offer industry advice and support. This multi-thread approach has allowed us to control the balance of growth and cash preservation.

What does your team structure look like geographically, and do you have advice for businesses looking to hire offshore?

We have 90 staff across 7 offices – Auckland, Napier, Melbourne, London, Birmingham, New York and Toronto.

Our product and development team are based in the Hawkes Bay’s Tech Collective. The other offices each have a mix of finance, marketing, sales, HR and implementation. We have recently transitioned from a regional operation to a functional one with ‘Heads of’ being responsible for their teams globally.

For reference, our CEO is based in Auckland, CFO is based in London, Head of Sales is based in New York, CTO is based in Napier and Head of People and Ops is based in Napier. We all travel to stay close to our markets.

When hiring offshore, we invest time upfront in getting our first hire right. Someone that fits the company culture and that you can build a strong and productive relationship with. You can then build a strong team around them – It helps if they have an existing network in-market.

What was your strategy for entering a market without established networks? Please share any advice for other entrepreneurs looking to do the same

We build strong relationships with our customers. Although the UK is a very big market, the commercial property industry is very relationship driven so everyone has heard of or knows everyone in one capacity or another.

Customers can teach you about the market, introduce you to prospects, introduce you to employee candidates and give you ideas for relevant marketing and product ideas. Building relationships with our customers has been invaluable and has made the journey really enjoyable. This is a must do for anyone entering a new market!

How has your go-to-market approach differed from NZ, compared to the USA, Aus, and UK? USA?

Typically, the entry into our respective markets have come off the back of Xero’s success in NZ, Australia, UK, Canada, US etc. Like Xero, we are educating a relatively traditional and conservative market on the benefits of cloud technology. One of our products integrates with Xero and fortunately for us, Xero has spent years and huge marketing resources educating the respective markets before us.

Before entering a market, we would understand the market opportunity and if there was potential for a strong product to market fit. Once we had a strong indication and were happy with our market research, we put 1 person on the ground to accelerate learnings and sales. We would then continue to invest in that market as long as we kept receiving positive commercial indications. This method prevented us from making big unknown bets up front.

Once we are in-market, the markets are all ‘relatively’ similar in terms of competitive landscape, property portfolio make up, property industry groups etc. However, we do need to invest in our product to get a strong product-to-market fit. In the first instance, we would typically have a 80% fit which is normally close enough for the early tech adopters in the respective market to kick off our momentum. From there, we roll out our ever-evolving go-to-market playbook to ensure we are successful in the market as fast and as effectively as possible.

What has the past year looked like?

Re-Leased has had it’s strongest year yet. We continue to grow in our respective markets where our brand, customer base, product and team is the strongest it has been. This is great timing for us as 2019 saw the market adopting cloud tech at an accelerated rate – This is very positive as our prospects move off legacy based software and spreadsheets. Importantly we are finding our place as thought leaders in property management.

We are very proud to have won a handful of awards being; Xero’s UK Industry app of the year, NZTE’s emerging business, Best of British Business, Best Place to work in property and have recently been nominated for the UK’s Industry Journal’s Proptech innovator of the year award.

Can you talk about resilience and perseverance when it comes to launching a business, and what advice could you offer on how to best look after yourself?

We are pioneering a new era in a very conservative and traditional industry so resilience and perseverance are two critical characteristics that everybody in our team needs. We have always focused heavily on the culture of our team; celebrating the small wins, holding each other to high expectations, finding a way to solve a problem and treating one another with respect.

If you have a team that supports each other and is united in accomplishing a single vision, it’s easier to manage the ups and downs of the process. Together, we do the small things well but always have one eye on the bigger picture.

CONTRIBUTOR

Richard Kennedy

Global Head of Partnerships of Re-Leased

Kea member


HOW KEA CAN HELP YOUR BUSINESS GROW

Kea Connect

Kea Connect is a free service that will help your business grow offshore. We connect you personally with regional, sector-specific experts and peers.

READ MORE

Resources

Kea is here to help New Zealand businesses grow offshore. Be inspired and hear advice from businesses who have created their export path.

READ MORE

Jobs Portal

Looking for the right talent for your team? Reach our global Kiwi community through the Kea international job portal. 

READ MORE

Filed Under: Businesses growing at home, Kea Connect success stories Tagged With: Business, Commercial Property, Growth, New Zealand, Re-Leased, SME

There are several accelerators and incubators across New Zealand already. Why did you choose to expand across the ditch?

We’ve seen some key catalysts for startup growth such as the government’s budget allocation into venture funds and the first wave of startup success (RocketLab, Pushpay, Allbirds, Xero, etc), which culminated in a booming NZ ecosystem. But there is still a lack of a unified startup community, which brings together founders, operators and investors from across organisations, across the country and across the world. Startmate unites all parties by one purpose – to help raise and shape the ambition of Kiwi founders building the next global legacy. Kiwi founders want and need access to world-class mentors with global reach.

We have already been receiving more and more applications from NZ companies for the Sydney and Melbourne cohorts. We have invested in three NZ companies which were part of MEL18, MEL19 and SYD20, who had to move to Australia to join the cohort. Rather than the startups moving for us, we’re moving to where they are.

Tell us more about Startmate, and why it differs from the usual Founder programmes?

Startmate was brought to life in 2011 with the core principle of founders helping founders. We believe that (ex-)founders have the most empathy for early-stage founders and that the best advice comes from those who are a couple of steps ahead of you. Every one of our mentors is a founder, ex-founder or early-stage employee in a startup.

Another underlying principle at Startmate is having ‘skin in the game’. Each mentor is also an investor in each cohort. This beautifully aligns everyone’s incentives, as the startups success becomes the mentors’ success. Startmate has the full values alignment of founders helping founders and putting the money where their mouth is.

Now that New Zealand is at Level 1 and business is starting to move again, what opportunities are there for kiwi startups to go global, from the safety of New Zealand?

COVID levelled the playing field across the world. It doesn’t matter for customers nor investors if you’re talking to someone down the road or on the other side of the world – the meeting is over Zoom. This is a massive opportunity to get all the benefits of funding and reach, whilst having much lower cost and attracting talent which other companies can’t tap into.

Kea has a global community of Kiwi expats and friends of New Zealand, many of whom are willing to help kiwi businesses succeed globally. What influence can they have on the Startmate programme, and how can they get involved?

Startmate has a mentor network across New Zealand, Australia and San Francisco. Our mentors fulfil the three key pillars for us – investment, selection and mentoring. As each mentor invests heir own money ($10k up to $250k per cohort), our mentors also get to decide who will be part of the cohort and then which startups they want to be mentoring. The program is now fully developed for mentors to participate wherever they are in the world.

Are there companies you’d love to see join the Startmate programme?

We’re completely industry-agnostic. Software, hardware, aerospace, robots, you name it! Our sweet spot is between a $1-4m valuation and from first customers to $1m in annual revenue.

And similarly are there mentors that you’d love to have eg. With specific skill sets/expertise/backgrounds?

Founders and ex-founders or anyone who joined a startup and scaled a business unit to 100+ people. We don’t look for specific skillsets, but empathy for founders.

CONTRIBUTOR

Michael Batko

CEO

Startmate

Kea member


HOW KEA CAN HELP YOUR BUSINESS GROW

Kea Connect

Kea Connect is a free service that will help your business grow offshore. We connect you personally with regional, sector-specific experts and peers.

READ MORE

Resources

Kea is here to help New Zealand businesses grow offshore. Be inspired and hear advice from businesses who have created their export path.

READ MORE

Jobs Portal

Looking for the right talent for your team? Reach our global Kiwi community through the Kea international job portal. 

READ MORE

Filed Under: Businesses growing at home Tagged With: Business, Business accelerator, Growth, Startmate, Startups

Kea press release for the results of the Welcome Home Survey

When Kea revealed the potential number and calibre of returning Kiwi expats last year, it caused a sensation among commentators and journalists, who asked; “If that many talented Kiwis return, what could that mean for our nation?”

With the global landscape continuing to evolve, Kea is looking to build on this initial report with the Kea Future Aspirations Survey, intending to flesh out more important detail on our Kiwi explorers, and establish what may be changing for this valuable offshore network. 

The Kea Future Aspirations Survey seeks to: 

  • Understand how world events, including the vaccine roll out, are impacting exploring Kiwi. Are external influences altering their decision to return home, their timeline, and how they feel living away from New Zealand at this critical time
  • Provide an updated view on Kiwi talent around the world, including those looking to return home, what barriers they face and what they might need to thrive
  • Gather the ideas and aspirations exploring Kiwi have to help leverage the current positive global awareness of New Zealand, and how they feel they can best contribute to our nation’s recovery, wherever they choose to reside

“Last September we were delighted that 15,000 Kiwi from around the globe took the time to complete our ‘Welcome Home’ survey, giving New Zealand an essential dataset during a unique moment in time,” says Kea chief executive officer, Toni Truslove.

“This survey showed that a significant number of talented Kiwi were planning to come home in the next two years. 

“Six months on, we want to understand what might be changing for them. Will they still return and bring their talent, their families and their investment, or will they choose to stay offshore, and what factors could influence that decision.  If they do choose to stay offshore how can we still enable them to effectively contribute to New Zealand’s success as a united population? ” Truslove asks.

“The number of Kiwi expats residing offshore is roughly the same size as the population of the South Island. As border restrictions ease over the next 12 months, the decisions these New Zealanders make could have a huge impact on our workforce, our regional communities and our aspirations for the nation,” she said.

Founded in 2001, Kea nurtures a diverse and vibrant community of  Kiwis and friends of New Zealand, with members all across the globe and operations in Auckland, London, New York and Beijing. Kea’s mission is to enable better understanding of our exploring Kiwi through goodwill and connection for the benefit of New Zealand. 

“Kea is uniquely able to reach and connect with a very large and broad group of expats, including those planning to return to New Zealand,” says Truslove.

“All Kiwi, no matter where they are in the world, are important to New Zealand’s success. We are asking New Zealanders to forward the survey to Kiwi family and friends abroad and invite them to take a few minutes to complete the survey, and to get involved!” she said. 

The Kea Future Aspirations Survey has been commissioned by Kea, with research and analysis by leading research agency TRA. The initial report is expected before the end of June.  

If you’re a Kea community member, check your inbox for your exclusive link.
If you’re new to Kea, join to tell us where you’re at and to be first to hear the results.

#KeaCommunity #KeaFutureAspirations

Key findings from the Welcome Home Survey released 9th November, 2020

  • Over 15,000 people completed the survey, from regions including the UK, Australia, US and Canada 
  • 49% are planning to return, with half of those planning to arrive within the next two years
  • 75% of those intending to return plan to stay permanently
  • 75% of respondents have been away for 5+ years, and are primarily aged between 35 and 54

See the ‘Unleashing the Potential of our Returning Kiwis’ report here

For more information contact:

Kea Communications Representative: Ele Quigan 027 773 7779 [email protected] 

About Kea:

Kea is a Public/Private partnership, supported by NZTE, MFAT and MBIE

New Zealand has the second largest offshore community per capita in the OECD.  Kea was founded in 2001 to connect and engage our global people, for the benefit of Aotearoa.

Two decades on, Kea nurtures a vibrant and diverse community who share a strong passion for New Zealand and the success of its people and businesses.

Our mission to connect New Zealanders has never been more important.

Filed Under: Global Kiwi, Kiwi coming home Tagged With: Coming Home, Economic Recovery, economy, Future Aspirations Survey, Growth, opportunity

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