Collaboration is a win-win for businesses and students
Entrepreneurial businesses work alongside Victoria University’s marketing school and WellingtonNZ to give students real-life experience.
Grant is the founder of one of Wellington’s leading property management companies Comprendé, and a high-growth leader and advisor at GrowNZ. He has expertise in helping businesses put in place and deliver viable growth strategies.
Having been in business in New Zealand and Asia for more than 30 years, Grant has experienced the highs and lows of business and economic cycles.
He believes these five tips can help businesses get through challenging times.
Reach out to people you haven’t spoken to in a while. Connect on a human level, ask them what is happening in their world, how are they coping, and how their teams are. This is not a sales call. Just be human. Try it. You will feel better, and your connections will as well.
Hire a student to help you. Student Job Search runs an amazing free hiring service. Delegate a project or give some specific tasks to a talented student — 10 to 20 hours of flexible work could fit in around their studies. You will be helping both of you.
Spend some time reviewing your systems and processes. Make it a team activity — what is working, what could we do better, what frustrates your team? Choose a few processes and improve your business.
Sales is pretty frightening to most businesses. Do you understand where your sales come from? Which clients generate a good profit margin? Do you have clients that cost you money to service? Compile a list of clients and the revenue they generated over the past 12 months. Then review the inputs (labour, raw materials), and evaluate the profitability. Consider which are your A clients and which ones are costing you money.
New business or growth of existing clients is important. When was the last time you proactively won a new client? Proactive means that you identified a prospective client, engaged with them and then won their business. It’s not easy, it takes time, patience, research, and focus. So what better time than now to strategically think about sales?
Entrepreneurial businesses work alongside Victoria University’s marketing school and WellingtonNZ to give students real-life experience.
This Wellington-based company is crafting crackers and crisps using rescued grain from beer production.
A Wellington-based machine safety and risk management consultancy has ventured into the tech space hoping to create safer and more compliant workplaces.
Physiotherapist and entrepreneur Bart de Vries is on a mission to reduce back pain by getting desk-bound people moving again.
The pool of talent in Wellington lured the UK’s fastest-growing energy supplier to set up its New Zealand headquarters here.
The Summer of Engineering internship programme helps employers find talent and gives students real-life work experience.
The rise and rise of a peanut butter business is out of this world — literally.
Puffin wine bar owner Hannah Wells ensures her specialist staff think of work as more than just a job.
Birds of a feather collab together rings true for Wellington’s Flight Coffee and Waitoa Brewery.
A Wellington charity is teaching a group of young women skills to set them up for life and work.