How Trimax built export success through customer-first culture
NZ Manufacturer, November issue Bob and Michael Sievwright. Founded in 1981 in Tauranga, Trimax Mowing Systems has grown from a small New Zealand manufacturer into a globally recognised provider of commercial mowing solutions. Known for its focus on innovation, quality and export success, Trimax has become a case study in […]
Q & A: Stephanie Adding, NZ Business Manager, Brickworks New Zealand
NZ Manufacturer, November issue Stephanie Adding, NZ Business Manager, Brickworks New Zealand *Tell readers about Brickworks? Brickworks Building Products is one of the world’s largest and most diverse building material manufacturers. Our company has built an enduring reputation with our customers, we are loved for our innovation, professionalism and […]
$50 Billion up for grabs thanks to new procurement rules
NZ Manufacturer magazine, November 2025 By Hon Chris Penk, Minister for Small Business and Manufacturing You may have seen the Finance Minister’s recent announcement about changes to how the Government buys goods and services. I want to make sure Kiwi businesses hear the good news because the new procurement rules, […]
Could a ‘grey swan’ event bring down the AI revolution? Risks we should be preparing for
Cameron Shackell, Sessional Academic, School of Information Systems, Queensland University of Technology The term “black swan” refers to a shocking event on nobody’s radar until it actually happens. This has become a byword in risk analysis since a book called The Black Swan by Nassim Nicholas Taleb was published in 2007. A frequently […]
Why strategy can feel stale
Jane Finlayson Strategic Doing Facilitator | Independent Consultant For some manufacturers, the last strategy they developed never got traction and didn’t survive the turbulent times we’ve been experiencing. For others their strategy lives in a document that no one’s opened since the last planning retreat. That’s not because people don’t […]
Before the Robots Roll in, is your system healthy enough to handle innovation?
NZ Manufacturer magazine Guest Article by Theresa Grainger, The Lean Hub & Productivity Excellence Academy. Every manufacturer is striving to lift productivity and much of the current focus is on investing in smarter machines, automated processes and AI. But the real question isn’t what we are going to […]
The hidden role of project engineering in NZ Manufacturing
Smart manufacturing is not just about advanced machines, data, or automation. It is also about how projects are delivered. In New Zealand, where margins are tight and downtime is expensive, project engineering is often the difference between a smooth delivery and one that struggles to get finished. Beyond the Plan […]
Beyond the roadmap: How Argus made people the engine of change
Adam Harvey, Business Performance Partner – Manufacturing, The Learning Wave Running operations today feels like living in two realities at once. On one hand, you know the plant has to modernise. The systems are creaking, customers want more for less, and digital tools promise the efficiency you need. On […]
Age-Inclusive Manufacturing: Making Flexibility Fair on the Factory Floor
By Shyamini Szeko, reflecting on Master’s research into ageing and work in New Zealand manufacturing (AcademyEx, 2025) Why Flexibility Matters “My 32-hour week lets me maintain a healthy sleep schedule and personal life,” one long-serving factory worker told me during my research. That small adjustment meant he could keep working […]
The Business Owners Exit Dilemma
David O’Connor, Platform 1 Many aging business owners have worked hard all their lives and are at a stage where they have built up a business that has given them a good income and lifestyle and it’s part of who they are. They know they should do something at some […]
From survival to strategy
Creating a business that runs without you Step into almost any Kiwi workshop at 6 a.m. and you’ll find the owner already there, fixing yesterday’s problem before the team clocks in. They’re signing off orders, juggling suppliers, answering calls and putting out fires faster than they ignite. By mid-morning they’ve […]
Could a laser-generated plume be the next biohazard scare?
By Ruth Nicholson, Laser Safety Officer and Director at NZ Laser Training Institute Ltd Lasers are an emerging technology used across various industrial applications such as precision cutting of metals, welding components with minimal heat distortion, or hardening to improve wear and corrosion resistance. Unlike ordinary white light, they emit a single wavelength […]
AI for Manufacturing Operations: It’s the bus you can’t afford to miss
Gareth Mitchell, Associate Partner, IRIS by Argon & Co Manufacturing globally faces relentless pressure for operational excellence, efficiency, and resilience. Over the past five years, Artificial Intelligence (AI) has emerged as a revolutionary innovation and a true economic engine reshaping modern manufacturing. As companies encounter supply chain disruptions, predictive maintenance needs, and real-time quality demands, AI adoption is becoming essential. However, much confusion remains about the economics of AI. Below, we demystify this confusion and explain why integrating AI into your strategy is both the smartest and most cost-effective path for leaders focused on competitiveness and capturing new value. AI is expected to add approximately $7 trillion USD to global GDP over the next decade, mainly by automating tasks, increasing productivity, and driving new value creation. IRIS by Argon & Co is already sees significant ROI across planning, supply chain, document and spend intelligence, and manufacturing efficiency. However, AI adoption represents a fundamental shift in how businesses create value and how labour may be structured in the future. AI’s cost-saving potential is profound, and exceedingly more high-ROI use cases appear across industries. AI has in some cases increased productivity by 40% and delivered cost reductions through AI automation and optimization. Businesses see stark improvements when AI automates repetitive actions, allowing workers to focus on higher-value tasks. The types of real-world use cases IRIS and its clients are developing show real AI-enabled efficiencies, such as reduced error rates, predictive AI reasoned planning, and automation of routine service tasks, all which lead to substantial improvements at all levels of the P&L. Besides economic advantages, early AI adopters gain multiple competitive edges. Early adopters benefit from foundational AI infrastructure that supports future innovation and ongoing productivity. AI-driven companies are focused on productivity gains and disciplined ROI, enabling faster data-driven decisions, better productivity, […]
