Cyber security no longer an IT problem
From February issue, NZ Manufacturer magazine It’s a reputation risk manufacturers can’t ignore With corporate cyber breaches in the spotlight increasingly, NZ Manufacturer magazine advisor and Impact PR director Mark Devlin looks at how firms can protect their brand in the event of an incident. For years, cyber security sat […]
From data to decisions: getting more value from sustainability measurement
From February issue, NZ Manufacturer magazine The way manufacturers measure sustainability is changing rapidly. New tools, improved data and AI-enabled platforms mean businesses can now measure far more than they could a few years ago. Carbon, circularity, risk and supply chains — the list keeps growing. For manufacturers, this often […]
Election Year Excuses? Why Manufacturers Can’t Afford Them
From February issue, NZ Manufacturer magazine David Altena is Head of Growth & Partnerships at SmartSpace.ai & C0-Founder & Host of The Better SMB Podcast. david@altena.solutions We are entering a familiar three yearly cycle of hesitation. As we flip into another election year, a subtle but pervasive “hush” descends over […]
Productivity and baby boomer business owners
From March issue, NZ Manufacturer magazine By Mike Warmington, Platform 1 For many SME baby boomer business owners last year, the economy forced them to think more of productivity and how to do things smarter. Some made strong gains however these were generally the larger SME sized businesses and above. […]
Backing Capability: Lessons from Fi Innovations and the Future of NZ Manufacturing
From February issue, NZ Manufacturer magazine New Zealand’s manufacturing sector has always relied on one core strength: capability. Not scale or low-cost production, but the practical skill, judgement, and adaptability of the people who make things here. In a recent podcast, Caliber founder Jonathan Prince spoke with Gareth Dykes and […]
Before the robots arrive: How Formthotics prepared its staff for the changes ahead
From February issue, NZ Manufacturer magazine Adam Harvey, Business Performance Partner – Manufacturing, The Learning Wave Running a manufacturing business right now can feel like standing on a moving walkway. If you don’t step forward, you fall behind. Customers want more for less, and Boards are pushing for efficiency, growth, […]
Importing gas locks NZ into fossil fuels for longer – just as clean energy surges
Jen Purdie,Senior Research Fellow, Centre for Sustainability, University of Otago The government’s announcement that it would move ahead with plans for a new facility to import liquefied natural gas (LNG), potentially as early as next year, was framed as a way to shore up energy security. But the decision instead marks another […]
2026 off to a strong start for manufacturers
From February issue of NZ Manufacturer magazine By Hon Chris Penk, Minister for Small Business and Manufacturing As I kick off my first manufacturing column of 2026, I want to pass on my best wishes to manufacturers across the country as you return from a well earned summer break. I […]
Strengthen worker training and safety
WorkSafe’s health and safety inspectors have been carrying out proactive assessments in the wood product manufacturing sector, and early findings show there are clear opportunities for businesses to strengthen worker training and improve the safe use of machinery. Manufacturing continues to be one of WorkSafe’s highest harm sectors. It accounts […]
XPO Exhibitions to launch new trade fair
From February issue of NZ Manufacturer magazine XPO Exhibitions is partnering with Hannover Fairs Australia to launch Logistics Automation New Zealand, powered by CeMAT. This will be held from 10-11 November at the Auckland Showgrounds. The trade fair will bring together world-leading logistics, automation, robotics, intralogistics, warehousing, and supply chain […]
New Zealand Productivity Organisation wants to hear from you
www.nzproductivityorganisation.co.nz www.nzmanufacturer.co.nz/nzproductivityorganisation The New Zealand Productivity Organisation (NZPO) invites all businesses throughout the country to share their views on Productivity […]
The Learning Wave Free 90-minute taster: Accelerate team cohesion and performance in times of change
What happens when frontline teams are truly connected to each other and the business? You see fewer handovers going wrong, safer decisions on the floor, better problem-solving, issues owned and closed out properly, and people who actually speak up when something’s not right. This complimentary 90-minute taster gives manufacturing leaders […]
How CTEM, AI, and access control redefine OT security in 2026
By Carlos Buenano, Field CTO for OT, Armis As we step into 2026, AI-driven adversaries, supply chain fragility, and relentless digitisation are forcing Operational Technology (OT) security to mature into a force to be reckoned with. Here’s what 2026 looks like: AI-Powered adversaries demand autonomous defence AI is no longer an abstract threat vector; it’s an operational force multiplier that attackers are leveraging with frightening results. We’re witnessing adversaries use autonomous agents to probe networks, map exposed devices, and launch dynamic exploitation campaigns that run continuously. In 2026, those systems will act autonomously: isolating compromised segments, or enforcing multifactor re-authentication for operators under suspicious conditions. In OT, where minutes can mean millions, automation will be the only meaningful defence. CTEM becomes the operational centre of gravity A few years ago, “CTEM” was just another Gartner acronym. In 2026, it’s the organising principle for any serious OT security program. CTEM represents a shift from periodic vulnerability management to continuous, risk-based exposure assessment and management across hardware, firmware, network paths, and even supply-chain dependencies. But the key difference this year is context. We’re aligning exposures with what actually matters; the physical process, the human safety implications, and the potential operational impact. The cybersecurity landscape in 2026 is clearly set for a strong and necessary integration where vendors leverage the strengths of CTEM to directly inform actionable firewall enforcements, workflows, and reporting. This narrative is driven by the final “Mobilisation” step of the CTEM cycle, which demands that validated, confirmed high-priority exposures leads to an immediate, automated remediation. Specifically for firewalls, this means a CTEM platform will no longer just issue a general alert but will use its deep, risk-based context to trigger a Security Orchestration, Automation, and Response (SOAR) playbook that instantly pushes a micro-segmentation policy or a temporary block rule to […]
