Lessons from the 1%
Success isn’t what you start. It’s what you don’t stop. When you spend time inside New Zealand’s best manufacturing businesses there’s a pattern that shows up again and again. They don’t launch more initiatives They don’t chase the latest tool They don’t rely on heroic effort or last‑minute pushes. They […]
Leadership: The difference between the plan you have and the results you get
Adam Harvey, Business Performance Partner – Manufacturing , The Learning Wave You can feel good leadership before you see it. A strong shift hums. There’s a rhythm: Clean handovers, problems solved where they happen, and a team that knows what “good” is. Output is steady. Waste is controlled. The team […]
Data, Decisions, and the Drive for Productivity, A Digital Path to World Class Performance
Article 3: V2 –By Neil Robinson, a Senior Business Consultant with Argon & Co (Auckland) specialising in productivity improvement, Lean systems and capability building. If you’re reading this third article in the series, you already know that New Zealand manufacturers face a difficult reality: our productivity lags many of the […]
EMEX is with us again
From May issue, NZ Manufacturer magazine The latest version, EMEX 2026, is mere days away. The most focussed trade fair for manufacturing businesses in New Zealand continues to display the latest and advanced equipment and technology which our companies require to improve their levels of Productivity and to make […]
Business exit and the waiting trap
-Mike Warmington, Director, Platform 1 There has always been talk about a tsunami of businesses actively seeking an exit of some description. It has not come to New Zealand yet and with covid, tariffs, wars, high interest rates and fuel price concerns there is a lot of waiting going on. […]
World-First construction tech could cut building emissions by 80%
-Mark Devlin New world-first technology developed to prevent design errors from cascading throughout the country’s most complex construction project to date could reduce cost overruns in New Zealand’s $275bn infrastructure pipeline by millions of dollars, as well as cutting new building emissions by up to 80%, according to new data. […]
World class is not optional
From May issue, NZ Manufacturer magazine Ian Walsh, Partner, Argon & Co While there are industries — car assembly, for example — where the economic case for local production can be debated, food is different. Producing food is something we should be doing. More than that, it is something we […]
Free 60-minute webinar
$144K recovered. 18% more output. When literacy improves, performance follows. As an operational or HR leader, you see the issues every day. Downtime that shouldn’t have happened. Instructions that were acknowledged but not followed. People waiting around for instructions, not sure of what’s next. And a strange silence during […]
(I wonder) What is in the Budget for manufacturers?
Another Budget, another election year. Lots of hand wringing? I hope not. The business community needs government to invest more and assist to make life better for all of us. Through these challenging times, we are not hearing from Ministers, expressing concerns, or sharing ideas to address the difficulties businesses […]
NZ‑India free trade deal: were early fears about immigration and investment justified?
by Rahul Sen, Senior Lecturer, Department of Economics and Finance, Auckland University of Technology Depending on which side of the argument you listen to, the recently signed New Zealand-India free trade agreement represents either a huge economic opportunity for New Zealand or a risk to its economic sovereignty. In an election year, […]
Talking point from Mayor Wendy Schollum: McCain and Wattie’s closures
When a major employer closes and another downsizes, the impact doesn’t stop at the factory gate. In Hastings it affects workers, growers, contractors, suppliers, transport operators, local businesses, and families across our region – because when steady jobs disappear, it is felt around kitchen tables, in local shops, and across […]
Three Ministers for Small Business and Manufacturing in Three Years
Andrew Bayly, Chris Penk and Cameron Brewer have been the ministers for Small Business and Manufacturing in the past three years. How has this happened? Manufacturing in New Zealand requires a strong focus and a minister in the position for the long haul (or three years as the political term […]
Making scope 3 manageable: how to use spend-based emission factors
Manufacturers need a clear view of emissions across their value chain to identify hotspots, manage risk and meet reporting requirements. The challenge is that supply chains are complex, with limited visibility beyond direct suppliers. This makes scope 3 emissions difficult to quantify. Unlike scope 1 and scope 2, they are rarely measured directly and rely on estimates. Data is often incomplete or unavailable, especially early on. Waiting for perfect data is not realistic. This is where spend-based emission factors come in. They use financial data to estimate emissions, allowing organisations to build a complete scope 3 baseline from the data they already have. Using financial data to get emissions insight Spend-based emission factors link financial data to greenhouse gas emissions. They express the average emissions associated with a dollar spent in a given category. This approach uses national economic data and emissions data to estimate the average emissions per dollar spent. In practice, it allows manufacturers to use their existing spend data to estimate scope 3 emissions. This is exactly how many organisations begin. Financial data is readily available, structured and complete. Using it as a starting point enables a rapid, economy-wide view of emissions without waiting for supplier engagement. Photo by Cooper Hofmann on Unsplash Why this approach resonates with manufacturers Manufacturers operate across complex supply chains, often with a mix of domestic and imported inputs. Understanding upstream emissions in detail is challenging, particularly early on. Spend-based emission factors address this by providing full coverage. Because they are built on national economic accounts and include import data, they capture emissions across both domestic production and international supply chains. This completeness is one of their defining strengths. Every dollar spent is linked to emissions somewhere in the value chain. They are also efficient. Organisations can apply them using […]
