Ground-breaking Māori business programme in Hamilton
Ka tū papahū a “Kōkiri” ki Kirikiriroa
Ground-breaking Māori business programme begins in Hamilton
He ao hou kei te pae tawhiti, ka tū ki te pae tata. He kaupeka ngahuru hei poutama ki te pae ō angitu, tēnā te haruru mai nei. E au, au, auē ha!
A new Kōkiri accelerator programme
kicking off this week features 10 ambitious startups with
products including a process that turns the environmentally
damaging didymo into fabric, a digital tool for Māori
millennials learning Te Reo Māori, a system providing
complete visibility of the honey supply chain, and a new way
to find owner-operated
eateries.
15
February 2018 – The country’s first business
accelerator programme for ambitious Māori entrepreneurs was
launched with a pōwhiri in Hamilton on Monday (February
12).
Callaghan Innovation and Te Wānanga o Aotearoa have teamed up with Creative HQ, Robett Hollis, Crowe Horwath and Ernst & Young Tahi to create Kōkiri, a unique business accelerator dedicated to speeding up the development of fledgling Māori businesses.
Ten promising, young start-ups from across Aotearoa have been selected to participate in the four-month Kōkiri programme, based at Te Wānanga o Aotearoa’s Mangakōtukutuku campus in Hamilton.
Kōkiri participants will receive education, funding, mentoring, networking opportunities and engagement with leading business figures during the course of the programme, which runs until June.
The teams selected for Kōkiri were chosen by a panel, comprised from the programme partners, through a competitive process in late 2017 (teams and description below).
Te Wānanga o Aotearoa Innovation Development Group Director Aisha Ross says prominent business figures will provide intensive mentoring and insights for those participating in Kōkiri.
“The industry figures we are engaging with on this programme have been selected because of their experience in delivering successful and recognised business accelerator programmes,” Aisha says.
“They also have a track record of successfully engaging with Māori participants.”
Aisha says the aims of Kōkiri align with Te Wānanga o Aotearoa’s mission of tauira success.
He says Te Wānanga o Aotearoa is the optimal provider for the programme having already produced hundreds of small business graduates who have established successful businesses.
Government Innovation Agency, Callaghan Innovation, supports a number of accelerator programmes helping startups with the tools, networks, and capabilities they need to turn their idea into a commercial reality. Start-Up Manager, Elena Higgison, says Kōkiri provides this but with a unique twist for budding Maori entrepreneurs.
“Lots of people have great ideas, but commercialising those ideas and getting them to market is the difficult part. Kōkiri is unique because it incorporates Māori values and principles into a business accelerator programme.
“Here success is defined more broadly than merely attracting investment or growing a business to a point where it can be sold for a profit. Success can also involve nurturing a sustainable business that brings income into a community or employs local people. We think that’s fantastic.”
Aisha Ross says Kōkiri also recognises that Māori have strong links to place, which may have been a barrier to participation in mainstream accelerators.
“Instead of being based full-time at Te Wānanga o Aotearoa, the entrepreneurs can remain in their regions and travel in once a month for intensive on-site sessions. That way they can carry on with their whānau responsibilities and their keep their local community connections while on the accelerator.”
Kōkiri is an initiative funded through the Māori Innovation Fund, in support of the Enterprise pou of He kai kei aku ringa, the Crown-Māori economic development strategy
he 10 businesses selected for Kōkiri
are:
AKUDOS (Whangarei,
Auckland)
Akudos is a cloud-based awards management
system designed to streamline the awards process from
beginning to end. It has key pilot customers secured for
2018, and its goals stretch far beyond
Aotearoa.
Arataki Systems
(Tauranga)
Arataki Systems builds solutions that provide
unique cultural, geographical, environmental and historical
information for people “in location”. Arataki enables
users to receive information about sites of cultural
significance using a custom mobile application and proximity
technology. It currently has an operational system at Mauao
and Mt Maunganui with 350+ platform downloads with no
marketing.
Biome (Christchurch)
Biome
turns didymo, the pest algae, into high-end fashion
materials. These high-quality materials are produced
sustainably and strive to improve the New Zealand
environment. They are made in sheets which creates zero
wastage in production, whilst also providing customers with
a range of colours, textures, and patterns on our
materials.
Hikurangi Enterprises
(Ruatoria)
Hikurangi Enterprises is researching bioactive
extracts from plants, shellfish, and fungi to develop new
medical and health products. It will be the first to take a
New Zealand grown medical cannabis product to clinical
trials.
MovingPros (Tauranga,
Auckland)
MovingPros makes it easy to compare multiple
moving quotes from one place. They aspire to create a $1
billion business by helping to solve the transport and
shipping inefficiencies in the residential moving space
within New Zealand and globally. MovingPros has a committed
network of 120+ moving companies across New Zealand and have
serviced more than 6,500+ moving requests since
launching.
MYREO (Huntly)
The goal is
to provide Māori millennials with the digital tools and
resources they need to learn, practice and grow in reo
Māori. MYREO is creating a series of bilingual digital
games and software targeted at school-aged students, but
accessible to everyone, in a range of subjects including
programming, data sorting, artificial intelligence, math,
mythology, history and other STEM subjects. Kiwicode is a
bilingual programming education game developed for the NZ
education market. MYREO are also working on a tourism and
marketing application and sporting registration app for two
Māori organisations.
Origins Software –
ApiTrak (Whakatāne)
ApiTrak is the first
product from Origins Software. It is a cloud-based platform
that provides complete visibility of the honey supply chain
from land to end consumer. Origins have created a digital
platform that enhances product data management that is a GS1
compliant “land-to-jar” traceability solution, combining
leading edge technology with user-friendly interfaces. It
minimises the opportunity for manipulation of honey data,
simplifies disease management and increases food safety
compliance.
Papa Taiao Earthcare
(Wellington)
Papa Taiao has the vision to become a
pan-Iwi youth enterprise enabler. Papa Taiao Earthcare works
with rangatahi across Aotearoa and across iwi to guide them
into a life focused on social, ecological, economic and
cultural regeneration through enterprise in rural and urban
communities.
SeeCom (Hamilton)
SeeCom
provides sign language education programmes & resources to
facilitate multiple communities who benefit from "hands on"
learning. SeeCom is prototyping the world’s first digital
interactive sign language game, a virtual game-based
experience of learning sign language through means of
interaction and movements in front of digital screens. This
technology enhancement will track arm, body, hand and finger
movements and sense the smallest movements.
The
Realness (Auckland)
The Realness is the new way
to find owner operated eateries without having to rely on
review sites, advertising platforms, personal option sites,
magazines and mainstream media. In a world where money or
media can determine who is found first on Google, Demaris is
creating a level playing field for owner-operators within
the food industry and
beyond.