Press Release: December 11 2009
North & South New Zealander Of The Year Announced
North & South’s January 2010 issue, on sale on Monday, December 14, profiles a man whose maverick style and ability to inspire
the passion of those around him saw him claw back from the brink to rebuild his company exporting Kiwi ingenuity to the
world.
Dunedin high-tech innovator Ian Taylor is North & South’s New Zealander of the Year 2010. He is the14th supreme winner in these longstanding annual awards, which salute
New Zealand’s real achievers – not high-profile celebrities and not always names that are widely recognised, but people
who embody the qualities and values that Kiwis admire.
Eighteen months ago, Taylor was on the verge of bankruptcy. A world leader in computer graphics for two decades, he
arrived at his Dunedin office to tell his team that the company would have to close. As he walked past, his receptionist
showed him the front page of that morning’s newspaper announcing the closure of a local factory with the loss of
hundreds of jobs. “I can still remember her saying, ‘God, how awful that would be,’” says Taylor. “And I thought, ‘Well,
I can’t do it today.’”
Not only did Taylor turn the company around, he and his creative team capped a comeback year by landing a multi-million
dollar contract with the BBC to provide graphics for international coverage of the 2009 Formula One series.
As well as the supreme winner, North & South’s New Zealander of the Year special features winners and “honourable mentions” across 10 categories, traversing
business, sport, science, arts and entertainment and the environment, plus a Young Achievers award to salute the next
generation of high-flying New Zealanders.
Last year’s North & South New Zealander of the Year was Murray Burton, principal of Auckland’s Elim Christian College, awarded for the
leadership and humanity he showed when a teacher and six senior students were drowned in a flash flood in the
Mangatepopo Gorge, near Turangi.
Other previous North & South New Zealanders of the Year include former Minister of Treaty Negotiations Sir Douglas Graham; Auckland University
leader turned-Oxford University head John Hood; philanthropist, businessman and Hawke’s Bay tourism guru Graeme Avery;
Christchurch-based international sustainable business doyenne Peri Drysdale; outspoken economist and philanthropist
Gareth Morgan; and Dr Philip Bagshaw, founder and champion of Canterbury Charity Hospital.
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