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Tania Niwaās mini-guide shows how to move between cultures without losing your identity. Through listening, storytelling, grounding, and authentic leadership, she bridges worlds while staying deeply connected to her MÄori roots. This is her story. šMoving between cultures can feel like dancing on a tightrope: sometimes fun and thrilling, sometimes straight out wobbly and unsettling.
Pounamu Skeltonās story is one of vision, resilience, and legacy. He uri o Taranaki Maunga, Te Atiawa, Taranaki Tuturu, and NgÄti Ruanui, Pounamu lives on her papakÄinga in Onaero, a place her whÄnau have named Te Rau Orongo āthe multiple ways to heal ourselves.āFor more than 24 years, she carried a dream: to live organically
This episode follows the real-life adventure of Charlotte and Natalie, co-founders of Pompom Events & Marketing š. Dive into their journey as partners in business, full of ups, downs, and lots of laughs, to discover practical lessons on the doās and donāts of a business partnership. šCharlotte and Natalie never set out to become business
Twenty something Ella Sargent from Manawa MÄori and Multi Agency explains how Gen Z entrepreneurs are doing things differently and what we can learn from them. Thereās a new kind of entrepreneur on the rise: one who doesnāt wait for permission, doesnāt follow the old rules, and isnāt afraid to experiment. Theyāre bold, values-driven, and unapologetically
This episode features Lynda McGregor from Little Bread Loaf Bakery, sharing tips on how to weather a downturn in business.
Nartarsha Navanaga-Bamblett built her business by honouring culture and identity in a Western-dominated space. Her story shows the power of representation and how to stay true to who you are in business. When you are a First Nations person whoās navigating a Western-dominated world, you enter unchartered territory. When you do that as a business person,




