Transcript
Wellington business owners Latu To'omaga and Holona Lui are behind 'A'o Atu, A'o Mai', to give and to receive. Mr To'omaga says the mentoring scheme is based on reciprocity, allowing up-and-comers to connect with experienced business people in a two way learning environment.
"It fits well because we are relational, communal, we like to talk and laugh, but at the same time we want to offer really strong business workmanship. For example, making sure they are registered, they have got their techs and their accounts in place and order, just to make sure they have both sides of the coin. It is really important to us, not just being able to function but being able to sustain their business."
Mr Lui says the programme provides insight and mentoring over an initial six month period.
"They're able to access existing businesses and they have four sessions which they're guaranteed and after that we will see what else develops from there. One of the great things about the programme and about mentoring is that it personalises people's learning and it gives the benefit of one on one learning and experience, learning from people who have been there before so they learn the potential pitfalls but also to be challenged."
Network chair Paul Retimanu says the initiative is all part of a move to get Pasifika more involved in business. He says there has a reluctance in the past with only 1.6 percent of the Pasifika population self-employed or running their own businesses. A figure that compares dismally to other ethnic groups.
"All of us have the same story. Our people moved over here from the 50s, 60s and 70s to go to the freezing works or to blue collar jobs. So we never had the advantage of being able to have parents that could fund us. That's reality. Now things are changing. Our kids are smarter. People going into schools are coming out, they are getting university-educated, they are looking at different things. What we are trying to do is find a pathway and a vehicle for them to look at business and say, hey look, working for somebody else isn't the first choice for our people anymore."
Ivy Vena, is one of five mentees in the programme. She is creative director for Confetti Love Boutique, an event planning and styling company and says the initiative is sorely needed for Pasifika entrepreneurs.
"We take on this attitude of kind of 'she'll be right' and I think I've been running my business with a she'll be right attitude for so long and now just getting so much good feedback and collaborating with other businesses. I am now embracing that there is something that could be done really well with the business and so working with the mentors, it is just a really great opportunity to do better at what I am doing."
Mrs Vena says she has two daughters who have entrepreneurial spirits, so if she can inspire them into business she will be happy. Paul Retimanu, a son of migrant workers from the late 50s, says his seven children also talk about starting their own businesses one day, representing a cultural shift within one generation. He says more Pasifika business operators will create community wealth.
"The importance for us is the sheer fact that if our people work for themselves, they're more inclined to hire our own people and if we hire our own people we are more inclined to pay them more, so there are a lot of different reasons why we should."
Mr Retimanu says he hopes the programme can be expanded but work will need to be done on identifying more Pasifika startups.