Otago Daily Times

Workshops on capitalrai­sing

- RILEY KENNEDY riley.kennedy@odt.co.nz

A SERIES of workshops have been held across Otago and Southland with the aim of educating businesses to raise capital

New Zealand Trade and Enterprise (NZTE), Mainland Angel Investment Network and a panel of establishe­d startups and investors have travelled across the region this week holding workshops in Invercargi­ll, Queenstown and Dunedin.

The sessions were part of a national roadshow in various regions to help businesses begin building a game plan for realising internatio­nal growth potential.

NZTE’s investment manager Oliviah TheyersCol­lins said the businesses that attended were mainly those that exported or were seeking to export and needing investment capital for growth.

‘‘They will probably be in market and probably have got some sales.

‘‘But the essential piece of the puzzle is they have something to sell, they have a growth propositio­n in mind and also they are looking for investment in the next six to 18 months.

‘‘There might be some that can take the knowledge away from this programme and implement it straight away or there might be those that go, OK, now that I know that we will wait six months,’’ she said.

Ms TheyersCol­lins said the contents of the workshops were tweaked ‘‘just a little’’ depending on the hosting town.

‘‘Given the way we are running the workshops it is pretty much the same but for example, in Dunedin we know there is the university so there are deep tech companies here so we have someone on the panel who can talk to those deep tech investment opportunit­ies.

‘‘And when we were in Southland, we had more of an engineerin­g and manufactur­ing focus and in Queenstown there is a tourism gap so it was about that diversific­ation,’’ she said

Ms TheyersCol­lins believed Covid19 had created new opportunit­ies for raising capital.

‘‘In the investment side of things there is more capital available and that is at borders open and already we had a few offshore funds, typically Australian VC [venture capital] funds coming into New Zealand.

‘‘But with interest rates at an all time low and property, even through it is sort of going through the roof in some areas, can be highrisk, so I think that asset class of investing in business is really starting to expand,’’ she said.

That has meant there is a lot more capital around and has allowed businesses to be a bit more ‘‘choosy,’’ she said.

‘‘I think with Covid on the founder side of things, people have really pivoted and have been forced to really think about their businesses and they are ready to bring in that growth capital.

‘‘So you bring those two things together: more capital and more appetite for growth and it is a really exciting time,’’ she said.

 ?? PHOTO: PETER MCINTOSH ?? Oliviah TheyerColl­ins, of Christchur­ch, was in Dunedin for the NZTE capitalrai­sing workshop at Galloway Cook Allan on Wednesday.
PHOTO: PETER MCINTOSH Oliviah TheyerColl­ins, of Christchur­ch, was in Dunedin for the NZTE capitalrai­sing workshop at Galloway Cook Allan on Wednesday.

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