Digital transformation in New Zealand stands at a pivotal juncture. After years of investing in cloud platforms, automation, and AI, many organisations still find themselves frustrated by the persistent gap between technology deployment and meaningful business results. The root cause? Too often, technology leads the way without first establishing clarity on the real business problems it’s meant to solve.

The True Missing Link: Clarity of Purpose

Despite the proliferation of digital tools, many transformation efforts falter because teams lack a shared understanding of what specific challenges these investments are intended to address. When technology is rolled out without a clear, well-communicated purpose, it risks becoming a solution in search of a problem. This leads to fragmented initiatives, wasted resources, and disengaged teams.

The Cost of Tech-Led Transformation

Many New Zealand firms (especially in traditional sectors like agriculture, utilities, government, and financial services) have treated transformation as a technology modernisation project. Cloud migrations, digitised workflows, and agile squads abound. Yet, leaders still ask: “Why aren’t we seeing the impact we expected?”

The answer is often a missing strategic anchor. Without a precise definition of the business problem, technology decisions become reactive and disconnected from customer and commercial priorities. Surveys show over 65% of ANZ CIOs admit their digital initiatives lack measurable links to business outcomes, and only one in three NZ businesses feel confident their technology investments align with long-term strategy.

This misalignment is more than inefficient, it’s risky. In a low-growth, high-expectation market, wasted investment erodes competitive advantage and leadership credibility.

Flipping, and Deepening, the Model: Strategy, Clarity, and Engagement First

To succeed, NZ organisations must invert the traditional approach:

  • Start with strategy. Define the markets, customer experiences, operational levers, and regulatory shifts that matter most.
  • Achieve clarity. Explicitly articulate the business problems you’re solving and how technology will address them.
  • Engage the team. Involve employees early, communicate benefits in relatable terms, and ensure everyone understands the “why” behind the initiative.

Practical Steps for Leaders

1. Clearly define the problem. Make sure everyone, from the boardroom to the front line, knows what specific challenge the technology is meant to tackle.

2. Involve your team from the outset. Gather input on pain points and needs before making final decisions. This builds ownership and surfaces valuable insights.

3. Communicate benefits in everyday language. Explain how the new tech will help each team member, not just the business as a whole.

4. Invest in onboarding and training. Equip your team with the skills and confidence to use new tools effectively.

5. Create feedback loops. Use regular check-ins and feedback sessions to reinforce goals, address concerns, and celebrate early wins.

6. Empower champions. Identify influential team members to act as advocates and mentors during the rollout.

Measuring True Understanding and Impact

To ensure your team truly grasps the purpose and benefits of new initiatives:

  • Survey and ask for feedback in their own words about the initiative’s goals.
  • Observe behaviour: Are daily actions aligned with the initiative’s objectives?
  • Monitor engagement and satisfaction: Higher motivation often signals deeper understanding.
  • Track progress on KPIs that tie directly to the initiative’s purpose.
  • Hold retrospectives to surface misunderstandings and adjust course as needed.

Real-World Success: Strategy-Led, Clarity-Driven Transformation

Fisher & Paykel Healthcare: Purpose-Driven, Patient-Centric Innovation

Fisher & Paykel Healthcare exemplifies how a strategy-led approach, anchored in clarity of purpose, can transform not just a business but an entire sector. Their digital and product innovation is never about technology for its own sake; instead, it’s about addressing the most pressing challenges in global healthcare: improving patient outcomes, reducing system costs, and empowering people to take control of their own health.

For instance, the development of the Airvo™ 3 high flow system was not simply a technical upgrade; it was a direct response to the evolving needs of clinicians and patients in respiratory care. The device, built on more than five years of research and development, offers advanced features like targeted oxygen delivery, integrated battery, and expanded settings for paediatric and neonatal patients. These enhancements were designed after close collaboration with healthcare providers, ensuring the technology met real-world clinical demands and improved patient experiences across different hospital settings.

This user-centric mindset is embedded in the company’s culture. As Ben Casse, Informatics R&D Manager, describes: “Innovation doesn’t just apply to the device, or the therapy itself, but also to the patient experience. How you’re interacting with people should be central to the design and is just as important as the tech requirements. We’re talking about changing someone’s life, that’s the level of conversation that we need to be having.”

Fisher & Paykel’s impact is quantifiable: their products helped treat around 16 million patients globally in a single year, including during the COVID-19 pandemic, when demand for respiratory therapies surged. The company’s commitment to continuous improvement, participating in programs like the Voluntary Improvement Program (VIP), has led to better resource planning, more effective use of data, and improved management of performance targets, all of which ultimately benefit patients.

Their approach demonstrates that when technology is guided by a clear strategy and deep engagement with end users, it can deliver both measurable business results and profound societal value.

Air New Zealand: Customer Experience Reimagined

Air New Zealand’s digital transformation journey began with fragmented, tech-first projects. Real progress began only when the company shifted to a strategy-led approach, anchored in a vision to become “the world’s most digital airline.” This meant every digital investment, whether intuitive mobile journeys, AI-driven customer service, or operational platforms, was evaluated through the lens of customer experience and brand loyalty.

For example, Air New Zealand didn’t just deploy AI for efficiency’s sake. They trained their AI systems on real passenger feedback and pain points, ensuring that every digital touchpoint, from booking to boarding, was designed to reduce friction and build trust. Their transformation roadmap was customer-back, not system-forward, and every technology decision was measured against its impact on loyalty, operational resilience, and brand reputation.

Fonterra: Supply Chain as a Strategic Asset

Fonterra’s transformation is anchored in the strategic imperative to deliver higher-value, more sustainable dairy products to global markets. Rather than digitising farm data in isolation, Fonterra focused on making its entire supply chain smarter and more responsive. Investments in digital twins, predictive logistics, and traceability solutions were all tied to the company’s broader goals: improving product quality, meeting evolving regulatory demands, and differentiating through sustainability.

By rooting technology choices in clear business outcomes like reducing waste, enhancing transparency, and enabling premium product positioning, Fonterra ensures that every digital initiative serves a strategic purpose. The result is a supply chain that not only supports operational efficiency but also strengthens the company’s global brand and resilience in the face of supply chain shocks.

In all these cases, the common thread is clear: technology is never the starting point. Instead, it follows a well-defined strategy, is grounded in a deep understanding of the real-world problems to be solved and is brought to life through close engagement with the people who use it, whether patients, passengers, or farmers. This is the model New Zealand businesses must embrace to turn digital investment into sustainable, measurable value.

While these examples are of large local businesses, the lessons are valuable to any business owner.

Pitfalls to Avoid

  • Confusing activity with progress: Launching pilots or migrating systems is not success unless it delivers measurable value.
  • Delegating strategy to IT: Business leaders must own the transformation agenda.
  • Underinvesting in change leadership: Technology is the easy part; aligning people and mindsets is where transformation succeeds or fails.

The New Mandate for NZ Leaders

Now is the time for CEOs, boards, and executive teams to reclaim the transformation agenda. Ask:

  • Are our tech investments solving real strategic problems?
  • Is our roadmap anchored in customer needs, not just system upgrades?
  • Are we measuring value, not just outputs?

And take bold action:

  • Pause or stop initiatives that don’t link to business goals.
  • Build shared governance between business and tech teams.
  • Upskill leaders to make confident, informed technology decisions.

The fastest route to real transformation is to slow down and ensure clarity of strategy, of purpose, and of team understanding before making technology decisions. New Zealand’s business future will belong not to those with the flashiest tech but to those who lead with strategy, communicate with clarity, and execute with discipline.

Let’s flip and deepen the model. It’s time for strategy and clarity to lead, and for technology to follow.

52

Buying or merging with another business?

TLDR: When it comes to combining your people, systems, processes, and policies successfully, you should approach mergers or acquisitions the…

Learn More / >

53

Smooth the Route To Successful Change

In our last white paper, we laid out the top 10 risks of digital transformation. This blog will look at 5 main categories of risk: people an…

Learn More / >

54

The importance of a roadmap for successful digital transformation.

TLDR: Digital transformation without a roadmap can have disastrous consequences such as budget blowouts, misaligned processes, and costly mi…

Learn More / >

What our customers say about us

"One of Ant's strengths is relating to owners in a visionary sense and talking to people who are on the ground...[Ant has a] wide understanding of different systems, processes and applications and can articulate where we're going and what the possibilities are...working with Ant has changed the way we make decisions about IT structures and support systems."

Felicity Hopkins, Director - Research Review

We hired Ant to support us with an important project after he was highly recommended by colleagues. Ant was responsive, speedy, super-helpful and helped us to make key decisions. We appreciated his broad experience, and his ability to hold a high level strategic view alongside expert advice on details. We will definitely be consulting with Ant again and are happy to recommend him.

Gaynor Parkin, CEO at Umbrella Wellbeing

"We don’t need a full-time CTO [chief technology officer]. Ant knows enough about our business he can deliver it virtually. He can translate things for us. During project management, Ant came into his own... Ant gets his head round your business and [took his time] understanding our context. He was really clear about pausing on investment into the app...Ant's inquisitive, curious and approachable - he's very easy to work with."

Gus McIntosh, Chief Executive - Winsborough

"Ant was really quick to understand the business model and our processes and IT structures."

James Armstrong, Director - MediData

"Ant helped us at the early stages of Aerotruth helping us to plan our technical infrastructure and ensure we built a product that would scale. Ant was great to work with and we really valued his support and contribution to Aerotruth"

Bryce Currie, Co-Founder & Chief Commercial Officer - Aerotruth

"No question has ever been too silly. Ant's been accommodating and helped me understand. I've valued that he understands the charitable sector really well. He can look through the experience that he has with larger organisations and what's the reality for a small and mighty charity where you don't have teams of people that can come in and project manage an IT project"

Nicola Keen-Biggelar, Chief Executive Drowning Prevention Auckland

"Having Anthony was really valuable – to lean in on his skillset – and his connections. He was able to provide impartial advice about the different strengths [of the providers]. It was important that we undertook a good due diligence process. Having Anthony there meant we had impartial selection as well, which is very important to us and [something] other not-for-profits [could benefit from]."

Rose Hiha-Agnew, Program Director - Community Governance

Unlike outsourced IT providers who often operate without deep business knowledge, Target State acted as our strategic partner to ensure technology was purposefully aligned with our business goals, driving real value and growth.

Nathan Barrett, COO Delta Insurance

Ant has a clear, no-nonsense approach to technology. He focuses on outcomes, not hype, and always keeps the business context front and centre. In a world full of AI buzzwords and distractions, he’s someone who brings clarity and direction.

Rohit Kashikar - Head of Technology, Delta Insurance

Although we’ve only just started working with Ant, it’s already clear he brings a thoughtful and structured approach. He quickly grasped the context and asked the right questions to get us moving in the right direction. I’m looking forward to seeing where we can take things from here, especially to ensure we cut out waste and hold vendors to account.

Clayton Thomas, GM – Euromarc

Who We've Worked With