Workplace culture · Aotearoa
Guides shaped for how Kiwi teams actually mahi
Plain-language frameworks for respectful collaboration, sustainable pace, and shared rituals—from our Penrose, Auckland studio.
At a glance
Made in Aotearoa
Workplace culture notes from across the motu
Our editors draw on conversations with team leads in Tāmaki Makaurau, Pōneke, Ōtautahi, and regional centres—always adapted to your own context, never copied as rules.
What we publish
Downloadable and web-based guides on meetings, hybrid handoffs, morning tea norms, and end-of-week wrap-ups. Prices, where shown, are in NZD and include GST where applicable.
View topics01 — Philosophy
Culture is built in ordinary moments
We document patterns teams can try without a full-scale change programme. Each guide focuses on observable behaviours—how hui start, how breaks are signalled, how feedback is invited.
Our material suits varied roles and rosters. You do not need a dedicated wellbeing lead or external facilitator to get started.
Read our story
02 — Pillars
Three anchors for healthier collaboration
Temporal clarity
Agreed signals for focus time, open doors, and wrap-up—so everyone reads the room the same way.
Dialogue norms
Turn-taking, async updates, and escalation paths that keep tension productive rather than personal.
Recovery rituals
Short, repeatable practices that help teams reset between intense blocks of work.
03 — Guides
Structured reading for busy leads
Each guide pairs narrative context with checklists your team can try in a single week. Topics span onboarding tone, hybrid handoffs, and closing the week with intention.
Browse guide library04 — Nourishment
Eat: shared meals as culture glue
Food at work is rarely about diet plans—it is about timing, inclusion, and whether people feel welcome at the table. Our Eat section covers pantry norms, lunch cadence, and catering choices that respect varied needs.
05 — Patterns
Observations from Kiwi workplaces
The following are editorial examples only—not verified testimonials or guaranteed outcomes. Your experience will vary by sector and team size.
Friday boundaries
Some teams protect the last hour of Friday for closing threads rather than new bookings.
Async stand-ups
Written updates before a short hui can reduce long morning calls.
Shared kai
Voluntary morning tea once a week can help hybrid staff stay connected.
06 — Interactive
Culture readiness checklist
Tick what your team already does. Self-reflection only—not an individual assessment.
Start the week
Share priorities in writing before a short hui—under fifteen minutes where possible.
Mid-week
Voluntary morning tea or walk-and-talk—no slides required.
Close the week
Harvest open threads; avoid late Friday bookings unless urgent.
07 — Visit us
Penrose studio & correspondence
Tendonsjoint
1061/716 Great South Road
Penrose, Auckland 1061
New Zealand
Start with one guide this week
Pick a single practice, try it with your team, and adjust. Small, visible steps tend to work better than big launches.
Choose a guide