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Business valuations
We offer expert valuation advice in transactions, regulatory and administrative matters, and matters subject to dispute – valuing businesses, shares and intangible assets in a wide range of industries.
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Capital markets
You need corporate finance specialists experienced in international capital markets on your side if you’re buying or selling financial securities.
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Complex and international services
Our experience of multi-jurisdictional insolvencies coupled with our international reputation allows us to deliver the best possible outcome for all stakeholders.
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Corporate insolvency
Our corporate investigation and recovery teams can help you manage insolvency situations and facilitate the best outcome.
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Debt advisory
An optimal funding structure for your organisation presents unprecedented opportunities, but achieving this can be difficult without a trusted advisor.
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Expert witness
Our expert witnesses analyse, interpret, summarise and present complex financial and business-related issues which are understandable and properly supported.
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Financial models
A sound financial model will help you understand the impact of your decisions before you make them. Talk to us about our user-friendly models.
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Forensic and investigation services
We provide investigative accounting and litigation support services for commercial, matrimonial, criminal, business valuation and insurance disputes.
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Independent business review
Is your business viable? Will it remain viable in the future? A thorough independent business review can help your organisation answer these fundamental questions.
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IT forensics
Effective ESI analysis is integral to the success of your business. Our IT forensics experts have the technical expertise to identify, preserve and interrogate electronic data.
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Mergers and acquisitions
Grant Thornton provides strategic and execution support for mergers, acquisitions, sales and fundraising.
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Raising finance
Raising finance - funders value partners who can deliver a robust financial model, a sound business strategy and rigorous planning. We can guide you through the challenges that these transactions can pose and help you build a foundation for long term success once the deal is done.
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Relationship property services
Grant Thornton offers high quality independent advice on the many financial issues associated with relationship property from considering an individual financial issue to all aspects of a complex settlement.
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Restructuring and turnaround
Grant Thornton’s restructuring and turnaround service capabilities include cash flow, liquidity management and forecasting; crisis and interim management; financial advisory services to companies and parties in transition and distress
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Transaction advisory
Our depth of market knowledge will steer you through the transaction process. Grant Thornton’s dynamic teams offer range of financial, commercial and operational expertise.
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Virtual asset advisory
Helping you navigate the world of virtual currencies and decentralised financial systems.
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Corporate tax
Grant Thornton can identify tax issues, risks and opportunities in your organisation and implement strategies to improve your bottom line.
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Employment tax
Grant Thornton’s advisers can help you with PAYE (payroll tax), Kiwisaver, fringe benefits tax (FBT), student loans, global mobility services, international tax
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Global mobility services
Our team can help expatriates and their employers deal with tax and employment matters both in New Zealand and overseas. With the correct planning advice, employee allowances and benefits may be structured to avoid double taxation and achieve tax savings.
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GST
GST has the potential to become a minefield and can be expensive when it goes wrong. Our technical knowledge can help you minimise the negative impact of GST
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International tax
International tax rules are undergoing their biggest change in a generation. Tax authorities around the world are increasingly vigilant, especially when it comes to global operations.
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Research and Development
R&D tax incentives are often underused and misunderstood – is your business maximising opportunities for making claims?
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Tax compliance
Our advisers help clients manage the critical issue of compliance across accountancy regulations, corporation law and tax. We also offer business and wealth advisory services, which means we can provide a seamless and tax-effective offering to our clients.
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Tax governance
Mitigate tax risks and implement best practice governance that will stand up to IRD scrutiny and audits.
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Transfer pricing
Tax authorities are demanding transparency in international arrangements. We businesses comply with regulations and use transfer pricing as a strategic planning tool.
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Audit methodology
Our five step audit methodology offers a high quality service wherever you are in the world and includes planning, risk assessment, testing internal controls, substantive testing, and concluding and reporting
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Audit technology
We apply our audit methodology with an integrated set of software tools known as the Voyager suite. Our technology has been developed to produce quality audits that are effective and efficient.
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Financial reporting advisory
Our financial reporting advisers have the expertise to help you deal with the constantly evolving regulatory environment.
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Business architecture
Our business architects help businesses with disruptive conditions, business expansion and competitive challenges; the deployment of your strategy is critical to success.
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Cloud services
Leverage the cloud to keep your data safe, operate more efficiently, reduce costs and create a better experience for your employees and clients.
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Internal audit
Our internal audits deliver independent assurance over key controls within your riskiest processes, proving what works and what doesn’t and recommending improvements.
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IT advisory
Our hands on product experience, extensive functional knowledge and industry insights help clients solve complex IT and technology issues
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IT privacy and security
IT privacy and security should support your business strategy. Our pragmatic approach focuses on reducing cyber security risks specific to your organisation
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Payroll assurance
Our specialist payroll assurance team can conduct a review of your payroll system configuration and processes, and then help you and your team to implement any necessary recalculations.
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PCI DSS
Our information security specialists are approved Qualified Security Assessors (QSAs) that have been qualified by the PCI Security Standards Council to independently assess merchants and service providers.
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Process improvement
As your organisation grows in size and complexity, processes that were once enabling often become cumbersome and inefficient. To maintain growth, your business must remain flexible, agile and profitable
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Procurement/supply chain
Procurement and supply chain inputs will often dominate your balance sheet and constantly evolve for organisations to remain competitive and meet changing customer requirements
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Project assurance
Major programmes and projects expose you to significant financial and reputational risk throughout their life cycle. Don’t let these risks become a reality.
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Risk management
We understand that growing companies need to establish robust internal controls, and use information technology to effectively mitigate risk.
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Robotic process automation (RPA)
RPA is emerging as the most sophisticated form of automation used to help businesses become more agile and remain competitive in the face of today’s ongoing digital disruption.
Gender diversity in business leadership is a no-lose proposition, yet progress is still slow. Grant Thornton International has been surveying thousands of businesses annually since 2004 about the levels of gender diversity in leadership roles globally. The 2019 report Women in Business: Building a Blueprint for Action has just been released; we’re seeing some incremental improvements but no real sea change.
In some ways this is surprising, given the commercial benefits of diversity are well-established: higher performance, more innovation, a better work culture, and better connections with a wider range of customers, not to mention the impact on bottom lines.
In other ways, perhaps the lack of progress is to be expected. Many companies have unconscious biases and ways of thinking that aren’t conducive to positive change.
Slow progress in the face of complacency
Once upon a time, New Zealand was ranked relatively high among other countries for its gender equality in business. Our ranking dropped significantly four years ago, and it continues to plateau; this could be attributed to complacency kicking in. It can be easy to tell yourself, “Yes, this is a problem in general, but it’s not an issue in my business.” Unfortunately, our research over the years shows that’s not the case.
Instead, we see only incremental improvements over the years when it comes to gender equality in senior management positions. There are some positive signs: most encouragingly, 87% of businesses worldwide have at least one woman in senior management, up from 75% last year and 66% in 2017. We’ve also hit an all-time global high of women filling 29% of senior management positions, up from 24% on 2018. However, when put in perspective, this is less impressive when compared to the 2004 survey results of 19% of senior management roles, showing a disappointing lack of progress in 15 years. It’s thought that 30% is the tipping point at which we’ll start to see gender parity really kick in.
Embedding policy in company culture
How can that target be reached and then surpassed? Equal pay, non-discriminatory recruitment and flexible hours were just three of the policy recommendations from last year’s Women in Business report, but policies alone don’t generate the kind of change we’d like to see. This year’s report spells out some of the practical actions that businesses can take to improve diversity in their senior management teams, including:
- Reviewing recruitment approaches. Gender diversity is hampered by entrenched recruitment bias and the tendency for ‘mini-me’ hiring. This can be overcome; this year’s report revealed that when one multinational business began requiring diverse candidate lists, its rate of women in leadership roles jumped from 17% to 30% in four years.
- Mentoring for women who want to make the step up. One study found 32% of women believed reaching the C-suite was a reasonable goal, but that rate increased to 49% of those with a mentor and 61% with a sponsor.
- Flexible working. Both flexible hours and the ability to work remotely contribute to better retention of top performers. One study found 83% of women with work flexibility aspired to senior leadership roles, compared to 54% of women without.
These simple adjustments can lead to big improvements to how Kiwi businesses hire and retain excellent employees. Making only a handful of small changes can have a positive impact on the current and future women in your workplace.
Diversity drives innovation and profits
For those business owners who believe there’s no gender diversity problem in their own companies, I would urge them to actually measure their success on this front. What percentage of the senior management roles are filled by women? And how many women are waiting for a seat at the table?
If fewer than 20% of management positions are held by women, your business is hampering its own success. This year’s research indicates that there is a clear relationship between diverse management teams and revenue increases when creating innovative goods and services. Innovation only increased significantly when women held more than 20% of management positions.
Even without expert studies dedicated to this subject, it’s common sense that diverse teams of people will generate more diverse ideas and be less likely to fall into the trap of groupthink.
Grant Thornton’s own global CEO, Peter Bodin, says he’s seen it with his own eyes: “I know from my own personal experience that gender diversity leads to higher performance, a more inclusive culture [and] more balanced decisions.”
Changing the culture at the top
Women still face more barriers to progress than their male counterparts, including lack of access to professional development and networking opportunities. Caring responsibilities beyond their work remains a barrier for 25% of women, however this is also the case for 21% of men surveyed for this year’s report.
New Zealand’s first father, Clarke Gayford, made international headlines in 2018 when he took time off to be a stay-at-home dad while his partner Jacinda Adern continued in her role as Prime Minister. Some of the negative responses to this arrangement were startling – the level of astonishment was another indication of how slow progress has been when it comes to challenging traditional gender roles. But it does demonstrate that they are being disestablished, and having it happen at the highest level of government sends a powerful message – one that also needs to come from the top tiers of company culture. When the senior management team leads by example, it becomes a group that women aspire to join, where they feel accepted as a leader. When the senior leaders all look the same, that sends a message to anyone who doesn’t fit the description: You don’t belong here.
An inclusive culture is a way to foster diversity, creativity, productivity and a much more enjoyable workplace – everyone’s a winner. That means making diversity part of the everyday conversations at your business, rather than merely a talking point on International Women’s Day. We need to make this a living, breathing part of every company’s culture.