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Source: MIL-OSI Submissions

Source: Te Pukenga
Kaimahi and representatives from ServiceIQ and Te Pūkenga came together in Wellington this morning for a pōwhiri as ServiceIQ was welcomed into Te Pūkenga Work Based Learning Limited.
Around 120 kaimahi attended to mark the occasion, following ServiceIQ’s formal transition on 1 July 2022 to become a division of the Work Based Learning subsidiary.
ServiceIQ is the national industry workplace trainer for the aviation, hospitality, retail, travel, tourism, and museum sectors. Their 94 kaimahi support more than 13,000 workplace apprentices and trainees, and 2,500 Gateway students across the motu.
“It is always exciting to welcome more people and industries to our work-based learning whānau and ServiceIQ is no exception”, says Toby Beaglehole, Chief Executive of Te Pūkenga Work Based Learning.
ServiceIQ brings with it strong connections across all of the service industry, working with industry associations, government, advisory groups, schools, and all kinds of businesses, from large national chains to small and medium-sized enterprises throughout Aotearoa New Zealand.
“Like with the TITOs that have come before ServiceIQ, it is important to us to make the transition as smooth as possible for everyone involved,” says Toby. “We’ve taken a ‘lift and shift’ approach so ServiceIQ’s ākonga and kaimahi will see little change in these early days.
“Our main priority is ensuring ServiceIQ is welcomed and excited about the future ahead for all of us as we seek to improve outcomes for learners, employers and industries.”
ServiceIQ Director, Andrew McSweeney says: “Today, with ServiceIQ becoming a business division of Work Based Learning, we grow Aotearoa’s premier vocational education provider. We are excited by the potential for the great things that will drive success for employers, trainees, schools, Te Pūkenga and its staff, and the health, wealth, and well-being of all people in Aotearoa.”
ServiceIQ joins four other divisions already transitioned into Te Pūkenga Work Based Learning subsidiary – Competenz, Connexis, BCITO, and MITO. Still to be welcomed throughout the remainder of 2022 are Careerforce, Primary ITO, certain arranging training functions from Skills, and HITO whose transition plan was approved by TEC Board last month. 
Te Pūkenga, New Zealand Institute of Skills and Technology, was established in 2020 as one of seven key changes of the Reform of Vocational Education. Te Pūkenga is bringing together a national network of integrated learning that supports learners, employers and communities to gain the skills, knowledge, and capabilities Aotearoa needs now and for the future.

MIL OSI