 Thanks very much. I wanted to start this morning with a real tribute to friends and family of so many of us in Christchurch. Five years ago today the earthquake, the big earthquake there, and for me it's extremely fitting to be in Wellington because I was here on that day. I don't actually have the emotional connection to Christchurch like so many of us who actually experienced the earthquakes. I was at a conference in Wellington talking about the social media impact and disasters and where that might go and how that could work based on our initial project down there which was called the UC Student Base for Earthquake Cleanup. I thought it was a very catchy name, and since then over the last five years our little group has worked a lot in Christchurch, worked a lot with different people organizations right around the world sharing the story about what was after the earthquakes. For me the most beautiful part of New Zealand is the micro interactions we have with each other all the time everywhere. It's been talked about a bit of the last few days, the small little friendly Kiwi culture, that identity that really New Zealand is known for internationally and it's interesting at the moment going through the flag process for instance and looking at how much of our identity actually comes out in that. What is the real New Zealand identity? And so today I'd like to frame my talk around and the story around New Zealand identity and what is for me that real core of it and where is that going. The story of Christchurch and the tsunami and the farmy army and everyone that helped out after the earthquakes and there's so many groups. It's well told there was silt, there was council and a civil defense responding to a major disaster, there was a whole lot of us everyday people from all walks of life who wanted to help out and there was no path clear for us to help out. So a group of us got on bold Facebook started this Facebook page and eventually we had 11,000 students keen to help out in Christchurch. For the last five years that movement has just continued. It's morphed in a few different directions. It's been those paths that we went down in a very gung-ho, we're amazing, we're going to do this, we're going to go here, we're going to build this network of clubs. That didn't work very well. We had this big approach of how do we run this thing? What are all the different ways or possibilities of growing and changing this thing? Some of it worked, some of it didn't. If I'm completely honest most of it didn't work. The beautiful thing about it is that the group now and our little team in Christchurch is 23 students who run the student volunteer army in Christchurch. They are predominantly second and third year students who lap up every single bit of knowledge that anyone impasses onto them. It's the most remarkable thing, sitting in a group with them and sharing them something that I take so for granted, that for them it's just this incredible change of knowledge receiving. They just learn something new and away they go. The student army for me and the process of Christchurch has all been around leadership. There's been all these leaders that have been created in Christchurch and every different type of definition of leadership. We talk about leadership in this way that it's some sort of thing up here and personally as a guy that was on the news an awful lot in the last five years, I got caught up in the circle of up here in this news in self-importance when actually the most important conversations in this event inspired me a lot last year with it and a couple of conversations with some of the Inspiral Q team and reading a lot was how do we move this thing from trying to be an organisation but actually just to realise it's a movement. There is nothing organisational really about that. It's a movement. There's one very good seed idea at the bottom of it and that's that people like to help out other people in their communities and you just need to find better ways to make that happen. So we're now like searching for answers and searching for what are we going to do on the five-year anniversary of the earthquakes. We're trying to find this big legacy project, find this way to help out and how do we further the volunteer army and realise actually that was the completely wrong question to be asking. The thing that we needed to continue on with was the very, very seed underneath the student volunteer army and beneath the branding, beneath the people, beneath any personalities and egos and everything. It was this fact that after a major chaotic event a whole lot of people went and helped each other. The crisis and the disaster that's come after the earthquake in Christchurch has been when we've forgotten that. The challenge, our challenge as a country is how we learn from the best of Christchurch, the best of this way of a disaster recovery, the best of every learning and lesson that comes out of it and how do we go back to that place. And for me it's so, so simple. Little actions everywhere. Microactions everywhere is actually what makes the difference for me in this world. Yesterday there's a group of us about 20, we went out and painted this fence and just show of hands of who actually came. There's quite a few I think are here. There's about 20, a lot of others aren't here as well. We went and just painted this fence. We arranged it with the Upper Hut City Council. I rang them up and said look there's this group of us at New Frontiers and we'd love to come and do a small service project in Upper Hut. Is there something you can do? And they said right away well we've got a whole group of young taggers and these taggers they love going and actually working with a street artist and making a mural across this big wall. But sometimes the preparation for that does take a bit. So if you guys can come and help us prepare this wall and prepare these spaces for artwork to go on and prepare it so the neighbours actually love the place, that would be a huge help to us. And so collectively yesterday we fast forwarded this program of work that the Upper Hut City Council, Denise that's lovely lady that's running it, she fast forwarded it a couple of months and these guys are going to start that pretty soon. The thing that I was looking up last night was actually what about the space that we volunteered in? Actually it's called Caller Lane and sort of it's a really sort of a run down old lane behind the garage in Upper Hut. Nothing special I thought. But I found out actually it's named after Jack Caller. This is Jack and Johnny Caller. He wrote the history of Upper Hut. He was a steward of this community for years and did this, this is a great photo online of him on his London book tour of actually sharing the knowledge of Upper Hut. Really looking back to why are we in this place? What is this way, this little place that we're in and where can we go with it? We're there yesterday thinking we're amazing painting this fence but actually it's not just about painting the fence to look forward, it's about the fact that Jack, this lane was named after him and we just restored it to its beauty of that it was. A few years ago I was very privileged to go up to the Kermadec Islands in New Zealand, right up about halfway between here and Tonga. One of the only 500 people in the world who have ever set foot on the islands, Rale Island where the birds just come and sit on your arm, where you dive in the water and if you've got goggles on you just see the fish moving everywhere around. The beauty of New Zealand is there like I've never seen it because it is our country, it's now the largest marine reserve in the world and this incredible place that is part of our country but we don't really know much about. They're slowly returning it to what New Zealand used to be before people arrived here and it's actually we have we know how to do that and I love the fact that small work by volunteers gets us there and gets us going. Scala Service Lane was then a panel beating shop, had a very famous panel beat, a Bob's panel beat is on there and that had a sense of identity too and we again restored that yesterday and that's the thing of Christchurch that we had all these cones. Oh yeah this is just this show painting up painting up a storm. In Christchurch it's actually the tiny actions that have had the biggest impact in the last five years. As a city full of road cones the simplest thing that I think had the biggest impact, one of the biggest impacts around mental health has been this. Just put a flower in the top of a road cone that tiny little action completely changes the way we see an object. That tiny action completely changes the way we interact with the space around us. This anniversary as we're looking back of how do we further the real seed underneath the earthquake and we are thinking about important days of national significance, important public holidays. Instead of just mourning and just looking back and we wanted to do something active on important days like Anzac Day, Waitangi Day, Cape Chepard Memorial Day, other important days of our history that we don't really understand and so this group of us are really excited to be launching today a concept called Serve for New Zealand. Serve for New Zealand is around doing one hour of volunteering on public holidays in New Zealand. We've partnered with the RSA, with the University of Canterbury and with the SVA to launch this concept. It's just an idea, it's a movement because we feel on such as Anzac Day it's not quite right to go to the beach in the afternoon. It doesn't feel quite right to just be completely self-absorbed on that day. How do we further the seed of what we learned from Christchurch which was about people helping each other on important days. In Nepal last year after the disaster a number of us are lucky to work there and support it from New Zealand. Again a group of students there. Two of us went and coached a team of 30 students in Nepal how to respond to their own disaster. They lapped up every bit of knowledge that came from the whole universe around them. They went and built these amazing little shelters that cost $120 each. They mobilized 300 of their pairs to work and just the very notion of giving them some support, some permission and a little bit of encouragement to do something completely changed the way that they interact with their space around them. In the global scale of like massive disaster response it's a minute little thing but for these guys the leadership skills that they learn throughout that has forever changed their life and 500 people got a temporary shelter that they could live in. Surfer New Zealand is just about that. It's about sharing little connections through service. Sharing passing on knowledge whether you want to you know one of the one of the concepts on there is actually it might be a bit ageless but it's adopt a granny to go and to go and just increase social connectivity to someone else. My grandad also said to me we really really good if you could get some young people along to teach them how to hold a garden properly because he doesn't think anyone knows how to hold a garden properly anymore. Other projects like just taking making some muffins and taking them to a neighbor or doing whatever that's what the campaign's about. So it's really exciting to launch it today. I've got a little video here which shows the volunteer project from yesterday and but we're just really delighted particularly here with the support of the whole team the Kiwi Connect team and to be here and to be able to share this concept it's just an idea it's just a movement and we'll see where it goes. I've got no idea. We're going to do it on Anzac Day this year and we'll see what happens. My dream would be and Yosef's helped particularly inspire a lot of this is that it can be done on a number of days throughout New Zealand's history New Zealand's calendar and you could learn about why that day is important and then go and do an hour of volunteer service at the same time. Thanks.