 Ture. I bet you're wondering who the Skucks Māori boy is on your computer screen, and if you're thinking that, cheer again. Trending in 2K16 is Māori and employment, and I'll let you in on a bit of a secret. The way to make gaining employment easier is whanau ngatanga, o networking. That way, you'll have the right people around you and you can have a cheer kind of day. Hi, I'm Keelu. I'm in my last year of school. Next year I'm out in the working world and heading out to test the waters. Ask the questions that not only help me find a job, but a job I'll love. And to make sure we forget nothing on our fact-finding mission, we're making a video diary out of it. Kia ora, Morgan. I'm the owner of Kaitiaki Studios and I'm the lead designer at Artiki Creative. My name is Hori Mataki, an operator of Artiki Creative. We do graphic design, web design, mobile apps, VR, photography. Is Māori tanga portrayed in your job, if so, how? Māori tanga is portrayed in our mahi. It sort of underpins everything. It's like a big kopapa of what we do. So being a design business, it's not just a thing that helps set us away from the pack and it's a part of our brand too. It's also a part of who we are because we are Māori. The narratives and stuff are not just there for business seekers there because that's who our tupuna. It's our responsibility to tell the stories of our ancestors and our tupuna with mana and respect. What does a Māori wahine have to do to establish their selves in this career? It's hard. I'm the only female sort of in the hub as a digital native. A lot of my time goes into my family and I've got a four-year-old so it takes a lot of my time and a lot of my mind power, I guess. I'm lucky as well. I'm sort of the only one that's virtual artist and tarmoko artist and things like that so I just make sure that all the things that I do that they can't as sort of seeing in my work. So what do you guys do? Can that be taught? If you can learn, you can learn anything, I reckon. And if you're not so good at learning try and get better at learning because then you can learn anything. We've got pretty much the worlds at our fingertips now of the internet and things like that. Resources, digital stuff, you can go online and pretty much find out anything you want in the world and you can try and become anything you want. As long as you have that innovative spirit. Do you want to tell us a bit more about your tarmoko career then? So I work as a tattoo tarmoko artist at Expression on New Regent Street in Christchurch. It varies. It's not just moko. I do lots of tattoo work, lots of Pacific Island work. Moko. I've been lucky enough to have some external influence from Fane Robinson on bits and pieces of my work which is awesome but I guess learning in a traditional tattoo studio you learn a lot about the machines and the techniques and things like that and a lot of what I learn here and the Māori tanga of what I learn as part of this hub carries on to what I can do over there so everything complements each other. So what are you doing here? Working on a bit of design stuff for clothing we can do some things for trade training. So what kind of process do you have to go through to make this kind of stuff? We get approached by a client and give us a design brief like the kind of colours they're into the kind of look and feel that they're after who's going to be wearing the clothes or who's going to be wearing the design and we work backwards from there to come up with a look and feel. What inspires you to create your designs? We have a philosophy around baka-papa and tikanga so we'll get a story that's grounded in traditional Māori design and then bring it to the modern age and look at how we digitise things to make them look more contemporary. So that's a pretty much our goal with all our designs to carry a narrative from people of the land. Kia ora. So what are you doing here? At the moment we're doing some installations at the new Māori land courts. These are going to be made out of wood slats and wrapped around. What kind of process do you go through about the concept of this design? At the start of it, when we're sort of in brainstorming I usually draw lots of concepts on my tablet like this. I'm working with the idea of a Māori snowflake and I import the files into here and they get carried away, as you can see in working files and we can use our software to integrate what we've designed. We heard you guys do VR as well. Would you be able to show us? So you want to chuck this on? That's what she's experiencing now is it's a spherical video, it's 360 degrees of virtual reality. So she's putting her seat what's on here on the screen at the moment. So let's recap what we just learned. Choose a job that fits in with your whānau and values. Your skills and talent can transfer from job to job. Have a passion for digitising and modernising Māori narratives. Make sure you check out our other awesome industry videos on the Maya website.