Winning an award can boost your career or kick start a business. Even the process of applying can help clarify your ambitions and possible career path.
For award/scholarship winners Nicole Austin, and Ben O'Leary, being recognised for their inventions has boosted one's career as an industrial designer and set the other one on the path of business.
During her fourth year of a Bachelor of Design degree at Massey University Austin, 23, won the 2017 national winner of the James Dyson Award (JDA), an international award for designers of new problem-solving ideas.
Austin was required to do a year-long project for the honours degree. Coming from a lifestyle block in a rural area, Austin chose to focus on the sheep-farming industry where she found traditional processes hadn't been updated for decades.
Tools were primitive, says Austin, and she decided to create a new blueprint for a docking iron, which farmers use to remove lambs' tails. Austin's tool was designed to be more useable, but still familiar to farmers.
The scissor-action tool, call "Moray" is LPG-powered, which makes it cost-effective and enables it to be used remotely. The LPG heats a copper searing blade, which cuts and cauterises the tail simultaneously. The Mora was designed with New Zealand's weather conditions in mind as well as minimising the potential for repetitive strain injury to users, and blistering of the hands.
Massey University encouraged Austin and her fellow students to enter this and other awards. "I also knew a couple of the past New Zealand winners," she says.
Austin, who now works at Fisher & Paykel Appliances as a part of the industrial design team, says winning will open doors for her in the future. "The JD award is huge exposure for someone of my age. It will help me leverage my career.
"Having such a recognised award behind me really opens up the design community not only here in New Zealand but at an international level and has created a number of opportunities even in this past year alone." She is currently looking at opportunities in Austria or London.