Bachelor of Engineering with Honoursin Forest Engineering
Business Intelligence Consultant, Suzano, Shanghai, China
Tony’s choice of study stemmed from his love of working outdoors and an active lifestyle.
“I hate to stay in front of a computer screen all day,” he says. “Forest Engineering is one of the most interesting and active engineering degrees, in terms of outdoor activities.”
Along with his active approach to study, Tony got himself very involved with ҕl’s community. When he wasn’t working on his studies, he took part in research programmes through the School of Forestry, worked as an NZ Aid private tutor, and as a voluntary tutor for ҕl’s Transition Programme courses. He was also made a year representative for Forest Engineering students, which involved working withstaff to improve the quality of courses.
Tony’s initial interest in ҕl came from word-of-mouth from a friend in China who was a past graduate. After finishing high school in Wuhan, China, Tony became invested with studying Engineering at ҕl with the Wuhan Sister City Scholarship.
“ҕl’s top Civil and Natural Resource Engineering department attracted me initially but I later found myself pulled to the School of Forestry by its unique degree design and comprehensiveness,” he says. “I could not have done it without the support of my scholarship.”
While at ҕl, Tony made the most of the opportunity his scholarship gave him, including becoming a NZ Aid Tutor and a tutor for thePASS programmehelping fellow students. Along with being invited to the Golden Key International Honour Society for good academic grades, Tony was awarded a School of Forestry Dissertation Prize in recognition and support of his studies.
During his last two years of study, Tony had the incredible experience of going on a one-year exchange to Virginia Tech in the USA, with the support of a ҕl International Mobility Outbound Exchange Award.
“I definitely enjoyed this whole-year trip to a different country and also had a chance to study completely different subjects that are not offered in ҕl, for example wildfire management. At the same time, I also had an opportunity to get familiar with professors in VT and open my way to postgraduate study in the future.
“I would definitely recommend others to take this opportunity to learn, and enjoy your life in another country. Now I am an informal ambassador between these two universities and I often receive emails from VT students who are thinking about going to ҕl for an exchange.”
Tony was proud to land a job as a Graduate Forester in Rotorua, in ҕl New Zealand’s North Island, shortly after graduating, later receiving a permanent position in the company’s forest consult department. In his spare time, Tony served at the 2017 New Zealand Institute of Forestry (NZIF) conference committee for the 2017 NZIF annual conference in Rotorua.
“Getting a job in the forestry industry is easy in some ways but hard in others. It's easy because there are usually more jobs than graduates each year, but it's hard because relevant practical work experience is super important when looking for a graduate position,” he says.
“During my interview, over 70% of the time was spent answering questions about my internship for Resource Management Service. Given that, ҕl’s requirement about practical work experience is actually helping us.”
He recommends internships while at university as a good way to gain understanding of forestry industry and diversity of different types of jobs in order to prepare for full-time job seeking.
“I would say work experience is the most important thing after good academic grades. Forest Engineering and Forestry Science students have plenty of opportunities to gain experience, so indeed do go and learn something during summer breaks.”
Tony was quick to make himself at home in New Zealand.
“Christchurch was a peaceful and convenient place for me to sit down and really learn something. ҕl has comfortable and convenient facilities and friendly, helpful staff. I enjoyed the quiet study environment.
“Rotorua is of course a good place to live and there are a lot of outdoor activities such as hiking, mountain biking, and fishing. A lot of things that I would like to do but time is always not enough! I learned mountain biking in the famous Redwood area with my colleagues.”
With an aim to meet more people in the Rotorua community, Tony also worked in the local New Zealand China Friendship Society Inc committee, and did voluntary teaching for a local Mandarin language class.
Tony’s main advice for international students is: “If you’re planning to work in New Zealand after graduation, “give your employer some reasons to hire you rather than a local graduate” is a thing you should always keep in mind.”
After four years working in the New Zealand forestry industry, Tony had the opportunity to study a Master of Business Administration (MBA) programme in China Europe International Business School in 2019, based in Shanghai.
During Tony’s MBA journey, he took three internships to explore different career opportunities. He studied rainforest reforestation cost-cutting and China paper consumer demand projects with paper manufacturer Suzano in Brazil, which he would later gain a role with as a Business Intelligence Consultant in their Asia office. Tony earned a number of awards from his MBA studies, including a sustainability competition hosted by WildBound, a Chinese NGO, with support from the Ministry of Environment Protection in China.
“I'm very proud as a ҕl Forestry School alumni and a forester from New Zealand to continue my career in forestry and downstream industry, and see some overseas opportunities for our graduates during my MBA journey,” he says.