
She's living locally, working globally
Kylie Brittain is one of those few Queenstowners who can truly say they work on the world stage.
The former Destination Queenstown convention bureau manager's been global events manager for Auckland-headquartered Les Mills International for the past three years.
The fitness-centric company, founded by Phillip Mills and named after his father, a former Auckland mayor and champion field athlete, is represented in 23 countries.
As events manager, Brittain organises three or four global fitness events a year.
Once a year, 4000 to 5000 Les Mills personnel also converge for two-day workouts and activations.
"One of the cool ones we did last year in Berlin was we set it up like a car wash-type thing."
Brittain's also organised events in London, in Los Angeles and Portland in the United States and Riyadh, in Saudi Arabia.
Currently she's working on events in Amsterdam and Tokyo.
After leaving DQ 10 years go, Brittain was senior experience manager for event company The Orange Group, then formed her own company, Ripple, with Queenstowner Samantha Stirling.
"Had Covid not happened, that could still very well be going now."
In applying for the Les Mills position, which for the first 15 months was contracted maternity cover, "my first response was, 'obviously, I don't live in Auckland, so I'm assuming that means I wouldn't be a viable candidate"'.
"And they were basically like, 'don't let the geography put you off because we have people working remotely all the time'."
Brittain, who now works out of Auckland HQ one week a month, says "the coolest thing is when you actually see these events you've spent nine months working on, come to life".
"You're so proud of what you do when you see people having a good time at something you've organised, and I think that's the thing that keeps you coming back all the time."
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RNZ News
2 hours ago
- RNZ News
'Dramatic shift' that could leave KiwiSaver members better off
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RNZ News
3 hours ago
- RNZ News
Over 1000 sign petition calling for passenger trains to Auckland's Huapai suburb
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Penk did not deny he had expressed support for trains to Huapai in the past when asked by RNZ, but he affirmed the government's position that the Northwest Busway was the best option. "As local MP for northwest Auckland since 2017, I've long advocated for better public transport options for our community. I have been open-minded about the transport mode as long as it delivers faster, safer travel for locals to get them to where they live, work, learn, and play. "For a number of years, the best option available was to invest in the existing Western line train service so that it would reach beyond Swanson to Kumeū-/Huapai and possibly then on to Helensville. "However, with the recent progress on work to create a dedicated busway between Kumeū-Huapai and Westgate we finally have a positive solution to this problem. It's a great joint initiative between central and local government and I was pleased to attend the official opening with the Transport Minister and Auckland Mayor. 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NZ Herald
4 hours ago
- NZ Herald
More than half Crown Regional Holdings/Provincial Growth Fund loan book ‘at risk'
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