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Jeremy Hall

Founder | General Manager

LinkedIn icon - GummyBear Digital Marketing Dunedin NZ

Jeremy is the paternal parent of GummyBear and is obsessed with building cool stuff and making the impossible possible. Most of the time, Jeremy can be spotted with a highly caffeinated drink in his hand, fuelling his desire to be 150% faster and more efficient in anything he does. When he’s not trying to change the world with technology, you can find him at the gym or having fun with his family.

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What’s your role at GummyBear?

I’m a bit like the conductor of an orchestra. I’m surrounded by highly skilled individuals who have spent years honing their craft and my role is to get everyone to play together at the right time.

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What’s your favourite part about working at GummyBear?

The freedom to break the rules. The opportunities to create something exceptional, to be relentlessly focused on the smallest details, pushing boundaries and technology further and seeing people’s lives and organisations excel as a result – it is addicting.

A ‘normal’ day at work?

‘Normal’ is an illusion!

What challenge(s) have you seen in our industry that you would like to fix?

There is incredible technological innovation and advancement within the digital and software space. Organisations whose digital knowledge remains current with technological innovation and advancement will be afforded incalculable opportunities for their organisation to operate with a competitive advantage, scale, improving productivity, etc., over digital illiterate organisations. The challenge is to have as much accurate digital information freely available and accessible as possible, in a language everyone can understand and with the knowledge of how organisations can benefit from adopting the technology.

team member personal photo
team member personal photo
team member personal photo
team member personal photo

Early bird or night owl?

Early bird

Hot or cold drinks?

Cold

Pineapple on pizza?

Hell no, what heathen would disgrace a pizza with fruit?

Spring, summer, autumn or winter?

Winter

Myers-Brigg’s

ENTJ-A

Top sheet or no top sheet?

No top sheet

What’s your background?

I grew up in Queenstown through my primary school years which was awesome! I fondly remember the plentiful outdoor opportunities: skiing, mountain climbing, four-wheel driving or motorbiking into places like Macetown, hunting, fishing, ice skating (completing my ‘Kiwi’ badges), bonfires were some of my favorite things to do. I proposed to Pearl on Cecil Peak. My family then moved to Dunedin where I attended intermediate and started highschool, before I moved to Balclutha to finish off highschool – I got bored at school so got my first after school job making coffins. It’s a different perspective looking at someone and sizing up their coffin. After a year I started working after school and in the holidays at an engineering workshop doing all the important jobs: getting smoko, sweeping, grinding, more grinding, etc. At 16 having passed 6th form certificate I decided to leave school (lost interest in most school subjects), leave home and moved into a granny flat in Dunedin to begin an engineering apprenticeship (the granny flat was awesome as the landlord used to cook meals for me).

$6.22 per hour before tax was not enough to pay rent so I worked the evenings in the Dunedin clubs’ distinguished positions of dishwasher, glassy and doorman. After going steady with Pearl for a number of years, Beven (Pearl’s father) suggested I advance my education at university. After being rejected from University I begged for a position at the Otago Polytechnic’s business school who allowed my entrance on a diploma trial. Beven offered to support my education via a fulltime assistant job – turns out, that translates into do everything no one else wants to do (work weekends, holidays, evenings, fix anything broken, solve the problems, etc.)

During the Applied Management Degree, I was allowed to apply my ‘assignments’ to real business issues (did not really see the point of not applying the knowledge to real issues), thus, for three years I found organisation’s who were seeking assistance within the areas I was studying and developed strategies and systems. For example, I improved cashflow by developing a fuel ordering system. After completing the Applied Management Degree, I went and studied a Masters of Business (MBA) at the Otago University (finally I was no longer a reject). I continued to apply my ‘assignments’ to real business issues. I was a member of the team who received the Ronald J Moore Memorial Award for developing an Australian market strategy for a New Zealand organisation.

The conclusion of my MBA was the development of a Strategic Decision-Making System for the Otago Polytechnic (never forget those who help you). I founded Gummybear in our basement by complete accident by just helping organisations. It began by helping DebtorInfo redevelop their software and we started helping other organisations, soon some highly skilled and talented people hung around too long and ended up staying and then the basement became too small. Now I get to build cool digital stuff everyday.

I grew up in Queenstown through my primary school years which was awesome! I fondly remember the plentiful outdoor opportunities: skiing, mountain climbing, four-wheel driving or motorbiking into places like Macetown, hunting, fishing, ice skating (completing my ‘Kiwi’ badges), bonfires were some of my favorite things to do. I proposed to Pearl on Cecil Peak. My family then moved to Dunedin where I attended intermediate and started highschool, before I moved to Balclutha to finish off highschool – I got bored at school so got my first after school job making coffins. It’s a different perspective looking at someone and sizing up their coffin. After a year I started working after school and in the holidays at an engineering workshop doing all the important jobs: getting smoko, sweeping, grinding, more grinding, etc. At 16 having passed 6th form certificate I decided to leave school (lost interest in most school subjects), leave home and moved into a granny flat in Dunedin to begin an engineering apprenticeship (the granny flat was awesome as the landlord used to cook meals for me).

$6.22 per hour before tax was not enough to pay rent so I worked the evenings in the Dunedin clubs’ distinguished positions of dishwasher, glassy and doorman. After going steady with Pearl for a number of years, Beven (Pearl’s father) suggested I advance my education at university. After being rejected from University I begged for a position at the Otago Polytechnic’s business school who allowed my entrance on a diploma trial. Beven offered to support my education via a fulltime assistant job – turns out, that translates into do everything no one else wants to do (work weekends, holidays, evenings, fix anything broken, solve the problems, etc.)

During the Applied Management Degree, I was allowed to apply my ‘assignments’ to real business issues (did not really see the point of not applying the knowledge to real issues), thus, for three years I found organisation’s who were seeking assistance within the areas I was studying and developed strategies and systems. For example, I improved cashflow by developing a fuel ordering system. After completing the Applied Management Degree, I went and studied a Masters of Business (MBA) at the Otago University (finally I was no longer a reject). I continued to apply my ‘assignments’ to real business issues. I was a member of the team who received the Ronald J Moore Memorial Award for developing an Australian market strategy for a New Zealand organisation.

The conclusion of my MBA was the development of a Strategic Decision-Making System for the Otago Polytechnic (never forget those who help you). I founded Gummybear in our basement by complete accident by just helping organisations. It began by helping DebtorInfo redevelop their software and we started helping other organisations, soon some highly skilled and talented people hung around too long and ended up staying and then the basement became too small. Now I get to build cool digital stuff everyday.

team member personal photo
team member personal photo

What do you enjoy doing when you aren’t working?

I enjoy weightlifting, playing video games, spending time with my boys, hunting, and listening to audio books.

team member personal photo

Imagination is everything.