The best advice up-and-coming Southland dairy farmer Emma Blom ever got was to treat the years from 18 to 25 as an apprenticeship, having the rest of her life to make money.
That advice, from the Bloms’ family accountant, Pita Alexander, is something Emma, now 23 years old, seems to be living to a tee.
Emma is working full steam, not only on her family’s northern Southland farm in Balfour, but also to make as much as she can of those ‘apprenticeship’ years.
She was the runner-up Trainee of the Year at the 2025 National NZ Dairy Industry Awards and recently completed Dairy Training’s Emerging Leadership course.
Emma says she was prompted to take part by the realisation that she needed to build specific skills – and by the encouragement of her brother Nick, who had also completed the Emerging Leadership course.
“To grow, you need help from people,” Emma says.
“To get help from people, you need to be good with people. I noticed that I lack some leadership skills.
“Dairy Training’s Emerging Leadership course is a real hands-on, specific course for dairy farmers to improve those skills.”
She found the personality and leadership profiling in the course especially beneficial as it helped her determine her leadership style.
“It showed me my natural leadership style — the one I tend to fall back on — but also gave examples of when I might need to use a different style and what I could work on,” she says.