Government spends $150,000 to create video game to teach people how to run a business
https://www.nzherald.co.nz/business/news/article.cfm?c_id=3&objectid=12095092
Government spends $150,000 to create video game to teach people how to run a business
26 Jul, 2018 5:00am
2 minutes to read
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Government, Joy Business Academy, Xero and BNZ have teamed up and
created a video game to give players insight into running their own
business.
The Ministry of Social Development spent $150,000 on the game but the total cost of development could not be revealed.
It took 14 months and eight designers to create.
The Tycoon Game series, which consists of Restaurant Tycoon and Tech
Tycoon, challenges players to use what the World Economic Forum has
deemed as 10 essential skills vital for the future of employment.
The educational game will teach players business skills including
emotional intelligence and cognitive flexibility, as well as critical
thinking and creativity - skills the Forum has this year bumped up the
prescribed list.
Players can
level-up and earn badges for certain achievements, determined by how
they manage scenarios in the game, including paying supplier invoices
and wages.
Social Development
minister Carmel Sepuloni said the game reinforced skills needed today to
be able to successfully start and manage your own business.
"Every year SMEs are constrained through a combination of external
pressures, lack of experience and commercial acumen. Recruitment,
training and retention of good employees is cited as one of the most
challenging aspects of businesses for this group," Sepuloni said.
James Coddington, chief executive of Joy Business Academy, which
developed the game, believes it is the game will support small business
education.
"By immersing the
player in operating their own business in the virtual world, it is our
hope they will learn the necessary skills and understand how they can
work with different partners or business advisors which can then be
translated into operating their own SME business in the real world,"
Coddington said.
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