Sunny Kaushal, an Indian community leader who organised the meeting, said there has been an increase in crime on small businesses.
He said the meeting was attended by shopowners, community leaders, members of the public and police, in the form of Inspector Jacqui Whittaker, Area Commander for the Auckland City western area.
"In the last three days, three dairies were robbed in Auckland ... [the] brutal attack on a dairy at Melrose Rd in Mt Roskill has shaken the community," Kaushal said.
Police said seven people entered the Mt Roskill dairy about 7.30am on Sunday armed with a baseball bat and crowbar.
The two shop attendants were both assaulted before the group fled in two cars, taking cash and cigarettes, Detective Sergeant Philip Cox said.
Police have since charged two teenage girls, aged 13 and 14, with aggravated robbery. The pair will appear in the Auckland Youth Court.
On Monday a police car was fired upon during a chase through South Auckland after an armed robbery at a dairy, while on Sunday, a service station in Auckland's northwest was also held up and the attendant threatened with a knife.
Kaushal has been visiting one of the victims of the Mt Roskill attack at North Shore Hospital, as the man undergoes several surgeries.
The shopkeepers, a husband and wife, were both injured during the robbery.
At the meeting, Raj Chopra, owner of Crown Superette for 15 years, asked for greater police powers and harsher penalties for serious offenders, including electronic tagging.
Kaushal also said the action group would also involve religious bodies, business groups, education institutions and local boards.
"It [will] work closely with police ... besides educating the small businesses and communities on safety and prevention initiatives, it will be an action oriented group to take the issues head on with government authorities and lawmakers," he said.
"The small businesses contribute significantly to our economy and society. Brutal attacks on shopkeepers in broad daylight in public places shows the offenders have no fear of police, [the] law of the land, or the consequences whatsoever."
While speaking to the group, Kaushal said, "how many Navtej Singhs and Arun Kumars [do] we need to lose?"