From working with Hollywood celebrities and world business leaders to helping the community - Tony and Belinda Goldsack say they love their new life in Rotorua.
The couple moved from Sydney just over a year ago to Mr Goldsack's hometown.
"I was in the car industry for 17 years with Mercedes Benz and Porsche and my last role with them was running a dealership at the airport with 30 staff working for me. I was working from 5am-10pm catering for all the flights into Sydney." Mrs Goldsack said.
"Tony had a cleaning business working from 5am-6pm, seven days a week."
Life didn't slow down when Mrs Goldsack started her international concierge business in 2007.
"We catered for members who were travelling to Australia from simple to some ridiculous requests, mostly within a 24-48 hour timeframe."
These included shutting down the Sydney Harbour Bridge for a wedding proposal, purchasing and flying 2kg of Beluga caviar and 10 cases of Dom Perignon Vintage Champagne via private jet to a 300ft yacht off the coast of Tahiti and organising a private meeting for a corporate client to meet former United States vice- president and international climate change champion, Al Gore over lunch in Sydney.
"We were married in New Zealand in 2005 at Waitangi grounds and we always wanted to come home and immerse ourselves in the community," Mrs Goldsack said.
"By the time we left Australia we were so burnt out that we spent a couple of months just travelling the country, we packed in 27,000km in two-and-a-half months."
From February last year they started volunteering with the Community Patrol New Zealand (CPNZ) Western Knights team working closely with Rotorua's police and Maori Wardens, Neighbourhood Support and the Western Heights Community Association committee.
Mr Goldsack is the team co-ordinator and his wife patrols with the Knights up to three times a week.
"We attend the police line up and it gave us a good insight into what the core issues of Rotorua are," she said.
They then joined the Red Cross and was trained for civil defence disaster. Mrs Goldsack was elected by the Rotorua branch to be their Bay of Plenty Area Council member for Red Cross New Zealand's National Council. Their love of water and the bush led them to joining the coastguards and the Rotorua Land Search and Rescue (LandSAR). Other community groups they volunteer for included the fire service and Victims Support. They have worked alongside police on numerous programmes such as C.A.C.T.U.S youth and are assisting with police and The Alzheimer's Foundation to replace and maintain pendants on 60 Rotorua patients while developing standard operating procedures for the local LandSAR.
Their volunteer work earned them a nomination for the Rotorua Daily Post's Person of the Year award last year.
"We are both actually feeling quite overwhelmed and very humbled that someone has even put us forward," Mrs Goldsack said. "We absolutely love helping and serving, it's very much part of our DNA.
"We were fortunate doing what we did in Australia and we're very fortunate to be able to now work with many wonderful people, amazing volunteers in the community.
"This shared purpose, camaraderie and team work - our friends and colleagues all working with the same mindset and shared purpose in mind is one of the many reasons driving Tony and I to play a part, albeit it a small one, within our community which we now call our home."