That will involve working towards a "bold" new UK-NZ Free Trade Agreement. And, while the UK is part of the EU, it will continue to support an EU-NZ FTA.
It was likely at this point of the discussion that things started to get a bit hairy for English and May at that meeting - for English would have also pushed for immigration rights as well as trade. New Zealanders have become collateral damage in the UK's drive to peg back migrant numbers - and Home Secretary Amber Rudd is now talking about even more changes that will affect New Zealanders.
So English will be flogging a dead horse. Nonetheless, he will be quite happy with the doggy bag he will get sent back to New Zealand with.
His Europe dance card was full of big wigs and they all made the right noises - from May to European Commission president Jean-Claude Juncker who said a free trade agreement could be done in two to three years.
It might only be noise with English as the piggy in the middle while the UK and the rest of the EU both try to prove to each other that they will not be paralysed by Brexit.
But English will be a happy little piggy if all that noise does translate into trade deals.