The concept of
Corporate Social Responsibility (CSR) developed alongside the emergence of
corporations more than a century ago and is now practiced by most companies and
institutions around world. While corporations may vary in their level of
commitment to CSR, their practice is largely focused on
corporate philanthropy such as donating to charities, supporting causes or
sponsoring individuals, groups and programmes. However, some companies, intent on
making their CSR impact more effective, are rethinking this approach. Among
these companies is Guaranty Trust Bank (GTBank) plc, a leading African
financial institution headquartered in Nigeria and spread across sub-Saharan
Africa and the United Kingdom.
GTBank has
always been heavy on CSR. The bank maintains a clearly defined Corporate Social
Responsibility (CSR) strategy with targeted focus on Education, Community
Development, the Environment and Arts. Among its landmark CSR programmes are the
GTBank Adopt-a-School programme through which the Bank has taken over the
provision of facilities tosome public schools across Nigeria’s six geopolitical
zones. The Bank also sponsors three annual secondary school football
tournaments—The Lagos State Principals Cup, the Ogun State Principals Cup and
the Masters Cup—all of which have become major grass-roots football
competitions in the country.The bank’s backed Orange Ribbon Initiative is the
foremost Autism-focused initiative in the country providing support and raising
awareness for people living with Autism Spectrum Disorders.
Not resting on
its CSR feats, GTBank is innovating how it gives back to its communities by
going beyond traditional corporate philanthropies to intervene in key economic
sectors to strengthen small businesses through non-profit consumer focused
fairs and capacity building initiatives that serve to boost their expertise,
exposure and business growth. The first big example of this new approach was
the Food and Drink Fair which the bank organized in May. Although the event had
all the flavoursof Food festivals, with world-class chefs such as Marcus
Samuelson and Raphael Duntoye serenading cooking masterclasses, its raison
d’étre was to boost the enterprise of indigenous SMEs in the food sector. In
that front it succeeded quite remarkably with over 25,000 guests attending the
fair and the over 100 SMEs seeing record sales of their products.
GTBank is now
looking to repeat what it achieved with the Food and Drink Fair in the Fashion
sector. “We are thrilled to be the first in the Nigerian financial sector to
pioneer an initiative that will assist in unlocking growth opportunities for
businesses in the fashion industry,” said the Bank’s MD, Segun Agbaje, in a
Press Release announcing the GTBank Fashion Weekend set to take place in
November. “We are committed to growing SMEs in a sustainable manner that is not
driven by profits but focused on empowering our customers and growing our
economy collectively.”The Weekend, it is understood, will have all the glitz
and glamour of fashion events but at its core will be the theme of Promoting Enterprise,
which will be achieved through the Fashion MasterClasses for entrepreneurs and
designers as well as retail exhibitions to boost the sales of local SMEs.
While in the
process of organizing the Fashion Weekend, GTBank also announced the launch of its
virtual arts gallery which the bank said will serve as a free platform for
local artists to exhibit their artworks and achieve greater market exposure. “At
GTBank we see art as an avenue for unlocking people’s creative potential and by
creating ART635 we aim to expand the opportunities for art education as well as
broaden the reach and viewership of the works of indigenous artists,” said Mr
Segun Agbaje in a statement announcing the gallery’s launch. “Although African
art goes back several centuries, the art industry in the continent is still
young and largely untapped and we hope that with ART635 we can drive its
evolution into a lucrative and vibrant economic sector,” he added.
Given the
depressed economic situation in Nigeria, and indeed across sub-Saharan Africa,
GTBank’s new approach to CSR is an apt response from a company keen on boosting
the general economic fortunes of its community. Small businesses, on which the
economic growth and development of most African states depend, need not just
financial empowerment but also capacity building and access to market, aspects
that GTBank’s CSR-tweak does address. The company’s new approach to CSR also
shows that far from just innovating for business growth, companies and
organizations must always evolve how they give back to their communities to
ensure that their CSR programmes continually make its desired impact.
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