Leadership Lessons From Africas Trailblazers
Leadership Lessons From Africas Trailblazers
Leadership Lessons From Africas Trailblazers
McKinsey
Quarterly
As in any market, there will be losers and winners—some of which are already
emerging. This article presents reflections from five of Africa’s leaders. Taken
together, their insights illustrate what is needed to thrive on the continent.
Nadia Fettah, CEO of Saham Finances, describes the strategic revitalization
of the Moroccan insurance company she leads. James Mwangi, the CEO of
another financial-services player, Equity Bank, explains how his company has
innovated its business model to boost financial inclusion. Aliko Dangote, who
has transformed a trading company into a large-scale manufacturer, elaborates
on the resilience he’s trying to build into Dangote Industries and how he hopes
this will help the company thrive far into the future. Fred Swaniker, founder of
the African Leadership University, shows how technology-enabled solutions
can unleash Africa’s young talent. Finally, human-rights advocate Graça Machel
shares insights about doing well by doing good, through the lens of New Faces
New Voices, the network she founded to expand the role and influence of
women in the financial sector.
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We spoke with these leaders, and many others, as part of the research for Africa’s
Business Revolution: How to Succeed in the World’s Next Big Growth Market
(Harvard Business Press, 2018). That book, as well as this article’s companion,
“Africa’s overlooked business revolution” (available on McKinsey.com), set out five
core requirements for building a successful enterprise in Africa: mapping the
right portfolio of countries and cities, innovating with business models, cultivating
resilience, unleashing local talent, and doing well by doing good. We hope that the
stories of these five leaders, in different sectors and across multiple countries, will
enhance understanding of the opportunity in Africa, clarify what it takes to build a
sustainable business there, and inspire global leaders to do so.
Nadia Fettah: Our goal was simple: to become the best insurance company
in Africa. Our first step was to become a major player in Morocco, which we
succeeded in doing over three or four years. But our ambition was big and our
market was small, so we looked for the next countries into which we could expand.
We considered North Africa and Europe, but when we started traveling in sub-
Saharan Africa we realized that we could have a major impact there. Most countries
had very low insurance penetration, so there was great potential to serve clients
who had very little access to insurance.
That led us to expand quickly across different regions of Africa. In 2010, we made
an acquisition that gave us an immediate presence in ten countries in francophone
West Africa—which made life easier for our Moroccan managers, all of whom
speak French. But we also wanted to go to other big markets in Africa that were
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underpenetrated. So we went to Angola and acquired the company that had
become the first private insurer there back in 2005. We also invested in Nigeria,
Kenya, Rwanda, Madagascar, and Mauritius. Despite language and cultural
differences, we built successful businesses in all these markets, creating lean,
highly empowered local leadership teams backed by shared, technology-driven
back-office systems.
Of course, that rapid expansion came with challenges, as the example of our entry into
Angola illustrates. We bought a fast-growing local insurance company in 2015, but just
as the deal closed, the oil price collapsed, putting Angola’s oil-dependent economy
into a tailspin. Suddenly, everything went wrong, and we were facing a crisis.
But we took a long-term view, and our local management team quickly came
up with a strategy to save the business. Rather than scaling back, that strategy
focused on ramping up sales to business customers, including thousands of smaller
enterprises. Within a year, our Angolan business had returned to profitability and
built a real beachhead for us. As we were growing, our competitors were halting
their investments. That will give us a strong competitive advantage as Angola’s
economy recovers.
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Innovate your business model: Fulfilling
a societal need for financial inclusion
James Mwangi, managing director and CEO, Equity Group Holdings
James Mwangi: I grew up in a rural area of Kenya, and my own mother, Grace,
didn’t have a bank account. The nearest bank branch was 50 kilometers away, and
the minimum opening balance was equivalent to several years of her earnings. My
mother would also have been intimidated by banks, with their granite floors, long
queues, and formally dressed officials. To make matters worse, banks often had
a seven-day rule between withdrawals. If your child got sick, you couldn’t go back
and withdraw money from your account if you’d been there the day before. Banks
simply didn’t understand the day-to-day financial situations of ordinary people.
Kenyans’ response was to keep their money under the mattress.
Fewer than one in ten Kenyan adults had a bank account at the turn of the 21st
century. Today, thanks in part to Equity Bank’s innovations, two-thirds of them do.
We knew we had to address the needs of people like my mother. We wanted to give
banking a human face and create the concept of the bank as a marketplace where
people would feel at home. We did away with high minimum balances, created
affordable products, and, most importantly, delivered them where people lived. One
innovation was to introduce what we called “mobile village banking,” or banking on
wheels. Long before cellphone banking came along, we created minibank branches
that could fit in the back of a Land Rover and drove them from village to village
across rural Kenya.
Maybe our best-known innovation, though, is our agency banking model: Equity
Bank has accredited more than 30,000 small retail outlets across the country as
bank agents, able to accept deposits, dispense cash, open accounts, apply for
payment cards, pay bills like those for power or water, and much more. It took us six
years to convince the Central Bank of Kenya that shopkeepers could accept cash
as banking agents. But once we did, we were able to multiply our network 1,000-fold.
That has really taken banking to the last mile in every village. As a result, banking
now competes with sugar and salt as a product. The agency model has assisted in
our continued pursuit of demystifying banking. Our agents don’t talk to customers
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in banking jargon—they use the language of the common man in their environment.
We’ve assisted those 40,000 shopkeepers to professionalize: they’ve become
owner–managers, managing a bank for a commission. That in turn has distributed
wealth across the country.
Our business model is high volume and low margin. Cost-effectiveness and
efficiency are key, and technology plays an important role. Today, Equity Bank
has moved beyond Land Rovers and enabled true mobile banking via our Equitel
mobile-banking application, which we launched in 2015. Equitel uses SIM overlay
technology to enable easy access by customers of every mobile provider. Equitel
has become very big, very fast. Today, our branches are doing 5,000 transactions a
day, our agents are doing 300,000 transactions a day, and Equitel is doing 900,000
transactions a day. As customer preferences for channels of service continue to
evolve to self-service devices, the old brick-and-mortar branches are moving to
become service and advisory centers. The bank’s cost model is shifting from a
fixed-cost to a variable-cost model. This has helped us reduce our cost-to-income
ratio to an average of 49 to 50 percent, down from a high of 60 to 70 percent some
years previously.
We are already looking ahead at future innovations. We see social media as the
next channel for banking, so our next big focus is channel innovation. We are also
looking beyond financial services and building a new business in the healthcare
space—a network of medical centers called Equity Afia. The inspiration came from
our charitable foundation, which has awarded some 6,000 university scholarships
through paid internships to academically gifted students from across Kenya’s
47 counties, under the Equity Leaders Program. We looked at our graduates and
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found that 600 of them had been to medical school. We already knew that 40 percent
of the defaults on our bank loans were due to ill health in the family, so we empowered
our medical graduates as entrepreneur doctors, helping them start clinics and
supporting them with systems to manage their clinics. At the same time, we
are providing our banking customers with medical insurance. These products
intertwine the commercial interests of the bank and a solution to address the
health challenge of our society.
Social impact is embedded in our DNA, and it is what has enabled Equity Bank
to scale: today it is the biggest bank, by market capitalization, in East and
Central Africa. We see the bank not just as a company but as a movement for
socioeconomic transformation. People see themselves as part of that movement.
They say, “I joined, I became a member,” not “I opened an account.” That concept of
belonging has been central to Equity Bank’s growth.
At the time, Brazilian manufacturers were dealing with hyperinflation and massive
exchange-rate problems. They helped me realize that if we were going to build
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industries in Africa, we would have to be the boldest people around. If we weren’t
going to be bold, we could just forget it. Even today, my philosophy is “think
big, dream big, and do big things.” Our target is to achieve annual revenues of
10 percent of Nigeria’s GDP—some $45 billion to $50 billion.
For many of our manufacturing businesses, we also generate our own electric
power. This is based on the realization that a lack of reliable power has been one of
the major impediments to industry in Africa and has caused many manufacturers
to fail. Here, too, our vision extends beyond our own operations. For example, we
have partnered with Black Rhino, a subsidiary of the US-based asset manager
Blackstone, to develop power-generation projects to feed into Nigeria’s grid.
Doing business in Africa is for the discerning, imaginative, and bold executive. I am
convinced that Africa is the best-kept secret as a place for a profitable and fulfilling
business enterprise. You don’t have to be African to succeed in Africa. But if you
really want to do business here, you have to think long term. Africa is not a place
where you can come and invest for two or three years, milk the business, and run
away. You have to build a business that can succeed in the good times, the OK
times, and the bad times.
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Unleash Africa’s talent: Imagining
new approaches to shape the skills of
the future
Fred Swaniker, founder, African Leadership University
Fred Swaniker: I spend my life today looking for and developing Africa’s future
talent. What I can tell you is that there’s an abundant source of talent in Africa: it
has the youngest population in the world, with an average age of 19.5, compared
to 46 or 47 in Germany and Japan. And this talent is driven, hungry, and willing to
learn—all they need is an opportunity. When we give them that opportunity, even
though they may have come with less preparation than you might find in other
parts of the world, they catch up fast. We’re able to get people who come from very
disadvantaged backgrounds with very weak foundations to perform at world-class
levels within two years.
Companies that succeed in Africa need to look beyond the rough edges that they
might see in a young African that they interview—someone who hasn’t necessarily
been to a fancy university and doesn’t speak English the way they might expect.
They need to really invest in that talent; that investment will reap significant
rewards for them as they grow.
You also have to take a strategic role in developing your own talent—to look at
talent development as part of your value chain, not as something that is outsourced
to the national university system. And to convert Africa’s raw talent, you don’t
necessarily need to put people through a full four-year degree. A three-month or
nine-month training program could be enough to unlock the skills that companies
need. Compare Africa to India. For years, companies in India used to complain,
“The universities are not producing the people we need.” So companies like Infosys
created their own corporate academies, and they started training and developing
their own people.
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Harvard Business School, from Cambridge, from MIT. That’s why we’ve been able
to leapfrog and build the universities of the future in Africa, driving significant
improvements in human-capital development with much less capital than would
have been needed before.
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goals are an ambitious, universal call to end poverty, protect the environment,
and ensure that all members of our global family enjoy peace and prosperity. They
require that we leave no one behind.
I see a central role for the private sector to partner in poverty-eradication efforts
and collaborate with public-sector and civil-society actors to drive job creation
on a massive scale. Business leaders should ask themselves, “If our country has
a certain percentage of young people who are unemployed, what kind of creative,
forward-thinking changes do we have to implement to accelerate job creation
and increase employment opportunities for our youth? How can we move from
producing 5,000 jobs a year to two million a year, for example?”
Those kinds of audacious goals require a change in mind-set for all of us. Entire
industries—and leaders themselves—have to meaningfully transform; it can no
longer be business as usual. Development doesn’t happen without transformation,
first of people themselves, then of institutions, then of systems. That means we
all have to move out of our comfort zones and move to a different level of thinking,
operating, and engaging one another. Ultimately, business leaders should see
themselves as responsible partners in a national pact for development.
Part of the change required is a set of very clear policies and strategies to bring
more women into top leadership. Business leaders in particular should make
women’s advancement part and parcel of their strategy of growth and sustainability
for the next five, ten, 15, 20 years. Human-resources departments and CEOs
need to make upward mobility for
female staff part of HR strategy
and succession planning and ask
themselves, “How can we get more
qualified women into the C-suite? How
are we nurturing our female talent?
How do we ensure more capable
women are sitting at the highest
levels of decision making?” You need
to value diversity as an element of
strength and make it part of a cultural
and institutional transformation.
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