This
week marks the celebration of the 125th anniversary of the existence of
the First Bank franchise in Nigeria. This stands the bank out as one of
the earliest institutions
established in West Africa, and obviously, one of the handful still in
existence today.
The
bank began as the Bank of British West Africa (BBWA) in 1894 and
quickly began playing the role of the Central Bank of British West
Africa in the absence of a regulator
at those medieval times in the sub region. The bank witnessed the
amalgamation of the Northern and Southern protectorates and the eventual
independence of Nigeria in 1960. It was founded by Alfred Lewis Jones, a
shipping magnate who imported silver currency
into West Africa through Elder Dempster shipping company also owned by
him.
In
1957, the bank changed its name to Bank of West Africa (BWA). Sequel to
Nigeria’s independence in 1960, the bank began to extend more credit to
indigenous Nigerians
as most of its credit facilities were hitherto concentrated on
foreigners living in the erstwhile colony.
Standard
Bank acquired the Bank of West Africa in 1966 and changed its name to
Standard Bank of West Africa. In 1969, Standard Bank of West Africa
incorporated its Nigerian
operations and its name had to change once again, this time to Standard
Bank of Nigeria Ltd (SBN). In 1971, SBN listed its shares on the
Nigerian Stock Exchange and placed 13% of its share capital with
Nigerian investors. Following the implementation of the
indigenisation policy of the then military government soon after the
civil war, Standard Chartered Bank reduced its stake in SBN to 38%. This
action led to another change in name to First Bank of Nigeria in 1979
as Standard Chartered Bank insisted that since
it had lost majority control, the bank should no longer bear its name
since by the action, it had failed to be its full fledged subsidiary.
This
marked a watershed in the history of the bank as more Nigerians were
appointed to the board and it began to look and operate more like a
Nigerian bank. The bank
had subsequently moved from a limited liability company to a publicly
quoted company and back to a limited liability company which it
presently is. The latest status is in compliance with changes in the
regulatory environment in 2012 that required that the
group operates as a holding company, with the bank as one of its
subsidiaries or spin off other operations not related to banking. That
marked the birth of FBN Holdings which presently has the bank and non
bank subsidiaries as part of the group.
In
1982, First Bank opened a branch in London and converted same to a full
fledged subsidiary, FBN Bank (UK) in 2002. Two years later, in 2004, a
representative office
in Johannesburg, South Africa, debuted. At the moment, First Bank has
subsidiaries or representative offices in France, China, Democratic
Republic of Congo, Gambia, Sierra Leone, Ghana, Guinea and Senegal. At
the last count, First Bank had presence across
10 countries in three continents. It operates from over 750 locations
and employs close to 22,000 people. Its has over N3.3trillion in total
assets. It also boasts over N2.5trillion in Customer deposits with a
tidy 19% Capital Adequacy Ratio (CAR). The bank
has over 1.3m shareholders and over 14million customers.
Before
going further, I must, in the full disclosure tradition of this column,
declare that I joined First Bank as an Assistant General Manager on
April 1, 2001 and left
10 years after, having risen to the position of Executive Director in
2011. I joined as part of the transformation team of the bank set up
following a decision to institute comprehensive reforms in the bank. The
project, titled, “Century 2, the New Frontier”
effected a total change in the way things were done in the bank.
Readers will realize, in the course of this essay, that a major part of
the resilience and longevity of the bank has to do with its ability to
keep pace with changes, not just in the banking
ecosystem, but the global environment.
It is pertinent to note that so many institutions and companies disappear after only a few years of existence and therefore, there must be some distinguishing characteristics that have made First Bank, not only to survive but to excel in the last one decade and a quarter. I will attempt to share my own thoughts on this, which would definitely not be exhaustive.
One thing that stands the bank out is that everything it does is woven around strategy. In my days at the institution, and I believe it should still be the same now, the bank will start a year with long board and management strategy sessions. These comprise long and short term strategies. The long term strategies normally have a horizon of 5 years while the short term ones are normally between one and three years. I am sure some people, particularly in other environments, will argue that 5-year strategies would be at best described as medium term, but the truth is that in the Nigerian market, 5 years is even too long given how rapidly things change here!
It is pertinent to note that so many institutions and companies disappear after only a few years of existence and therefore, there must be some distinguishing characteristics that have made First Bank, not only to survive but to excel in the last one decade and a quarter. I will attempt to share my own thoughts on this, which would definitely not be exhaustive.
One thing that stands the bank out is that everything it does is woven around strategy. In my days at the institution, and I believe it should still be the same now, the bank will start a year with long board and management strategy sessions. These comprise long and short term strategies. The long term strategies normally have a horizon of 5 years while the short term ones are normally between one and three years. I am sure some people, particularly in other environments, will argue that 5-year strategies would be at best described as medium term, but the truth is that in the Nigerian market, 5 years is even too long given how rapidly things change here!
Organizations
succeed and fail on strategy. The profound saying that when you fail to
plan, you plan to fail fits in perfectly here. It is also said that
when you are
not certain about where you are going, any road takes you there. Having
a clear strategy is one thing, achieving flawless execution is another.
I am aware of organisations that are very long on plans and short on
implementation. On this, you must give it to
First Bank as it is also very good on monitoring and measurement. It is
a known fact that what doesn’t get measured, hardly gets done. So, to
execute, you must have measurement tools and put in place, a system that
not only rewards good performance but also
poor performance. I can still remember our strategy sessions as we
joined in 2011, where the then CEO, Mr. Bernard Longe reeled out the Big
Hairy Audacious Goal (BHAG) of “being twice as large as the second
largest bank in Nigeria by a defined future date”.
Yes, the bank may not have achieved that goal within the timeframe, but
it did have a goal and it did work towards that goal. It is in strategy
that you define who you want to be, who you want to serve, how you want
to serve them and what distinguishes you
from the “guy down the road”. Once you have those agreed, the tools and
the people must also be addressed. I have seen situations where
management disbands a strategy put in place by the organisation only to
replace it with a weak strategy or none at all and
in consequence end up as lunch for competition.
First
Bank is noted for its very strong corporate governance regime. I
believe this is at the heart of the longevity of the bank. In our days
and I believe it is the
same till today, there are things you simply could not do irrespective
of who you were. Just like any organsation, the bank had a soul, meaning
the key board members who called the shots. But every decision had to
go through a process. Having survived over
a long period of time, most things were documented and rules were
strictly adhered to. I recall that even loan applications from viable
businesses of shareholders of the bank must not only be disclosed, but
must go through rigorous processes before they were
approved. And with the Risk Management function under very experienced
professionals with the brilliant Sanusi Lamido Sanusi, who was later to
become CEO of the bank and six months later, the CBN Governor and
currently the Emir of Kano, you couldn’t go round
the process. By the way, it will not be out of place to mention that I
was appointed an Executive Director the same day, September 4, 2005 with
HRH Sanusi who had joined from UBA. Others appointed same day with us
were Oladele Oyelola, Remi Babalola who went
on to become Minister of State For Finance, and Mrs Bola Adesola, the
current CEO of Standard Chartered Bank. We joined the only surviving
executive director from the regime before ours, Mr. John Aboh, who is
the current Chairman of Ecobank Nigeria and the
then CEO of the bank, Mr. Jacobs Moyo Ajekigbe.
As
we were appointed, we were handed over a merger and acquisition deal,
(some called it outright takeover bid) with another bank with footprints
in some other African
countries. The deal looked good on the surface, but some of us saw
danger in the whole transaction as proposed. We struggled with that
transaction for close to two years before resting it. Even though there
was very strong support for the deal from some influential
shareholders, management thought it was not going to create value for
First Bank and therefore had to let it die a natural death. Yours truly
had argued then that based on “back of the envelope analysis”, over 60%
of mergers and acquisition destroy shareholder
value. This my held position was to be corroborated by the Harvard
Business Review Report in 2015 which stated that between 70% and 90% of
mergers and acquisition destroy shareholder value and in fact fail. The
reasons for failure are fully documented in the
literature. One is glad that we still have the foremost Nigerian bank
with us today celebrating its 125 years anniversary as some of us are
persuaded that the situation would not have been the same if that deal
went through. On this note, permit me to acknowledge
the resilience of Mr. Jacobs Moyo Ajekigbe who showed strength of
character as the buck naturally stopped on his table.
One
of the lessons to learn from the First Bank story is its ability to
adapt to changing situations in the environment. For an organisation to
adapt, it must understand
the environment and be able to read changes and sometimes predict them,
even before they happen. The reality is that human beings will normally
gravitate around their comfort zones and oftentimes, become very
resistant to change. It is only an organisation
that constantly interrogates the status quo that will be able to adapt
to changes or even lead the change itself. In our time, we realized that
we had what our Human Capital Management department referred to an
“aging workforce”. Like Clinton would say about
Senator Dole, “we did not have a problem with their age, but with the
age of their ideas”. The bank started a workforce renewal strategy which
saw to the entry of young people with fresh ideas who could relate to
the youthful population who were basically
in control of the “new money”.
To
attract them, one needed people that not only looked like them but also
reasoned like them. An age band was approved by management for
different levels in the staff
cadre. This tilted the average age of staff down significantly. Younger
people were selected to replace those retiring on account of age.
Technology was massively deployed as part of strategy. Service
delivery, which was measured by external consultants,
spiked in the positive direction. The bank was able to compete with
smaller and younger banks, giving them a run for their money.
The
brand equity is an important part of any organisation, more so a bank.
First Bank benefited so much from its brand. Because some banks had come
and gone and bank
failures has not ceased even at this moment, the bank benefitted from
its longevity. Some people joke about dead people’s money being
warehoused in the bank. Besides, what the brand represents is also the
conscious effort at tweaking the brand to be in tune
with modernity, of course without doing away with the reassuring effect
of the ‘elephant’. I remember with nostalgia, the first strategy
session we attended in Gateway Hotel, Otta in 2001, a new colleague,
had proposed that the bank should do away with the
elephant as the animal is not known to be smart, fast and efficient. We
were all shocked at the response he got. Virtually everyone, except
those of them that were new, charged at him, in the manner of the
elephant he wanted removed. That was the last time
he made that kind of suggestion. It was considered a heresy to remove
the elephant. The rest of the people that mustered courage to speak
about the elephant talked about how to make it nimble, how to face it
forward rather than backwards, how to get the elephant
to raise one of its legs and generally how it would reflect efficiency
in strength.
Finally, I have always maintained that an organisation cannot be better than its people.
Finally, I have always maintained that an organisation cannot be better than its people.
First
Bank has built a culture of employing very sound and good people. The
recruitment process is excellent and gives little or no room for
manipulation. The reward
system ensures that the best people stay and misfits are gradually
eased out. The compensation system remains competitive from what I hear
and positions at the top are tenured such that the CEO and Executive
Directors must retire after a maximum of two tenures
of 3 years each. This policy makes it difficult for people to sit tight
at those levels and also keeps the top open for deserving younger
people to aspire. It is my sincere hope and belief that these
time-honoured traditions of First Bank endure.
Let
me therefore join millions of Nigerians to congratulate First Bank on
this 125th Anniversary celebration and wish the Board, Management,
Staff, Shareholders and Customers
well. Of course, I pray for the continued sense of camaraderie that
exists among the ex-staff of First Bank
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