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MD/CEO Firstbank. |
Who should corporate responsibility and sustainability lessons be taken from? Some companies are still unclear about the concept but latching onto the sustainability mantra anyway, because it has become a marketing buzzword for business? Or a company through whose creed and deeds, over the many decades it has been around, people can see corporate responsibility and sustainability lived (first) and preached (subsequently)?
If the above set of questions
constituted a question in an examination hall, it would be one of the easiest
of questions to answer. Not one person would fail it. Outside the examination
hall, the answer to this question that seems as easy and simple like the
question of 2 + 2 may not be as easy and simple. It may be complicated by all
the cleverly arranged noise and claims projected at people to make it difficult
for them to see and accept the obvious.
So, it is incumbent on people who know,
and care enough (like this writer), to keep stating and restating the obvious.
This is in the hope that doing so would help others to take full cognisance of
the obvious and not allow themselves to be bamboozled by image without
substance and rhetoric without pedigree.
The concept of corporate responsibility
and sustainability is not about the clever or manipulative use of marketing
buzzwords by corporate citizens. It is about impact, net positive impact, in
the lives of real, not imagined, people through the deliberate and well-planned
activities of socially-responsible corporate citizens.
Even if history is no longer taught in
most schools in Nigeria, the records are there. The records show that Nigeria
has been blessed to have standing by her, at all times, a corporate citizen
which understands the concept of corporate responsibility and sustainability.
This corporate citizen has been standing
by Nigeria before the country’s founding, through its amalgamation,
Independence and all the conflicts and crises Nigeria has gone through and
still faces. Today, the corporate citizen still stands by Nigeria.
First Bank of Nigeria Limited, a lender
of unmatched pedigree, a bank with a history of unparalleled support to Nigeria
and Nigerians (right from the colonial era to date, even serving as Nigeria’s
central bank at some stage of our national development), has been a corporate
citizen like no other.
A brand that has backed innumerable
groundbreaking projects across Nigeria and beyond, FirstBank has demonstrated
that real impact that can be seen and felt by all, and not mere marketing
buzzwords, is the real measure of an institution’s understanding of corporate
responsibility and sustainability.
It is incontrovertible that whichever
way corporate responsibility and sustainability is understood or defined,
FirstBank is sure to tick all the boxes. Just name every parameter for
assessing a company’s efforts in corporate responsibility and sustainability
and match each against what FirstBank has been doing. Is there any parameter
that FirstBank has not surpassed?
FirstBank has been living corporate
responsibility and sustainability for most, if not all, of its existence as a
going concern. Knowing it cannot do it alone, the bank has also devoted
resources to efforts that will enable it to preach or pass the message so other
corporate citizens, groups and individuals will emulate it.
One platform the bank has used
effectively for this purpose is its Corporate Responsibility and Sustainability
(CR&S) Week. The
CR&S Week is a full working week that the FirstBank Group, in-country and
across the world where it operates, dedicates to the promotion, execution and
celebration of social responsibility initiatives.
The Sustainability Week also includes a
huge kindness campaign to reorient citizens towards the right values and
reignite acts of kindness in society. It is only one of the many ways FirstBank
is living true to its brand promise to always put customers first.
And the Sustainability Week seeks to
invite others (individuals and corporate citizens) to follow the bank’s example
and begin to intentionally create positive impact in their immediate
communities.
From the inaugural edition in 2017, where
the theme was “Promoting Kindness: Putting You First”, the Sustainability Week
has helped to reinforce FirstBank’s role as a nation-builder that is driving
sustainable development across communities where it operates. It was an
opportunity for the bank to encourage others (individuals and corporate
citizens) to follow in its steps, even if all they can afford to take are small
steps.
Taking small steps may have informed the
choice of theme for the second edition of the Sustainability Week in 2018:
“Touching Lives: You First”. The bank sought to debunk the notion that touching
lives in meaningful ways and making an impact on society require big-ticket
projects, whilst emphasising the power in the little things people do and the
small steps they take.
After all, is it not little drops of water
that make a mighty ocean, like the saying goes? And does the journey of a
thousand miles not begin with a (small) step, like another saying puts it?
Just take a look at SPARK (Start
Performing Acts of Random Kindness), a values-based initiative that raises
consciousness promoting kindness to one another in society, which the bank
started during the inaugural Sustainability Week in 2017.
Aimed at reinforcing FirstBank’s corporate
culture of encouraging giving and volunteering among its staff and the larger
society, its magnitude today and the many kind initiatives it has sparked off
across the country could not have been imagined when the seed was planted five
years ago. Incalculable manhours and financial resources from FirstBank staff
and partners have been contributed willingly.
Children in orphanages, internally
displaced persons (IDPs) in various IDP camps, widows and other underprivileged
or vulnerable groups have been visited and their challenges alleviated if not
totally eliminated. Scores of career counselling sessions with secondary school
pupils across Nigeria has also been organised as part of the Sustainability
Week, which has been the first of its kind in Nigeria’s financial services
industry.
In 2019, the third edition of the
Sustainability Week with the theme: “Ripples of Kindness: Putting You First”
enunciated the values (or pillars) of the SPARK initiative to include
Compassion, Civility and Charity. FirstBank believes that these values and the
acts of kindness that flow as a result of embracing the values are critical to
promoting and building peaceful co-existence and prosperity in society.
Among the key highlights of the 2019
Sustainability Week was a “Nice Comments Day” that was a day set aside to
foster words of encouragement, support and kindness to people around one,
regardless of ones’ familiarity or close ties, in recognition of the
instrumental role kind words play in lighting up people’s day and bringing out
the best in them.
Another highlight was the SPARK School
Engagement that promoted the SPARK initiative in schools, with the objective of
embedding the values of SPARK amongst school children at a young age so the
values become part of, and habitual to, them as they develop into adulthood.
Due to COVID-19 pandemic and
government-imposed lockdown, the year 2020 witnessed no edition of the
Sustainability Week. Any attempt to stage the kinds of activities and events
that usually accompany the Sustainability Week would have been
counterproductive, spreading infections and possibly deaths instead of kindness
and joy that the Sustainability Week has become synonymous with.
However, FirstBank’s avowed commitment to
corporate responsibility and sustainability would not allow it fold its hands
and just watch while COVID-19 and its debilitating effects tried to make living
and learning difficult for most Nigerians.
Working virtually or remotely and, where
it could not do otherwise, physically but in strict adherence to COVID-19 safety
protocols, FirstBank executed several initiatives meant to ameliorate the very
difficult situation in Nigeria then.
The bank contributed to efforts to provide
palliatives to vulnerable Nigerians, announced a moratorium on repayment of
loans, set up a special loan fund for businesses run by women, established
another for school proprietors in collaboration with a state government and
drove an e-learning initiative that sought to move one million school children
to a safe online learning platform so their educational progress would not be
set back due to COVID-19 restrictions, government-ordered lockdown and the
closure of educational institutions for the greater part of 2020
“Kindness: A Way of Life” was the theme
for the fourth edition of the Sustainability Week held in 2021.
Highlights of activities of the 2021 Sustainability Week, designed to entrench a culture of kindness, included a practical-oriented training webinar
for staff to embed a culture of
kindness in the bank by driving understanding of how kindness (or the lack of
it) can impact the workplace, the marketplace and the communities in which
staff live and work.
Another important feature of the
Sustainability Week was the “Kind
Comments Days” that ran all week to inspire a consciousness of kind choice
of words and consideration for others. There was also a dedicated
programme in secondary schools designed to institutionalise SPARK by using school SPARK champions (including students and
teachers) alongside other partners such as Junior Achievement Nigeria (JAN) and
Lagos State government to inculcate
the SPARK values in school children.
One other feature was the ground-breaking
ceremony for the Lagos State government’s OCAAT (One Community At A Time)
initiative to provide the
Primary Health Care Centre at Ijedodo community in Alimosho LGA. Set up as an
initiative to improve the health and welfare of the members of various
communities in Lagos State, FirstBank partnered the government on the project
as part of its contribution to global efforts to meet some specific Sustainable
Development Goals (SDGs).
There were also webinars: a general
webinar with the sub-theme: “Education: Does Kindness have a Role?"; and a
millennial webinar with the sub-theme: “Making the Cyber World a Kinder
Place" which sought to proffer solution to the question of how people
could become kinder on social media platforms.
All the past editions of FirstBank
Sustainability Week highlight the longstanding and relentless commitment of
FirstBank not only to continue to live but also to preach the message of
corporate responsibility and sustainability.
Given its unmatched pedigree in
corporate responsibility and sustainability, FirstBank has earned the right to
address all other corporate organisations as well as individuals and groups on
matters of sustainability. The bank has earned its right to the people’s
audience.
It is against this backdrop that
FirstBank’s forthcoming 2022 Corporate Responsibility and Sustainability Week
should be welcomed by other banks and corporate citizens, irrespective of
industry, as an opportunity to come together and take lessons from Nigeria’s
foremost corporate citizen with regard to corporate responsibility and
sustainability.
FirstBank does not consider itself too
big to take lessons from other corporate citizens in areas where they have
distinguished themselves. So other corporate citizens should not feel too big
to take lessons from FirstBank in this area where the bank stands highly
distinguished.
Or can anyone claim not to know that if
the concept of corporate responsibility and sustainability were to be
represented by one corporate citizen per country on a world map where countries
are denoted by their foremost corporate entities, it is unarguable that FirstBank
would be the company eminently representing Nigeria on that map?
Culled from Leadership Newspaper
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