Last week Stanbic bank signalled a shift in how they do
business with the launch of their “Wealth Value Proposition”.
The new offering will go beyond the traditional banking
services to include introducing their clients to their insurance and wealth
management products provided by their affiliates Liberty and Stanlib,
respectively.
The bank by gaining an intimate knowledge of how they make
and spend their money, advising on saving and investment and helping them plan
and protect their money, will help its clients improve their financial health
in the short term and ensure they leave behind a durable financial legacy. This
service will be offered to their individual and corporate clients.
"If executed properly this single initiative will not only boost Stanbic’s bottom line (as if they needed any more help) but be good for the economy as a whole....
For the bank it will be a shift away from churning out
products to actually paying attention to what their clients’ aspirations are,
putting their resources and expertise at the service of attaining these goals.
For individuals it will bring for the first time, in the
vast majority of cases, an appreciation of financial literacy in a very
practical way, not the “information”
being peddled by snake oil salesmen.
But the real benefit will be to businessmen, particularly
the Small & Medium sized Enterprises (SMEs).
According to the bank, in Uganda only one in four businesses
opened live to see their third birthday. The fold because mostly because they
don’t know what to do and don’t know where to go for help.
Relatedly there are serious gaps in the financial industry
that make it difficult for small business to access appropriate credit for
their stage of development.
As it is now the financial industry is dominated by the
commercial banks, which are ideally suited to working companies with regular or
growing revenues, dealing in predictable products and services.
Between scrapping together personal savings and relying on
the generosity of friends and family to the point where a business can
gainfully engage with commercial banks, there is a dearth of the kind of
financial services SMEs require to not only rise to the next level but to
survive.
In other markets there is vibrant business support services
segment – often run by the government, which
helps small businessmen with help in market research, incubation, mentorship
programs, grants and loans.
If a business outgrows this help it might then be taken over
by the venture capitalists, people who are willing to finance and handhold a
business’ through its teething pains, for a share in the company.
The private
equity crowd are more the same but they play at a higher level.
While attrition rates are not very different around the
world, the difference under such circumstances is that the surviving businesses
have a better chance at growth and durability than our own businessmen who
rarely ever reach that point of sustainability.
This is what Stanbic is getting itself into.
"It is inevitable because once the bank gets intimately involved with its clients’ businesses and works to come up with solutions, they will find themselves going down paths, creating products they had no clue they would be involved in. Which is as it should be...
Now imagine if this new initiative, rolled out across
Stanbic’s nationwide 72-branch network, is executed half as well as is intended
and even one hundredth of the bank’s
half a million clients or 5,000 business
are touched, the ensuing sea change in the economy would be huge.
Imagine the businessman who up to this point has seen the
bank only as an avenue for banking and withdrawal of those same monies, then
now learns to organise his books (he thought that was only for big companies),
to think strategically ( how do you spell strategy?), to identify and appraise
opportunities ( he thought he would be shopkeeper till he died), how to protect
his hard earned wealth (he thought he would eat all he made by the time he
died) and provide for future generations.
A country’s economy is only as viable as the quality of its
private sector. The private sector creates jobs, pays the taxes and its
proprietors are instrumental in maintaining national stability. This is more so
when the captains of commerce and industry are indigenous players.
"We pay lip service to helping the private sector because truth be told our government and technocrats have no clue what it takes to do business. Stanbic is climbing over the table to help their clients, if their clients thrive they thrive too. There is a very real self interest in what they are doing.
We can bet that others will follow suit in days to come,
which will only widen the surface area for change and setting up the economy for
the next level.