New Era

Nedbank appoints Gawaxab as new IT head

- ■ Staff Reporter

Taschiona Gawaxab took over the new role as the head of Informatio­n Technology (IT) at Nedbank Namibia on 1 May 2021. Before joining Nedbank, she held a senior IT role in the banking industry, leading a team of 42 people in her department.

Gawaxab was born in Windhoek and attended St Paul’s College before working in the United Kingdom at an IT company in networking and systems administra­tion.

“I have a passion to help the company achieve its strategic objectives, to drive and exceed expectatio­ns and to get things done through others. It is about innovating and creating new value and experience­s for Nedbank and its customers. It is not about tech, but about people. So, to get people to embrace changes and partner businesses to achieve their objectives, we create value for shareholde­rs and customers and we provide peace of mind to regulators.”

One of her objectives is to rally employees around the vision of Nedbank, driving a high- performanc­e culture, prioritisi­ng what gets done and inspiring and motivating people.

This will be made possible through people management – “how we recruit them, train them, reward, develop and retain them. When we recruit, we need to bring in top talent, develop them and make it worthwhile for them to stay with us. It’s fine to let go of under-performers because it allows us to bring in new blood and talent.”

Gawaxab described informatio­n, communicat­ion and technology as the heart and centre of the business, where she will manage data and process to create value for the company. She noted that IT is about gaining efficiency, eliminatin­g redundanci­es and de-risking the business by automating manual processes and partnering business units to achieve their objectives.

However, ICT is maledomina­ted and there are many cultural biases. Women have to work twice as hard as men to prove themselves, which has been the most significan­t barrier in Gawaxab’s career.

Her advice to other young women who want to join the industry is that they need to move fast and learn to embrace change “and not to play catch up all the time”. One of her inspiratio­ns is an American businesswo­man and investor, Marissa Ann Mayer, who became president and CEO of Yahoo in 2012 at the age of 37s.

Whileanaly­singandass­essing the impact of the coronaviru­s on businesses and the economy, Gawaxab says this is the new normal, as the pandemic has accelerate­d the adoption of technology. Many manual jobs will be automated and people need to upskill and re-skill to remain relevant.

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