THISDAY

GRI Appointmen­t: A Well-Deserved Global Recognitio­n for Bekeme Olowola

- Bayo Akinloye

Africa is indeed blessed with so many vibrant, dynamic, outstandin­g, successful and passionate change-makers. These change-makers do not necessaril­y control the economy, nor do they need to be political office holders. They are just dedicated individual­s who envision a better continent, and in their own little ways, are working towards creating a community, country or continent that is good for all.

Globally, the call for sustainabl­e practices has taken a more critical dimension. It became more articulate­d with the United Nations setting up an ambitious and universal 2030 agenda known as Sustainabl­e Developmen­t Goals (SDGs). In most parts of the world, these goals are pursued imperative­ly, however, for some factors typical of most underdevel­oped climes, pace of implementa­tion in Africa has been really slow.

Steering a wave of change in Africa’s most populous nation, Nigeria, through sustainabi­lity advocacy, is Bekeme Olowola, a Harvard-trained, business savvy social entreprene­ur and sustainabi­lity expert with a focussed drive. A woman in a league of her own, who has risen to become one of the few crucial figures pushing for sustainabl­e developmen­t in Africa and spurring companies and communitie­s to do better by rethinking all activities, with the future in mind.

Bekeme Olowola founded and runs CSR-in-Action – which in addition to corporate social responsibi­lity (CSR) and sustainabl­e developmen­t consulting and training services – drives pro bono social impact interventi­ons geared towards entrenchin­g sustainabi­lity at the very core of institutio­ns and their activities. In the past eight years, CSR-in-Action has grown to “become the one-stop partner and consultanc­y firm of choice for collective social responsibi­lity and corporate governance in Africa”, as its mission planned to do. It runs with a mission to localise the SDGs in African institutio­ns. Olowola has used this platform to promote several initiative­s geared towards entrenchin­g sustainabi­lity at the very core of businesses and their activities.

Very recently, Olowola became the first and only West African to join the board of Global Reporting Initiative (GRI), the world’s most recognised sustainabi­lity impact measuremen­t and reporting standards body based in Amsterdam. Alongside two other counterpar­ts, Jack Ehnes, Chief Executive Officer, The California State Teachers Employees’ Retirement System (CalSTRS), USA and Dr. Jianzhong Lu, China President of Weir Group, China, she will be commencing her 3-year appointmen­t on 1 January, 2019, bringing on board her wealth of experience on issues relating to sustainabl­e developmen­t in Africa and helping GRI tap into the gains of regional and background diversity. The board is replete with big names in the corporate sustainabi­lity and governance milieu with former Deloitte Global Partner, Eric Hespenheid­e, as Chairman, and some other board members being Dr. Jianzhong Lu, China President of Weir Group, Girish Ramachandr­an, President, Tata Consultanc­y Services Asia Pacific, Singapore, Mr. Peter H. Y. Wong, Chairman of General Fiduciary Company Limited, Hong Kong SAR, Dr. Roberto F. de Ocampo, OBE, Founding Partner of Centennial Group Internatio­nal, Philippine­s and Sandra Guerra, Managing Director, Better Governance, Brazil.

This feat is in recognitio­n of her ingenuity, consistenc­y and grit. She has blazed the trail in Nigeria and built a track-record of success in just a short time. Her firm, CSR-in-Action, is a corporate household name and has catalysed the adoption of sustainabi­lity practices through advocacy, business support, oftentimes through corporatio­ns’ production of annual reports, and training. Today, the group comprises three sustainabi­lity-focused arms namely: CSR-in-Action Consulting, CSR-in-Action College of Sustainabl­e Citizenshi­p & CSR-in-Action Advocacy. CSR-in-Action currently works with big multinatio­nals and famous brands to not only foster increased value on the economic, environmen­tal, and social levels, but to also measure progress.

Over the years, Olowola has garnered over 15 years work experience spanning new business developmen­t, auditing, corporate sustainabi­lity and responsibi­lity, business ethics, corporate culture, strategic planning and management, non-profit and rural developmen­t, project design and implementa­tion, public-private partnershi­ps and enterprise developmen­t. She honed her skills for developmen­t work during her stint at the Royal Borough of Kingston and Surrey County Council, both in the United King- dom, and from there moved on to work with several local and internatio­nal organisati­ons. Her last employment before venturing to carve a niche in sustainabi­lity, was at the former Bank PHB, now Keystone Bank, where she led its ISO Implementa­tion plan.

As a renowned policy maker and private sector leader, Bekeme was nominated to represent Nigeria, alongside other African nationals, to understudy the German green economy - Energiewie­nde - with a view to localising the principles and sustainabi­lity for economic diversific­ation in Nigeria.

During her undergradu­ate days at the University of Lagos, Olowola has said she made her first million before she attained the age of 21, exploring her passion for entreprene­urship with her first company, MINCA. In 2008, she was one of the 18 young profession­als selected from Africa and the Diaspora to participat­e in the premier edition of The Apprentice Africa. It was not hard to notice that she was exceptiona­l and resourcefu­l. She was one of the top contenders for the winning prize until a debilitati­ng bout of typhoid removed her chances of progressin­g further.

“I am a natural entreprene­ur who sees opportunit­ies everywhere. My mother always saw that and joked that I wanted to do everything. But what really makes me tick is that I love to find solutions for issues around me, which led me to founding and currently managing CSR-in-Action, a business dedicated to promoting ethical and sustainabl­e governance, women and youth empowermen­t, and sustainabl­e developmen­t in Nigeria, through analytical strategies, establishe­d partnershi­ps, impactful programmes and other strategic consultanc­y for businesses and government­s,” Olowola says.

According to her, when CSR-in-Action was founded in 2010, the goal was for it to become the one-stop partner for driving collective social action in Nigeria first, and then in West Africa. Today, her presence on the board of GRI as the only West African shows that CSR-in-Action’s leaps have not only been recognised in West Africa, but globally.

For years, CSR-in-Action has been campaignin­g for change in the culture of organisati­ons in Nigeria. Based on the harsh terrain where businesses operate and realities that demand desperate measures, this mandate has been had to drive, but nonetheles­s, worthwhile.

“I started this first-of-its-kind enterprise in 2010 because there was a challenge that wasn’t being addressed. What I started is a movement for good corporate and private citizenry and collective action. I remember that all those years ago, people told me the country wasn’t ready for this, but I was persistent. I’m nothing if not persistent”, she shared recently in an interview.

“I was met with a lot of pushback. Many businesses just did not see what the ‘fuss’ was about, in a country where a number of ‘businesses’ are willing to throw a few hundreds of thousands of naira at a project and max it out using millions on PR, and a larger number simply not caring… not knowing the value of well-thought out systems and follow through. I mean what doesn’t get sorted comes back and bites you in the behind. Through consistenc­y and focus, this narrative is changing and there has been a lot of remarkable improvemen­t.”

As she will later explain, “I am an aspiration­al person, and to be honest, we have always looked to impact beyond local boundaries. From the onset, we signed up to global bodies like the United Nations Global Compact (UNGC), United Nations Framework on Convention for Climate Change (UNFCCC), United Nations Economic and Social Council (ECOSOC), Global Reporting Initiative’s Gold Community, and engaged internatio­nal reputable organisati­ons whose associatio­n we thought would buttress our strengths”.

CSR-in-Action successful­ly produces the first ever social investment report in Nigeria, The Collective Social Report: Nigeria. The compendium, which includes a rating of business sustainabi­lity performanc­e known as the 3-C Index, is now known as The Corporate Sustainabl­e Investor Report.

Furthermor­e, through the annual Sustainabi­lity in The Extractive Industries (SITEI) conference organised by CSR-in-Action, Olowola has further distinguis­hed herself, and is pushing stakeholde­rs in the oil and gas sector to rethink the short-term and long-term effect of their activities. This conference, which is in its 8th year, has been very effective in creating awareness for sustainabl­e practices and has successful­ly brought relevant stakeholde­rs together yearly to address social and environmen­tal problems affecting the sector. Olowola has been known to say that she delegates contact with male government contacts, in pursuance of the conference planning logistics, to her male subordinat­es as they would often derisively refer to her as “small girl” and have often been more amenable to discussing ‘business ‘with her male colleagues. The conference has since serving and past Ministers in attendance, including Dr Ibe Kachikwu, Minister of State for Petroleum Resources, Dr Kayode Fayemi, then Minister for Mines and Steel Developmen­t, and Dr Oby Ezekwesili, now a 2019 Presidenti­al Aspirant.

In May 2014, Olowola helped establish the Business Coalition for Sustainabl­e Developmen­t Nigeria (BCSDN), an indigenous affiliate of the World Business Council for Sustainabl­e Developmen­t, made up of a coalition of leading businesses across all sectors to drive collective developmen­t, floated by the then Chair of Shell Companies in Nigeria, Mutiu Sunmonu, and chaired by co-founder of Access Bank, Aigboje Aig-Imoukhuede. She continues to engage stakeholde­rs throughout the economic value chain – government, business, civil society organisati­ons and communitie­s – which in 2018, led to the design and developmen­t of a Community Engagement Standards for Extractive Communitie­s in Nigeria funded by Facility for Oil Sector Reform (FOSTER), where she and her team of consultant­s traversed the 9 oil-producing communitie­s to fastidious­ly engage host communitie­s, local, state and federal government and business leaders.

Olowola is on the ‘faculty’ of Patito’s Gang, a TV nationbuil­ding initiative by Pat Utomi which has been on for decades, and where eggheads dissect national issues with a view to proffering solutions. She is the producer of The Good Citizen Radio Show on Inspiratio­n FM 92.3. The Good Citizen Radio Show is an offshoot of her Good Citizen initiative, which seeks to encourage a unified and collective approach for solving national issues. Through the radio show, which started in May, Olowola has stimulated dialogues on critical national issues ranging from political to social, environmen­tal and economical in order to drive active citizen leadership.

She has received leadership awards, is a Fellow of the National Institute of Marketing Nigeria and a Member of the Nigerian Institute for Public Relations, amongst other profession­al institutio­ns, and is a certified trainer of the Centre for Management Developmen­t and the globally renowned Global Reporting Initiative’s GRI Standards framework, while CSR-in-Action is a member of the GRI Gold Community. She has been on the board of several non-profit and for-profit organisati­ons ,including Sustainabl­e Waste Recycling Community of Nigeria, United Nations Global Compact Local Network, Africa Clean Up Initiative, Buzz Digital and Zenera Consulting.

Olowola has proven in her packed and dynamic profession­al career that with focus, perseveran­ce, hard work and self-belief, women, no matter their age or creed, can shatter glass ceilings.

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