THISDAY

Bamidele Famoofo

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The Symposium ontrary to the custom of rolling out the drums, which many corporate organisati­ons do in Nigeria to celebrate major landmark achievemen­ts, Investment One Financial Services Limited, otherwise known as ‘Investment One’, says the future of the economy of Nigeria is what is more paramount on its mind, even as recounts its success stories in the last 10 years of its existence as a business entity in Nigeria.

To demonstrat­e its commitment to making the country to grab the opportunit­y for rapid growth and developmen­t locked up in technology, Investment One assembled a team of leading entreprene­urs in different fields of business and profession­als at a symposium titled : ‘Ideas Shaping the Future’ organised to mark its 10th year anniversar­y in Lagos recently.

Group Managing Director of Investment One, Mr. Nicholas Nyamali, said the changes and disruption­s which technology is already causing are inevitable and that businesses operating in the country must be prepared for them. He suggested that one of the ways to prepare for the possible job losses that might occur as a result of adoption of technology especially Artificial Intelligen­ce (AI) will be for profession­als to become to make the right investment decisions as a way of providing for the rainy days.

Executive Director at GTBank Plc, Bolaji Lawal, who kicked off the discussion, said banking had become all about technology. He noted that modern-day banking, apart from embracing technology as it breaks per time, must also be tailored towards the lifestyle of customers rather than developing products for them.

“Artificial Intelligen­ce and Blockchain technology are about to take over certain jobs like tellering in banks in the next five years,” he warned. He pointed out that the kind of job skills that will be needed in the banking industry in the future will not be from the social science fields and the likes, but technology inclined skill sets engineerin­g, computer related programmes among others.

Lawal, who was until his appointmen­t as Executive Director, the Divisional Head, Digital Banking Division, revealed that GTBank Plc is already reaping the dividends of using technology to run its operations. “One of the areas we are benefiting from technology as a bank is in cost reduction. We have also been able to increase our customer base in the last five years to about 14million as against five million customer base we achieved in 15 years without the necessary technology which now make banking easy for our customers. The analogue way of doing business will only deliver linear growth while digitalisi­ng banking operations will grow the business exponentia­lly,” he argued.

Lawal also lamented the apparent lack of preparedne­ss of Nigeria for technologi­cal revolution that will drive the world in a few years to come, saying, “We have no national strategy for digital developmen­t in Nigeria. The data bank is not available anywhere and our national assets cannot captured, and so we are not competitiv­e as an economy, we don’t have the values to drive growth and therefore we are engaged in endless struggles as a country.”

Google Programme Manager, Developer Ecosystem for Sub-Saharan Africa, Aniedi Udo-Obong, who spoke after Lawal, was tactical in his comment about the fear of job as a result of embracemen­t of technology. “The jobs won’t disappear, but the tasks may fizzle out. At least the emergency of the Automated Teller Machine (ATM) did not put staffs out of job. Artificial Intelligen­ce gives people more tools to change the future and does not really threaten jobs,” he said.

He, however ,acknowledg­ed that technology is growing rapidly across the globe with Google playing a critical role in making that happen.

Vice President, Farm Products Developmen­t at Farmcrowdy, an online agricultur­al initiative­s in Nigeria, Tope Omotolani, was convincing in telling the story of how her company which is barely five years old, had been able to boost agricultur­al production in Nigeria through the empowermen­t of farmers and sourcing investors through its digital platform.

“We have successful­ly deployed technology to drive agricultur­e using our digital platform. Farmcrowdy is Nigeria’s First Digital Agricultur­e Platform that empowers rural farmers by providing them with improved seeds, farm inputs, training on modern farming techniques and sales of their farm produce, which gives them the capacity to farm more acres, and leads to increased food production and security in Africa,” Omotolani disclosed.

Omotolani, who called on private individual­s to seize the opportunit­y which the agricultur­al sector offers for wealth creation added: “Innovation and excellence will transform agricultur­e sector in Nigeria, but it is unfortunat­e that Nigerians do not believe in continuity. We hardly sustain what we start.

There is a lot that players in other sectors like banking, technology can contribute to the developmen­t of the agricultur­e sector in Nigeria, which will in return boost the economy at large. Innovation must be introduced in agricultur­e to boost productivi­ty in that sector.

“For the Nigerian advertisin­g and music executive, public advocate and founder of X3M Ideas, a Lagos-based digital advertisin­g agency, Steve Babaeko, “Its either you innovate or die”.

His company, which was listed in 2017 as one of Nigeria’s fastest growing communicat­ion agencies is reputed for the use of technology in creating customer satisfacti­on.

Group Head, Medical Services at AXA Mansard, Dr. Tokunbo Ali, agreed with the other panelists at the symposium saying, the future is all about technology. He said the only way to bridge the yawning gap caused by shortage of medical doctors in Nigeria is to use robots in place of human doctors, most of whom have fled the country for greener pastures that exist abroad.

Reeling out statistics, he said, “More than 3,000 medical doctors have fled Nigeria since 2017 to date. The situation in Nigeria today is one doctor have 12,000 patients to care for instead of one doctor to 600 recommende­d by the World Health Organisati­on (WHO).

The future of healthcare will be a situation, where a patient will sit in the comfort of his office and get attended to by a through the means of technology anywhere in the world. Technology is the solution and the way forward in the health sector now. The future of healthcare is technology all the way. Investors are therefore needed in the industry to make a difference.”

The Award After the discussion­s in the morning, Investment One wrapped up its 10th year anniversar­y with a dinner where it rewarded excellence being one of its core values. Chairman, Board of Directors of Investment One, Mr. Egbert Imomoh, and Group Managing Director, Nicholas Nyamali, were honoured for serving the company meritoriou­sly for 10 years while eight of management staff were recognised for excellence and dedication.

Investment One Financial Services Limited was incorporat­ed in 2008 as GTB Asset Management Limited, a wholly owned asset management subsidiary of GTBank to undertake the businesses of asset management and securities brokerage. In 2011, following new regulatory requiremen­ts, GTBank divested from the company following a management buyout and the company’s name was then changed to Investment One Financial Services (Investment One) with the long-term goal of becoming the leading non-bank financial services group in Nigeria.

Recognised as one of the fastest growing companies in Nigeria by ALLWORLD in 2013, Investment One is today a leading player in the Nigerian financial services industry with distinctiv­e offerings in wealth management & trust, mutual funds, pensions, real estate, private equity/venture capital, investment banking and securities brokerage.

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