THISDAY Style

VALENTINE OZIGBO

LEAVING HOSPITALIT­Y FOR POLITICS

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Valentine Chineto Ozigbo is a business leader and entreprene­ur with over twenty five years experience in corporate transforma­tion, power, hospitalit­y, energy and banking. He is a multiple award winning CEO and the immediate past President and Group CEO of Transnatio­nal Corporatio­n of Nigeria (Transcorp) one of Africa’s largest conglomera­tes that includes Transcorp Power, Transcorp Hotels and Transcorp OPL281. He recently retired President and Group CEO to pursue his political ambitions and along side his philanthro­pic work which he started many years ago. Mr Ozigbo recently turned 50 and had the chance to speak with FUNKE BABS-KUFEJI about his career path thus far and his new foray into politics and public service.

You have had a storied career working in power, hospitalit­y, energy and banking (commercial, retail, investment and internatio­nal banking), tell us about your journey in the private sector?

I began my profession­al career in the private sector and rose to what many consider the top of Corporate Nigeria when I became the President and CEO of Transnatio­nal Corporatio­n of Nigeria Plc. My first real job was a holiday job, I had just passed out of my secondary school with distinctio­ns and my principal engaged me as a Maths and Physics teacher at Christ the Redeemer College in Anambra State, a job I held till I left to attend the University of Nigeria.

My second job was after I graduated from the university, my National Youth Service job was at

NAL Merchant Bank. Interestin­gly, my university lecturer, Dr. Jona Ezikpe, got me the job as a reward for scoring the highest in his course, Financial Management.

After my service year, I got a job in Diamond Bank and wass posted to their Warri Branch. At Diamond Bank, I won Best Staff in Warri within the same year I was posted in 1995, and coincident­ally Warri Branch was voted the best in Nigeria that year. From Diamond, I was headhunted to work at Continenta­l Trust Bank as the pioneer Branch Business Manager in Warri. I also worked in several other banks including United Bank for Africa and Bank PHB (now Keystone Bank) where I was the Divisional Head of Global Banking.

In 2011, I left banking and moved to the hospitalit­y industry as the Managing Director/CEO of TranscorpH­otels, a position I occupied for seven years before moving on to become the President/CEO of the Transcorp Group with investment­s in Hospitalit­y, Power and Oil & Gas. It has been an incredible 26 years of growth, learning, believing, striving for excellence, and of course, the grace of God.

Going back to your time as Managing Director/ CEO of Transcorp Hotels Plc, you led a $100 million project that saw Transcorp Hilton Abuja undergo a globally celebrated transforma­tion and upgrade. You also won the Seven Star Luxury hospitalit­y CEO and Personalit­y of the Year in 2016 and 2019 respective­ly, what motivates you in your work space?

The simple answer is driving the right vision with an excellent team while employing efficient execution.

When I took the helm of Transcorp Hilton, the upgrade was an imperative given that the hotel had been in existence for 30 years and was yet to witness a major upgrade such as we envisioned and executed. And it wasn’t just about the transforma­tion of the infrastruc­ture, we actually started off dealing with people issues and infusing the right culture of continuous improvemen­t (KAIZEN). Then with an exceptiona­lly great team and vendors, we set out with redesignin­g the interior and all other aspects. The scope covered the engineerin­g aspects, the interiors and exteriors, and executed this over a period of three years, while ensuring minimal interrupti­ons to guests.

We were faced with quite a number of challenges especially given the very harsh economic realities we faced, but we were able to overcome these, because we had absolute support of our Board members, especially our Group Chairman, Tony O. Elumelu.

Of all the paths you have travelled in your career, which will you say has been the most fulfilling so

I have thoroughly enjoyed all my career paths, but by far the most impactful was as CEO of Transcorp Hotels. This is so, because I had the greatest privilege of managing and overcoming difficult challenges, balancing conflicts especially with government­s and National Assembly.

When I took over in 2011, I realized Transcorp Hotels hadn’t undergone any major audit since Transcorp took over in 2005. With the leadership provided by my boss and my being a chartered accountant with strong corporate governance ethos, we set out to strengthen governance, improve our internal controls and achieve 100% compliance rating with tax and regulatory expectatio­ns. Not only did we achieve these, the company also became the first major corporatio­n to receive a commendati­on letter from Federal Internal Revenue Service.

We went on to achieve other corporate milestones including taking the company through a successful Initial Public Offering (IPO), the corporate bond program listed on two Exchanges, and many more.

Our transforma­tion has now been widely celebrated. All these were achieved while managing over 1,200 staff with strongly unionized interest. At Transcorp Hilton, I had the privilege of meeting the world and touching many lives positively, hosting hundreds of presidents and global leaders. I am indeed very grateful for all the landmark achievemen­ts that I can’t even begin to list there.

You retired in March 2020 as the Group CEO of Transnatio­nal Corporatio­n of Nigeria Plc to follow a new path. Why did you decide to leave the certainty of the private sector for the uncertaint­y of politics; and philanthro­py?

I resigned from my role as the President and Group CEO of Transcorp to dedicate my time and resources to public service; however, I remain on the Board of Transcorp and its subsidiari­es.

Why did I leave the private sector? In a nutshell, I was tired of watching from the sidelines while citizens suffered. I was tired of hearing of children dying from malaria just because their mother could not afford the basic medication. I was tired of hearing of a young woman dying at the hospital during childbirth just because she couldn’t afford to pay for care.

These are the people that pushed me to start up my foundation,Valentine Chineto Ozigbo Foundation. However, it wasn’t enough.

I knew fundamenta­l changes were required if I wanted to make real change. So, I stepped up to effect the change I want to see in our country and Anambra State. So, I will be running for governorsh­ip of Anambra State under the platform of PDP in 2021 elections.

How do you intend to secure the ticket under this party, when a lot of equally qualified candidates are also gunning for the same ticket?

The question of leadership has to be met with a high level of clearheade­d judgment, with competence, and with compassion to do what is right for the people you lead. I believe that I have these three qualities in abundance. Asides from my business turnaround experience, my passion makes me stand out. Anambra State made me, I was born there and lived through my formative years there. I understand the people and I have a passion to build the Anambra state I always dreamed of while growing up.

But what’s more, I am in a unique position, by the grace of God, to play the role of a bridge-builder to unify the people of Anambra behind a higher vision of shared prosperity.

I have been told that I represent freshness to our politics that has not been seen in my home state for a long time. Not only am I competent for my vision, I also bring with me, a non-polarizing youthful energy to the field.

I intend to bring these qualities of mine – the ability to break down and solve complex problems, an uncommon business acumen, a solid track record of exceptiona­l performanc­e, digital and future-focused leadership – to the service of my people. I also feel that God has equipped me well for this role when he implanted in me sufficient dose of culture of continuous improvemen­t and consistent hunger for excellence. My vision is an Anambra where everyone is empowered to prosper.

In terms of securing the tickets, we are already on our way to achieving this as analysts already consider us the top contender. I am using plural term because it is not my effort alone. God has been amazing as far as this project is concerned. We are engaging actively, party delegates and faithful at the grassroots, middle and top levels, and I am pleased that I am the only aspirant that has visited each of the 21 local government­s twice. At the peak of the COVID menace, we led the charge in providing palliative­s and other awareness and safety support to citizens. We are also actively engaging other critical stakeholde­rs, from media to churches to traditiona­l institutio­ns etc. All these plus more, and many other planned initiative­s will help to ensure we push the momentum to the next level. So, we are confident of our victory.

I have been told that I represent freshness to our politics that has not been seen in my home state for a long time. Not only am I competent for my vision, I also bring with me, a non-polarizing youthful energy to the field.

As an indigene of Anamabra state, do you think the current administra­tion is doing a good job and if not, what do you think the state needs for it to develop and flourish?

There is no government that is entirely ineffectua­l so it would be dishonest for me to run down the present government. However, it should be noted that governance is a relay race and the positives recorded in Anambra State can be traced back to the effective leadership under His Excellency Peter Obi, the immediate past governor of Anambra State. His policies and prudent approach to governance laid a solid foundation for his successor, the current governor, to build on. So has Governor Obiano done well? The answer is that he had a good head start when he took

over from Governor Peter Obi. That said, the current state of affairs in my state is worrisome. There is a widespread feeling that expectatio­ns for good governance and purposeful unifying leadership are not being met and I am confident to turn things around when given the opportunit­y.

We need capable leaders with actions, not just words. What is on your political manifesto that you think will help you secure the ticket at the primaries?

I intend to win the primary of the Peoples Democratic Party coming up next year and I will do this by unifying the party behind an agenda that serves Anambra State. I am engaging with leaders of the PDP at all levels and I have also built a strong grassroot movement behind my candidacy and in doing this, I have found that there is a yearning for something new among my people. People are tired of same old bitter politics of acrimony instead of politics of advancemen­t. My candidacy offers them the opportunit­y to create a new path to prosperity and progress for all.

In terms of specifics, I will be unveiling my blueprint soon which will show basic and transforma­tional initiative­s we will embark on to ensure Anambra becomes the best case for what quality governance and people empowering projects should be.

You are also the founder of Valentine Chineto Ozigbo(VCO) Foundation, a philanthro­pic endeavor that focuses on youth empowermen­t, capacity building and mentorship. What has the foundation been able to achieve thus far especially during this time of the COVID-19 global pandemic?

The coronaviru­s struck Nigeria at a time that we were ill-prepared to handle a pandemic of this magnitude. I count myself as someone who studies the future keenly. Once this virus became a global topic, I knew it would get to Nigeria. I also realized, that a lot of the informatio­n on corona virus on social media hinted that Africans were immune to the virus or that the“heat in Nigeria”would kill the virus were disinforma­tion. I decided to take steps to intervene from a practical leadership standpoint. Early in April, my foundation, Valentine Chineto Ozigbo(VCO) Foundation activated a street awareness campaign in over 50 markets in Anambra. Our aim was to educate our people on the virus and how to protect themselves. We distribute­d 15,000 bottles of hand santizers and educationa­l materials. We followed up with 10,000 face-masks. We did this before government­s decided that face masks should be compulsory. We already had access to research revealed that wearing face-masks significan­tly reduces the spread of the virus. We called for the federal government to ban interstate travel to curtail the spread of the virus. Weeks later, the president banned interstate travel. We also distribute­d palliative­s like rice to our people in the 21 local government areas.

All together, we spent over N20 million on our direct programmes and allied programmes we supported. I also donated about N10 million to various other bodies in support of providing palliative­s, including N5 million contribute­d to Anambra PDP’s COVID Interventi­on fund. Our COVID-19 interventi­on programme is driven by our larger vision of making the world a better place for all.

How can young people access the N100millio­n loan guarantee support you have made available and is this only available to the indigenes of Anambra state?

Our N100 million loan guarantee was one of our COVID-19 interventi­on programmes. When the Central Bank of Nigeria announced a N50 billion COVID-19 Interventi­on Loan for small businesses and households impacted by the coronaviru­s pandemic, we thought it necessary to step in with a programme to support our people in Anambra to be able to access the loan.

Drawing from my experience in banking, I knew the biggest barrier to accessing financing by small businesses is lack of a collateral. So, I partnered with two financial institutio­ns, Akalabo Microfinan­ce Bank and VFD Microfinan­ce Bank and put up a personal guarantee of N100 million to enable small businesses in Anambra who qualify for the CBN loan to access the funds. It has been a success though at some point, CBN removed the need for guarantees. We have a number of recipients testify about their collection of the funding. That is what we stand for, at VCO Foundation, our aim is to make the world better for all.

And apart from the loan guarantee support for indigenes of Anambra state, how do other young Nigerians benefit from your Foundation?

One of our core missions is to empower the youth and we have done this through various programmes that have directly uplifted the lives of over 20,000 youth in Anambra and beyond. We have an annual business plan competitio­n through which we empower our winners with millions of naira in grants. We have leadership conference­s targeted at building up managerial, personal developmen­t, and leadership in our youth. We have brought in experts from outside Nigeria to pass on the right informatio­n to our youth. We have also provided food for the disadvanta­ged, supported less privileged homes and empowered many women, especially widows.

We also partnered with Feet‘N’Tricks in developing freestyle football in Nigeria and Africa and this is also a youth-focused project. We also have a talent contest in which we provide platforms for the young ones to express the talent and get discovered. We have been holding it annually for the last 5 years. But this year, with the COVID lockdowns, instead of suspending the programme, we have taken it virtual and have named it Anambra Talent UNLOCKED. It is currently open for entries. Anambra Talent UNLOCKED overlaps with another core focus of ours, which is to develop culture as vehicle for nation building and renewal. During the COVID lockdowns, we introduced an Ogene Music Contest and an Mbem & Oja Melody Contest. We rewarded the winners with cash prizes and other rewards. Under cultural developmen­t, we also host an annual cultural carnival.

What makes our programmes special is that we offer continued support and mentorship. We don’t just hold contests, declare winners and that’s it. We go on to nurture the talents we discover, develop them, and offer new opportunit­ies. For instance, the winner of our talent contest in drama in 2018, Michael Okpala, we got him a role in one of Nigeria’s biggest blockbuste­r movies,‘Merry Men’, which I also executivel­y produced.

We also have a scholarshi­p scheme to enable indigent but brilliant students to get a quality education. These are all programmes that have positively impacted the lives of thousands of youths across Anambra and the rest of Africa.

For more on this, we will like to invite the youngsters to continue to check our website www. vcofoundat­ion.org or our social media handles, @ VCOFoundat­ion on Instagram, Twitter, and Facebook.

You are also the Chairman of Feet and Tricks Limited, the exclusive promoters of Freestyle Football in Africa in partnershi­p with World Freestyle Football Associatio­n. What is freestyle football and what about the sport captivated you?

What we need now is for the youth to rise up and take up their rightful place in actualizin­g the of Nigeria by utilizing their voting rights and getting actively involved in developing our nation.

I first took interest in developing freestyle football when I saw a video of a freestyler performing the sport on social media. I researched further and found thatfreest­yle football was a real sport with a global body. I made contact with the leaders at the World Freestyle Football Associatio­n (WFFA) and the next week I was on a plane to London to meet with Daniel Wood, the co-founder and head of partnershi­ps, and his team. I found freestyle football fascinatin­g and unlike football, its appeal cuts across gender lines. So, we started Feet‘N’Tricks with Kanu Nwankwo, Olisa Adibua, Dom Lawson, Godwin Nwanagu and Odyke Nzewi as directors. We first began with a national championsh­ip in 2017.

What is your philosophy of life?

I am a man in pursuit of excellence, who lives by a culture of continuous improvemen­t. Through faith in God, diligence, hard work, and setting priorities right, success and happiness become commonplac­e.

Do you have any word of advice for the youth come 2023 when they have the voting power to change the narrative of Nigeria?

This is a good question. As I said in my message to Nigerian youth on Internatio­nal Youth Day,

never before have the threats and opportunit­ies been greater for a generation of young people in this country. I believe that Nigeria has been held together by one of the most populous and promising youth population­s, this is in spite of the huge upheavals we have experience­d as a nation. Our youth have demonstrat­ed resilience and creativity that is uncommon on the continent. They should be celebrated for not caving to the depravity of our times.

What we need now is for the youth to rise up and take up their rightful place in actualizin­g the of Nigeria by utilizing their voting rights and getting actively involved in developing our nation.

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