Wednesday, April 29, 2009

Entrepreneurial traits span time and distance

You must seize your dreams and ambitions and act on them” – Titus Muya, founder of Family Bank, Business Daily 29th April 2009.

Today’s Business Daily had an in depth feature written by Titus Muya, the founder of Family Bank who started the bank in 1984 as a building society; and which has grown to become one of Kenya’s leading banks, with a customer base of close to 600,000 clients with assets in excess of Sh10 billion.

Fascinatingly, on the same page, there was a story on Bank of America (though on different content) that brought forth striking parallels between Muya and Bank of America’s founder Amadeo Peter Giannini. Though both entrepreneurs created their banks in different eras (the pre-cursor to Bank of America, the Bank of Italy was founded in 1904 in San Francisco) and on different continents, their stories of starting and growing their banks into large industry players makes one wonder if maybe the Business Daily editor had the same thought in mind when placing the two stories next to one another.














Heritage

Just like Giannini who was born into a poor immigrant family, Muya also came from what he calls a less “well-known” family. The Kenyan banking sector back in the 1980’s was only composed of multi-nationals and banks whose ownership emanated from society’s elite. Thus when he approached the Treasury to get a banking licence, he was met with stares of disbelief from civil servants who were only used to dealing with the “who’s-who”. However, this did not deter Muya’s passion and belief in his quest to take the dream first implanted by a magazine article to grow from idea to a thriving business.

But you are NOT a banker!

Due to the poor circumstances of his childhood, Giannini quit school at the age of 14, and just like Muya, he had absolutely no training in banking. As Muya writes in his article “officers at those (Treasury) offices used to look at me and wonder how I could start a bank when I was not even a banker”.

Maybe it is this lack of banking experience that led both entrepreneurs to approach sector in a new way, seeing opportunity in what was a hitherto unexplored market. Giannini “was the first to challenge the unwritten rule that banks should only lend money to people who don’t need it” (agilewriter.com), whilst Muya saw the future in providing banking services to low-income people, who ordinarily would have been ignored by the big banks of the day.

At a time when the Grameen Bank model was unknown, Muya focussed on the poorer sections of society, who were mainly small holder peasant farmers. He believed, just like Giannini that hard-working poor people who wanted credit would pay back. In Giannini’s words: "give the little guy a bank that will do business with him."

When you find a brick wall, find a way around it

When Giannini decided to open the Bank of Italy, the bank’s first office was in a converted saloon, and he even kept one of the bartenders on as an assistant teller. Similarly, Family Finance’s headquarters and first branch was in Kiambu on the outskirts of Nairobi, adjacent to tea and coffee small holder farms. Indeed, as the building society grew, it more or less steered clear of the nation’s capital, focussing instead on rural agricultural areas.

Comparable to the Bank of Italy which was the first American bank to offer loan products to people who had no experience with credit, Family Finance under Muya’s stewardship also developed products that were specifically targeted at the bottom end of the market. As Muya says “the now universal word and industry term for business of ‘microfinance’ did not even exist”.

When life hands you a lemon

When the 1906 San Francisco earthquake rocked the city, Giannini was not discouraged. As a Time Magazine article on the top 100 builders and titans titled “Consumer banking owes a big debt to a produce seller who refused to say no” notes:

“In the days after the disaster, the man known as A.P. broke ranks with his fellow bankers, many of whom wanted area banks to remain shut to sort out the damage. Giannini quickly set up shop on the docks near San Francisco's North Beach. With a wooden plank straddling two barrels for a desk, he began to extend credit "on a face and a signature" to small businesses and individuals in need of money to rebuild their lives”.

Similarly Muya showed fortitude when faced with nay-sayers from the established banking sector who doubted the capacity of poor people to be worthwhile banking depositors and loan re-payers. Nevertheless, holding onto his goal of “enabling people to advance their quality of life” finally paid off. Self belief in his dream meant that Muya had already resigned from his stable government job on receipt of his building society licence to in his words, take up the post of CEO and first employee. There was no turning back.

The Pinnacle

In 1928, Giannini’s efforts had grown Bank of Italy to a stage where he managed to purchase the Bank of America, an old and respected institution in New York, and consolidated all of his banks under that name. He continued to open branches all over the United States in the same spirit, making Bank of America the first nationwide bank By 1945, Bank of America was the biggest bank in the United States and remains to date the largest with US$ 3.2 trillion of assets. He died in 1949.

Muya likewise continued opening branches close to his niche market and finally started offering financial services to SME’s as well as students in Nairobi. Family Finance was finally granted a banking licence in 2007, transforming itself into what is now known as Family Bank with 50 branches nationwide.

What legacy can the story of Bank of America and Family Bank offer? Maybe the most apt message is Muya’s conclusion in his article which offers wise advice for young entrepreneurs: “No one is born with expertise; it is learning experience born of utmost commitment to goals, to set benchmarks, self belief and God-given determination”.

Friday, April 17, 2009

Business activism: Positively transform Kenya with the 2009 Budget Campaign

As any entrepreneur knows, business in the current economic climate is becoming well-nigh impossible.

With inflation adversely impacting raw material and final product prices, instability as a result of political bickering, a tax regime that places punitive impositions on micro-enterprises as well as dwindling consumer purchasing power, Kenyan small business enterprises are now under threat.

A few weeks ago on this blog, we decried the fact that the way the government to which we pay taxes was spendthrift, positing that if it were a business, it would have collapsed ages ago.

Well the season of the National Budget has come upon us again. And this time we can make our representatives to parliament more accountable by ensuring that government expenditure provisions reflect the will of the people of Kenya.

As the accountability portal Mars Group and the Partnership for change point out:

“The National Budget as presently constituted is enmeshed in corrupt and wasteful expenditure and there is need for Kenyans to educate each other on this so that we can pressure our representatives to scrutinize the budget to identify such expenditure. Savings can be used to boost development expenditure.”


As entrepreneurs are the main drivers of the economy, we should be in the fore-front of such an initiative. For instance we can demand accountability from our parliamentary representatives on the following:

• A reduction in the size of the Government of Kenya via the enactment of a statute pursuant to section 16 of the Constitution to cap the number of Executive Cabinet Ministries; and the need for integrity criteria for public service.

• A reduction of the recurrent expenditure of Government and the setting of ceilings on recurrent expenditure.

• Demand for full accountability and transparency in the External Public Debt Register which records all debts incurred by the Government of Kenya with international multi-lateral, bi-lateral and commercial creditors.

Apart from contacting your MP, you can also write a letter to the Commissioner General of the Kenya Revenue Authority (either when making payments or not) to register your displeasure that you are fulfilling your business obligations, albeit to a government that does not manage its resources responsibly.

Or, you can join the Partnership for Change 2009 Budget campaign to mobilize public support so that the Government of Kenya becomes accountable and transparent in the borrowing and implementation of the funds it collects from the public in taxes.

This time the onus is on us entrepreneurs to make the change we wish to see in Kenya today.

Update: read Kachwanya's take on the upcoming Budget in "A Letter That Finance Minister will never read".

Monday, April 6, 2009

Bashing without researching the Kenya Youth Enterprise Development Fund

This morning, we received a comment from an anonymous reader on a post Kenya Youth Enterprise Fund: Show us the money - "tusiharibu wakati bure!"

“Anonymous said...
This idea of bashing things without reearching should just stop. Why do we bash the youth fund even without endeavouring to find out how it works? Do we expect the fund to put labels on the foreheads of those it loans money?

Let us take time to study processes. Of course it is much easier to criticise.”

Here is our response to Anonymous:

Anonymous,

These are the researched FACTS regarding the youth fund:

1. The process of accessing the fund remains an obstacle to youth entrepreneurs. Forcing the youth to form “groups” in order to access Kshs. 50,000 is not in tune with the times. Many youth entrepreneurs are sole-proprietors and compelling them to dilute their shareholding in their enterprise is simply unfair.

2. For those individual entrepreneurs who can access upto 5 million shillings from financial institutions, they too are faced with a credit worthy assessment system that does not take into account the innovativeness of young enterprises. When they approach these banks they continue to face the same stereotypical and patronising attitudes as well as a perceived lack of credibility from the loan officers. Furthermore, they are also supposed to have bank accounts of at least six months standing.

3. The youth fund in its current form does not go far enough in building the capacity of young entrepreneurs to make their businesses growth oriented and market competitive. The fund should apart from holding short workshops for prospective loan recipients, conduct a nationwide programme of ensuring that young businesses can operate effectively and prosper. They could even go further by insisting that government procurement processes take into account youth enterprises for small tenders.

4. Research has proven that small business owners have a natural aversion to exposing their business to risk via debt financing. This has also had an adverse impact on the number of youth accessing the fund. The Youth Fund has done nothing to work on changing this state of affairs. For those interested in these studies, we shall happily provide citations.

5. Finally, just the process at the constituency level for accessing the fund is untenable, particularly in urban areas. The process of registration of groups is riddled with bureaucratic barriers. Secondly the number of banked youth is small in a country where 10 million Kenyans remain un-banked. The M-Pesa system has become a popular money transfer and financial management system solely because it uses mobile phones that reduce the time it takes in normal banking and money transfer processes, something that is attractive for young entrepreneurs who are time constrained. Third, the process of getting an ID card is similar to the group registration process. The Provincial Administration, specifically the local area chiefs, need to facilitate and support youth to acquire such documentation. Fourth in urban areas, getting to know who apart from meeting the local youth officer, Social Development Assistant or the Secretary of the Locational Social Development Committee is a tedious process. Imagine the sole-proprietor who has to close their kiosk every time they go looking for these officials, and probably has to queue for a long time waiting to meet them or even doesn’t manage to meet them. The opportunity cost is too high for such a small business who lose revenues they could have acquired in this time.

Now since we have been accused of criticising without merit, Anonymous, if you had really read this as well as other posts (http://yipeorg.blogspot.com/2008/11/opening-public-procurement-door-to.html and http://yipeorg.blogspot.com/2008/10/youth-and-women-enterprise-development.html) you would know that we have in the past suggested several reforms for the youth fund process:

1. Respecting individual youth entrepreneurs and their efforts so they do not have to form “groups” just to get the loans.
2. Ensure the financial institutions recognise the innovativeness of young enterprise in their loan application assessment process.
3. Build youth capacity to create and manage business by undertaking free training workshops that also take into account the time constraints of youth entrepreneurs. Also ensuring a level playing field for young enterprises as compared with other enterprises in the same industry.
4. Make the loan products attractive to young entrepreneurs, maybe by diversifying into short-term equity based financing.
5. Finally facilitate the process of accessing the fund by removing the need for so many stamps and signatures required.

If you still feel that this is “bashing without researching” then there’s really nothing else that can be said.

Youth Interactive Portal for Enterprise (Yipe.org)

Saturday, March 28, 2009

Serious questions for any entrepreneur

"Now is the time to put aside your fantasies, and take a hard look at who you really are..." - Martin Zwilling

Martin Zwilling's blog Startup Professionals poses several questions that any entrepreneur regardless of age and how large (or small) their business is should critically ask themselves.

Read "Not Everyone is an Entrepreneur" and decide whether YOU are really cut out to be an entrepreneur.

Thursday, March 26, 2009

Exhortation to the General Assembly of the Model United Nations

TALKING NOTES BY EMMANUEL DENNIS TO THE GENERAL ASSEMBLY OF THE MODEL UNITED NATIONS IN GIGIRI, NAIROBI: THURSDAY 26TH MARCH 2009

To Your honors I oblige.

I am greatly humbled by your invitation to address this great young people at this defining moment in the history of our country.

The world is going through an economic recession as never seen before. The environment has been depleted. The Global Warming has caught up with us due to climate change. Our natural resources are shrinking. Our young people are getting ever hopeless due to lack of sustainable livelihoods.

Kenya is going through a very difficult time in the economic front, leadership, and social well being. The government is broke, the people are poor, millions dying of hunger and starvation, the IDP situation and our leaders are stealing from us.

The Governance structures are crumbling by the day while our leaders take advantage of the situation and are busy auctioning the country to themselves in the form of corruption never seen before in our lifetime as a country.

The graduates from our institutions of learning are finding themselves in a more difficult situation while those that had no chances of going to school are more vulnerable to helplessness.

The situation is grimmer when funds allocated to the basic primary education is missing. Then very soon you will hear that funds saved by the now retired citizens is missing.

Very recently, we saw the government launch the Kazi kwa vijana initiative. They failed to realize that Kazi ya mkono has always existed and that not all the young people would opt for it. While there is no sustainability structure for this very obnoxious initiative as it will only see 30,000 shillings in the pockets of those who will be engaged in a period of 6 month.

While I recognize the Youth Enterprise Development Fund in trying to solve the ever increasing youth unemployment challenge, I also know that we can not create a nation of more than 20 million business entrepreneurs, who will consume, what happens to those who cant manage businesses? That is what happens when you trust the old to handle the needs of the future. They do not have capacity to foresee the future and as such will mislead the nation to the vision never ever. Did you know that it is a crime to be a youth in Kenya? Mungiki, Vijana ya Mkono, Idlers and the like. The police will arrest you, disappear you or simply kill you.

While the above happens, we have a president and a prime minister and institutions. The only mandate that this government has is to implement the National Accord. Scientific eveidence shows that no one won the election according to judge Waki. The President has been quoted to be “Moribund” and the Prime Minister “Ineffective” With the current leadership in place, the future is black.

The questions that linger in my mind today as a young person is where is our country headed to? What legacy will we leave when our children and grand children come face to face with the effects of our actions today?

Ladies and gentlemen, I see the future generation haunting us and asking questions, “you saw as they destroyed our livelihoods upon which the future is peged on,… You did nothing to save us” I see a country full of disasters, civil strife and militia men taking charge. I see a country where suicide bombers will take center stage, I see a country where the youth will survive by the rule of the gun. I see a country where War lords will be in control of ethnic enclaves for survival.

If any of the experiences on our roads are to go by, where Mungiki collect taxes everyday from matatus and busses, where the illegal groupings provide security in slums upon paying of the daily taxes. It is happening ladies and gentlemen, and it is only a matter of time before they come to your neighbourhood, or at least you become one of them. There will be no country called Kenya. We will be more like Somalia or even worse.

In the wake of the above realities,

I also see a ray of hope, a silver lining embedded on our youth to take up responsibility and say enough is enough. It is only the young people of this country that must rise above the ethnic politics and embrace nationhood and take this country to the next level of transformation.

We don’t need reforms as that is what we have lived with for along time. We need total make over Reworking the world. Transforming our Country into a robust economic hub, where our neighbors shall depend on us to show them the gateway to the future.

I would like to request all of you to join me as we start this long journey of transforming our country. The first step is to ensure we take total control of the decision making organs of our country. We need to support the religious leaders in calling upon the two principles to concentrate on their mandate. Or at least give way so that we can have a fresh election of responsible leaders for our country.

Kenya needs not more than 13 cabinet ministers. Kenya needs a president of not older than 40 years. Kenya needs not the retirement cap above 55. Kenya needs to use the resources, energy, vibrancy, spirit, and willingness of its youth in facing the challenges of the 21st century.

We have started that journey, we invite you to join us. By recruiting individuals in creating a national grassroots movement of individuals in taking responsibility to holding their leaders accountable. The National youth Convention, The National Youth Movement in collaboration with the Partnership for change is that ultimate vehicle of bringing positive change in our communities.

We need to do things differently in order to achieve results.

As Barack Obama said and I will rephrase..

If our children live long enough to see what we have done in this country, what change would they see, what progress would we have made? This is our chance to answer that call, this is our moment, to put our youth to work, to restore the doors of opportunity for our kids and reaffirm that fundamental truth, that we are one nation, one country out of our diverse cultural and ethnic backgrounds, while we go through this difficult time we shall always remain hopeful, and while we are met with cynicism and doubt, we will respond with that timeless creed, the spirit of the people, YES WE CAN.

And Franz Phanon summarized the struggle “Every generation must rise from relative obscurity, discover its mission, fulfill it or betray it”

Which generation are we going to be?

Will we rise up and fulfill our mission for Kenya?

Or are we going to betray our noble duty?

Thank you.

May God Bless the Beautiful Country of Kenya.

emmanuel@yesweb.org

Tuesday, March 24, 2009

Stand up and be alive!

Today, March 24, 2009 is the Human Rights Defenders Day in Kenya.

The day commemorates the assassination in 1996 of Karimi Nduthu who was murdered after finalising an investigative report into the 1992/3 ethnic clashes where there were rampant incidents of state sponsored executions targeting Kikuyu, Kisii, Luo and Luyha populations in Rift Valley, Nyanza, Western and Coast Provinces.

A blog posted in commemoration of this day by prominent activist Cyprian Orina Nyamwamu “The Fight For Freedom, Democracy And Human Rights Is The Necessary Qualification For Kenyan Citizenship” posits that the war against social injustice can only be won when we finally refuse to be pawns and objects of the market which in turn assists the government to keep us impoverished.

Cyprian exhorts us “You young Kenyan professionals and activists; Stand up and be alive. Do not be corpses who died at 18 years and are waiting to be buried at 70years!”

Read “The Fight For Freedom, Democracy And Human Rights Is The Necessary Qualification For Kenyan Citizenship

Monday, March 16, 2009

If the Kenya government was a business, it would have collapsed ages ago

"Why would a company hire someone that sleeps on the job, doesn’t complete assigned tasks and demands a hefty untaxed salary?" - Ken M. a Kenyan Entrepreneur, 16th March 2009
The global financial crisis has led to the closing down of many enterprises. Even the Business Daily today in its headline article “Global crisis wipes out call centre jobs” tells of the local BPO industry as being in jeopardy.

Recession-proofing

Indeed “recession-proofing” business has become a buzz word, even amongst local entrepreneurs. Key in the phrase on Google and you get a result of 4,790,000 website listings.

Ensuring that one’s business can swim the tide of global financial currents, means tightening belts, something that many companies are doing as seen in the number of industries laying off non-essential staff.

In line with this economic outlook, wouldn’t it also be prudent for the government that lives off earnings in the form of tax revenue from Kenyans also tighten its belt?

News stories such as lavish spending on tea and flowers are definitely not in tune with the times.

Mars Group Kenya, a local governance and accountability watchdog in a blog posted today “The Government of Kenya is Broke” has raised critical financial management inefficiencies being perpetrated with outright disregard to the Kenyan people. This coming at a time when the same government (which previously prided itself on being self-sufficient) has whipped out the begging bowl for donors to fill.

Scandals ranging from maize to oil continue unabated, whilst we business people are warned of imminent tax hikes. The grand coalition government seems to have a more voracious appetite in ensuring its parliamentarians are kept in the lap of luxury, whilst continuing to exert pressure on small businesses to pay taxes.

The Mars Group blog outlines several spending issues that if the Kenya government was a business, it would surely collapse.

For instance, the bloated cabinet of 93 Ministers and Assistant Ministers costs Kenyans billions of shillings annually. Out of the government’s budget, 24% goes to servicing external debt leaving 76% for services rendered to Kenya. Out of this balance, 85% is spent on recurrent expenditure (i.e. paying hefty salaries and buying the latest SUV’s) whilst only 15% is left for development.

It is this 15% of expenditure that is supposed to ensure that all Kenyans reach a point of financial stability, in order to pay (“as responsible citizens”) taxes.

One does not have to be an economist, accountant or even a high school student for that matter, to see that the flow of funds here is top heavy; whilst unfortunately it is small business entrepreneurs and lower income Kenyans consumers who bear the brunt of this parasitic government. Taxes such as VAT know no class barrier, thus we “watu wadogo” pay the same taxes as MPs who earn tax free allowances topping up high salaries.

No-brainer questions

The Mars Group blog proposes several reforms, which if given in advice to small business owners would seem a no-brainer: For instance,

• Why would a company have a bloated Board of Directors (i.e. cabinet) whilst revenues remain small?
• Why would a company hire someone that sleeps on the job, doesn’t complete assigned tasks and demands a hefty salary (untaxed!)? (our MPs).
• Why would a business owner retain the services of a financial officer when it turns out that money allocated for specific tasks (such as paying for free education) is diverted for other costs (such as buying maize)?
• How on learning that money has been siphoned out of the enterprise (Anglo-leasing style) by the same finance officer, would the business owner just let the matter drop; notwithstanding the fact that annually 24% of the business budget is religiously paid to external lenders?
• After finding out about the siphoning of funds, wouldn’t a prudent business owner ensure that such corrupt loans cease to be paid immediately?
• Wouldn’t an entrepreneur use legal redress so that the business doesn’t have to pay the corrupt loans?

Either way, remaining in the status quo would without a doubt crush the business before too long. The government is only lucky in that it gets free money from taxes without even having to pretend to offer adequate services.

That is until we finally demand that the government also tightens its belt.

Read THE GOVERNMENT OF KENYA IS BROKE: What Mwai Kibaki, Raila Odinga, and Parliament must do to deal with our current financial crisis