A legacy of leadership: Are we being the leaders that our youth deserve?

OPINION PIECE BY DUDU HLATSHWAYO: FOUNDER AND CEO OF CHANGE EQ

A legacy of leadership: Are we being the leaders that our youth deserve?
Dudu Hlatshwayo

Johannesburg, 21 June 2022: South Africa is facing a number of critical challenges. Two of the most worrying are a faltering economy and a crisis in leadership which is leaving many of our future business leaders either waiting on the side lines or, even more tragically, leaving the country.

Numbers don’t lie and, according to StatsSA, we not only recorded the highest unemployment rate of 34.9% during Q4 last year but we have a heart breaking 65.5% youth unemployment rate.

South Africa’s public and private sectors are facing a worrying skills shortage. Yet, more and more people are graduating from South African universities. That just doesn’t add up.

With the high rate of unemployment in the country, the number of skilled young people who are going overseas to seek work opportunities is growing rapidly. While the youth that remain behind face not only poverty and joblessness, but have little chance to gain hands on experience or be mentored by people who are in the field – people that have burnt their fingers learning the ropes.

So, who is then left to advance the objectives of our country and our economy?

If you look a little deeper, you’ll realise that, as a country, we are not utilising the human resources that are out there, tried and tested, to transform the educated graduates of today into the leaders of tomorrow.

There are many highly qualified professionals who are observers rather than participants in this economy.

Recent years of corruption allegations and findings from the reports of the Commissions of Enquiry have thrown an even bigger spotlight on the importance of integrity and ethics in business and society in general. Of course, some allegations of corruption were fake and unfounded, and people were exonerated through these processes. However, it is unfortunate that, regardless of no evidence having been found in certain instances, highly talented people are now out in the cold, unable to contribute to an economy that’s in desperate need of all the skills it can harness.

We all need to stand up and say that it is time that our country recognises the pool of talent that is lying out there unutilised.

At Change EQ, on a daily basis, we come across business enterprises that are struggling financially and underperforming operationally and were underperforming even before COVID-19 came about. On closer look, we’ve discovered issues like poor business management and sometimes instances of fraud and corruption, misappropriation of funds by management or self-enrichment.

When a business underperforms, the losers are the investors that have put their hard-earned cash in to the business, as well as the employees.

If the companies of tomorrow are going to succeed and the economy of the future is to recover, then we need to invest in the development of our management teams. We must make sure that we have strong leaders leading enterprises and boards of directors grounded in good corporate governance in place.

The legacy that we can leave behind for the business leaders of tomorrow is to learn from the mistakes of the past and the present and make sure that there are always mentors in place who can help them be the leaders that our country desperately needs.

ABOUT DUDU HLATSHWAYO:

Known for her honesty, integrity and profound belief in people, Dudu Hlatshwayo is an all-round professional and business leader who has not only sat on the boards of a number of powerful companies and state-owned enterprises but also founded her own company, Change EQ, in 2006. As specialists in work-out and turnaround, strategy, business process-re-engineering, organisational design and change management, Change EQ has assisted a number of companies both private and public.

Ms Hlatshwayo was born in Kwa-Zulu Natal and completed her schooling in Mariannhill College in Durban. She completed her Bachelor Degree with Honours in Social Science in 1986 at the University of Cape Town. In 2000, Ms Hlatshwayo completed her Masters in Business Leadership at Unisa where she majored in Advanced Corporate Finance. Since then she has attended courses in Project Finance, Private Equity, Investment Management, Mergers and Acquisitions. Valuations and structuring of companies, debt restructuring, capital raising and human capital management.

Her professional career includes having been a Partner at Ernst & Young, a director in the Corporate Finance Division of Andisa Capital, a subsidiary of Standard Bank, and a General Manager at ABSA Bank, and others.

From a very young age, she has always believed that success, happiness and the ability to drive yourself to your full potential lies within as a function of personal mastery.  She encourages and teaches self-mastery and self-belief to a group of under 12 children in KZN where she was born.

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