Joseph Tsolo’s life-altering transition from security guard to junior manager is a masterclass in perseverance and dreaming big. A beneficiary of a workplace skills development initiative, Tsolo’s ebullient rise through the ranks also showcases exactly why South African corporates need to embrace more practical and effective ways to unleash the country’s talent.
‘Recognising my potential, my manager suggested that I enrich my practical experience by studying at a business school,’ says Tsolo. ‘I eagerly embarked on a journey of continuous learning, starting with a Higher Certificate in Management Practice (HCMP) and, a year later, enrolled on the diploma-level Advanced Certificate in Management Practice (ACMP). Graduating with my ACMP is a milestone that fills me with immense pride, as I was the first in my family to graduate with a diploma.’
Tsolo’s is a story that would not have been possible without a very special partnership between his employer, Hollard Insurance, and Henley Business School Africa.
Henley is a global business school, part of the University of Reading, with campuses in the UK, Europe – and Johannesburg – and it is the only international business school in South Africa that has developed a full ladder of accredited programmes (from NQF 5 up to NQF 8) that can also be customised by clients like Hollard to make sure they are speaking directly to the needs of that organisation.
‘This means that ambitious young South Africans like Tsolo, who have heaps of practical experience, natural talent, and enthusiasm but lack a formal qualification perhaps because they didn’t have funds to study or had to get a job to support their families or didn’t get a good enough matric to study further, have a second shot at getting the qualifications they need to get ahead,’ says Jon Foster-Pedley, dean and director of Henley Business School Africa.
In South Africa, where there is already a backlog of education and dearth of opportunities, workplace learning on a massive scale holds the key to unleashing the country’s talent, he believes.
‘Research by the University of Stellenbosch’s Nic Spaull suggests that, on average, out of 100 children who start grade 1, just six will get some kind of qualification within six years of matric, and just four will complete a formal degree. This is woefully inadequate when you consider that in advanced economies like the UK or Finland, the numbers of formal degrees are above 50 per 100 children who start school.
‘It is only through one-on-one partnerships between the likes of Henley and committed corporate citizens that we can start to change the odds decisively. Each year, Henley graduates upwards of 2,000 capable managers and leaders that go into South African workplaces to make a difference and add value. Many of these are through our Executive Education programmes.’
‘Like it or not, future success is linked to further education, and we need a revolution in how we think about education and training to ensure that working South Africans can make headway in a complexifying world,’ says Jon Foster-Pedley, ‘While getting a degree or a diploma is by no means the only route to success in life, studying further is correlated with productivity and economic growth, better social outcomes, and human happiness.’
However, it’s not just about getting more people to get degrees, he cautions. It is also about changing the way people learn. Foster-Pedley points out that we live in a world that is dramatically different from the one for which most institutions of higher learning are geared to prepare their students. ‘The latest Future of Jobs report from the World Economic Forum estimates that by 2030 almost 40% of skill requirements will have changed,’ he says. ‘That changes the way people think about how to study and gain the skills they need to get ahead. We need to make sure that the skills we are gaining will remain useful and we need to find ways to learn continuously so our skills can be refreshed.’
Lolly Gwabavu, the group head of Leadership Development at Nedbank and a Henley client, believes that a key part of this lies in lifelong learning and developing yourself as well as your skills. She says that the starting point for any leadership development journey lies in personal mastery. After all, leaders must first understand how to lead themselves before they lead others.
Through her work with Henley, Gwabavu is developing emerging leaders identified through the bank’s established talent management structures. ‘One of the positives about Nedbank is that we believe everyone has the ability to be a leader. Leadership is not a position or a title, it’s a disposition … I’m busy finalising a leadership pathway that we are building for our learner system that focuses on leading self and influencing.’
According to Linda Buckley, Head of Learning Experience and Executive Education Director at Henley Business School Africa, another vital element to improving educational outcomes in South Africa is to ensure that learning in the classroom is closely aligned with practice. All Henley students are given ample opportunity to apply what they are learning as they are learning it, with many clients coming up with highly innovative solutions to achieve this. For example, one client, Bryte Insurance, through the Bryte Academy, recently created a shadow board (NextCo) that allows young talent within the business to make a contribution at the highest level.
Tebogo Baloyi, Head of HR at Bryte Insurance, explains: ‘We want diverse thinking in how we approach projects and strategic initiatives, and we want to hear the voice of our younger generation. So, NextCo is the practical experience that allows talented individuals to shine even more and get more exposure to projects. The shadow ExCo also sits like an ExCo; they are mapped to a portfolio and will be given real projects to execute as a team.’
Henley’s work in the skills development space is recognised globally. It’s listed among the Top 30 business schools in world in the Financial Times 2024 ranking of Executive Education programmes, scoring top in the world for Faculty Diversity in the same ranking. This makes Henley the highest ranked international business school with a campus in Africa, offering in-house corporate education to clients – an important third-party endorsement.
Most recently it was ranked top in South Africa by pmr.Africa in its inaugural PMR.Africa survey of institutions offering executive education programmes in South Africa, reflecting the school’s growing reputation for graduating impressive human beings who show up and know how to get things done (see box insert).
Specific Henley programmes have also won awards. In 2022, Henley and Standard Bank won a talent development award from the European Foundation for Management Development (EFMD) for a customised leadership development programme called “Acceleration”, part of the bank’s transformation strategy to develop African leaders. ‘The impact of what we discovered was greater than we could ever have imagined,” says Standard Bank executive Mei-lene Els. Of 40 people on the “Acceleration” programme, 13 were promoted into senior leadership roles. Of these, 40% were black women.
‘Employers recognise and value what Henley graduates can do for them,’ says Buckley. ‘Education is ultimately about change, and South Africa’s employers see first-hand how Henley’s graduates are personally transformed and go on to transform their workplaces, creating new value.
We make sure we stay up to date with emerging trends by continuously finding ways to adapt our programmes to the current business environment. This includes making use of virtual and augmented reality, experiential immersions and global perspectives. We aim to create new and unique simulations for current and future-focused learning that capture the rapid acceleration of today’s technological world.’
To find out more about Henley's executive education programmes, visit: https://www.henleysa.ac.za/henley-execed-page