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Kenyans win top positions in global firms

Kenyans win top positions in global firms
Kenyans win top positions in global firms

The recent appointment of former EABL boss Gerald Mahinda as managing director of a New York Stock Exchange-listed cereal maker has added the number of Kenyan executives rising to top positions of global conglomerates.

Mr Mahindaโ€™s appointment as sub-Sahara African MD for US foods manufacturer Kelloggโ€™s came just two months after Standard Chartered Bank promoted Richard Etemesi, who was CEO for the Kenyan unit, to head the global lenderโ€™s South African unit and four other countries including Zambia, Zimbabwe, Botswana and Mauritius.

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The appointments to positions in which they control multi-billion dollar balance sheets underscore the pedigree associated with Kenyan executivesโ€™ management acumen.

Other recent high profile appointments include Tony Mwaiโ€™s recruitment as business leader at IBMโ€™s South Africa office and promotion of Louis Otieno to spearhead Microsoftโ€™s 4Afrika programme, which has set a target to supply millions of African school children with customised laptops.

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10 COUNTRIES

Global payment services company firms MasterCard tapped James Wainaina to be vice president and area business head for East Africa while IBM picked Nicholas Nesbitt as general manager for East Africa in charge of 10 countries.

Another Kenyan, James Mwangi, is the global managing partner at New York-based consulting firm Dalbergโ€” in charge of 11 markets. He operates from the companyโ€™s Johannesburg office. He previously worked at consulting giant Mckinsey in New York.

Management experts attribute the rise of Kenyans to top positions in global conglomerates to the countryโ€™s liberal market which has shaped business leaders to navigate through highly competitive environments.

โ€œDue to liberalisation of the Kenyan market, local CEOs have learnt to compete with established players both for market share and talent and the world is noticing this,โ€ said Dr X. N Iraki, the MBA co-ordinator at the University of Nairobiโ€™s School of Business.

Another Kenyan blogger Ory Okolloh is the director of investments at Omidyar Network, an investment firm established in 2004 by eBay founder Pierre Omidyar.

CAPTURE THE EYE

The list also includes Googleโ€™s sub-Saharan Africa spokesman and East Africa lead Joe Mucheru and Robert Ngeru who is Samsung East Africa chief operating officer.

โ€œKenyaโ€™s business leaders have come of age as they have the experience, acumen and exposure to modern business practices,โ€ said Dr Iraki.

Most of these Kenyans started off their careers in local firms, rising through the ranks to capture the eyes of multinationals.

Mr Mahinda, 55, served as CEO and group managing director at EABL for five years from January 2004 to June 2009.

He is now driving the African agenda at Kelloggโ€™s, a New York Stock Exchange-listed firm which reported a net profit of $1.8 billion (Sh154.8 billion) last year, from sales of $14.8 billion (Sh1.3 trillion)โ€” ranking as the second biggest cereal maker after rival General Mills.

The Michigan-based food manufacturing company has an asset base of $15.5 billion (Sh1.33 trillion) and markets its products such as cornflakes, Mueslix, Pringles potato chips and Eggo waffles in 180 countries across the world.

Source-nation.co.ke

Kenyans win top positions in global firms

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