Not every institution marks time with chandeliers and violins, but Zenith Bank’s 35th anniversary felt less like an event and more like a coronation. At Eko Convention Centre, the city’s power brokers gathered to salute a bank that has come to embody Nigeria’s financial imagination.
The evening sparkled with speeches and tributes. Governors, business titans, regulators, and alumni filled the hall, their applause not just for longevity but for resilience. Awards were given to pioneer customers and long-serving staff, reminders that behind every financial empire are ordinary people who stay the course.
At the centre stood Jim Ovia, founder and chairman, hailed as the architect of Nigeria’s most profitable bank. Long before fintech was fashionable, he wove technology into banking’s fabric, turning innovation into a philosophy rather than a catchphrase. His foresight made Zenith less a bank than a compass for an entire sector.
Vice President Kashim Shettima, himself a Zenith alumnus, praised Ovia for placing excellence at the heart of Nigerian banking. Group Managing Director Adaora Umeoji called him the Nostradamus of finance, crediting his tenacity and integrity for turning a modest vision into a continental powerhouse. The room nodded, because the proof was already in the balance sheets.
But Ovia’s story stretches beyond spreadsheets. From a clerk in Lagos to degrees in Louisiana, to Harvard’s classrooms, he shaped his destiny against odds. His memoir, Africa Rise and Shine, insists that institutions only thrive when people do. It is why his legacy invests as much in human capital as in profits.
So the night closed not with nostalgia but with promise. Zenith, three and a half decades strong, looked less like a finished tale than a chapter mid-turn. And as Ovia lifted his glass, the crowd seemed to hold its breath, sensing that the game he changed was still being played.
Leave a comment