Not long ago, businesses were measured almost entirely by balance sheets: the bigger the profit, the greater the success. But today, the metrics have shifted. The most trusted institutions are those that use business as a lever for social change.
Absa Bank Ghana has embraced that evolution as a core belief through its Force for Good agenda. Framed by the bank’s purpose, Empowering Africa’s tomorrow, together… one story at a time, the initiative pushes beyond chequebook charity to target real-world transformation in education, entrepreneurship, sustainability, and community development.
ReadytoWork: Preparing Youth for the World of Work
Every year, thousands of students complete their studies and step into a labour market that offers few clear pathways. Degrees in hand, many find themselves underprepared or overwhelmed by the gulf between academic theory and workplace reality.
Absa Bank Ghana is helping to close that gap through its ReadytoWork programme, designed to equip young people with practical skills, digital learning modules, and career guidance.
By September 2024, the programme had reached over 743,000 young individuals through bi-monthly webinars offering practical job market skills. These sessions drew over 737,000 views on platforms like YouTube and Facebook. Additionally, nearly 6,000 tertiary students benefited directly from ReadytoWork modules, helping them navigate the transition from education to employment.
As of July 2025, over 10, 056 students have already directly participated in the programme, while more than 1 million others have engaged with its content online.
Absa Money Matters: Making Strides in Financial Literacy
There is a moment (often early in life) when a person learns what it means not to have enough. For many teenagers, that moment arrives without warning, often wrapped in anxiety: a school fee unpaid, a family emergency, or simply having to choose between essentials. If we expect young people to make smart financial choices, we must first teach them how money works.
That conviction led to the launch of Absa Money Matters in 2024, a financial literacy initiative tailored to senior high schools.
By the end of 2024, more than 101,000 students across the country had taken part, learning how to save and budget.
The work continues: as of July 2025, over 57,000 students across 78 schools have joined the programme, each new student a potential shift in generational thinking.
SME Empowerment: Building Capacity Beyond Capital
Walk through any market – Kejetia, Makola, Tamale Central – and you will find entrepreneurs at work. Beyond capital, many of these SMEs need access to knowledge, networks, and opportunity. Absa Bank Ghana’s SME Clinics are an answer to this need. The clinics are in-person learning series that connect
small business owners with seasoned professionals and industry experts. These clinics are spaces for insight, feedback, and practical guidance on navigating business, with topics ranging from financial management to digital marketing.
For younger entrepreneurs, access to market is often the missing piece. That is why Absa supported select startups to showcase their products at Porials Pitch, one of Accra’s fastest-growing shopping bazaars. With footfall in the thousands, the event offered a valuable platform for brand visibility, customer engagement, and sales.
Inspire Me: Expanding Possibilities for Women Entrepreneurs
Every year, thousands of women start or grow businesses, often without access to the resources, mentorship, or networks that make sustainable growth possible. Absa Bank’s Inspire Me Conference was created to address these gaps with practical, market-facing solutions.
Inspire Me is a pan-African entrepreneurship platform designed to support women-led businesses with real tools and opportunities. It brings together entrepreneurs, trade experts, policymakers, and ecosystem leaders for learning, connection, and access.
The conference tackles tangible issues – from export readiness and pricing strategy to mental resilience and supply chain opportunities – through masterclasses, panel sessions, and curated networking events. Participants can deepen their skills, build their visibility, and connect with cross-border partners who can accelerate their growth.
What makes Inspire Me different is its deliberate focus on market access and scale. Beyond the conference hall, women entrepreneurs engage in B2B trade missions, mentorship programmes, and digital marketplace activations. In 2024, the platform attracted over 1,500 in-person participants and 10,000 virtual attendees from across Ghana, Kenya, Zambia, Uganda, and Mauritius.
In 2025, the conference will take place in Lusaka, Zambia, from 24 to 25 July, under the theme “Elevating HerStory – United for Purpose.”
Environmental and Sustainability Efforts
Absa Bank’s corporate sustainability is becoming visible in kilowatts saved, waste diverted, and systems redesigned for a lower-impact future.
In 2024 alone, over 1,400 kilograms of paper and nearly 200 kilograms of plastic were kept out of landfills. These figures represent a shift in daily operations: more recycling bins, clearer signage, and staff retraining.
Inside the bank’s buildings, old air conditioners and fluorescent lights are giving way to inverter systems and LEDs. Thirty-one percent of Absa’s energy efficiency target has already been met, inching towards the 40 percent mark.
The bank’s solar rollout tells a similar story. With 8 percent of its 20 percent renewable energy goal achieved, Absa Bank is making deliberate progress towards lighting up its branches with the sun.
Aside from these initiatives, Absa Bank is working to provide potable water to underserved communities through its Water for Life project. In 2024, the bank provided eleven boreholes in needy communities, home to over 30,000 people. This year, ten more boreholes are underway.
Through its Force for Good drive, Absa Bank is investing in the kind of society where banking makes a lasting impact, because every story matters.