I
like to share my career journey especially with those just out of
high school or college. Hopefully they can learn one or two things
and also avoid the mistakes I made along the way.
In
July 1997 I was teaching Building Studies to Forms 1 and 2 students
(grades 8 and 9) at Kambarami Secondary school just outside Murewa
less than 90kms from Harare. I had started my temporary teaching in
September 1996 in Mudzi closer to the Mozambique border about 200kms
from Harare. My O’ Level class mates will be surprised that I ended
up teaching the subject to high school kids given how bad I was in
the subject in form 1 and 2. My distant uncle Itai Mavhunga was our
Building Studies teacher at Nyameni Secondary school and he could not
hide his frustration with me. That all changed towards O’ Level as
I had my sight on getting at least 5 distinctions and hopefully enrol
at Fletcher High School and study Mathematics, Biology and Chemistry
at A’ Level. I had to concentrate on all my 8 subjects including
those I did not like such as Shona and Building Studies.
At
O’Level I got 4 distinctions and during the sixth form selection, I
did not make it into to Fletcher High School nor Gokomere High School
my second option and instead I was selected by Mutambara High School
in Chimanimani. The day I got the acceptance letter, I boarded the
overnight train to Mutare and took the B&C bus to Chimanimani.
The school reminded me of Nhowe Mission closer to our village in
Mukarakate communal areas in Murewa. I knew there and then that I
would not come to this school. After about two hours at the school, I
got a lift back to the main road to Mutare and got transport back to Mutare just in time for the night
train back to Harare. I then enrolled at Marondera High School
instead.
When
my A'Level results came out in early 1996, I did not make it to the
University of Zimbabwe. During that time the government was fully
sponsoring university students and giving them generous grants.
Getting into UZ was a ticket out of poverty and for most students it
did not really matter which program you pursued at that time. It was
prestigious just being accepted into UZ. My choices included joining
civil service, apprenticeship, joining private sector, going to
Hillside Teachers' college and train as Science or Mathematics
teacher etc. I never wanted to be a full time teacher so I never
applied to any teachers' college. During my temporary teaching years, I met
many people who had completed Bsc degrees in fields such as general
science subjects as well as agriculture ending up teaching and this
pained me a lot. My A’ Level Mathematics teacher had graduated with
an Economics Honours degree. I had set my sights on pursuing studies with the
Chartered Institute of Management Accounting (CIMA UK). After I
started working as a temporary teacher, I enrolled for the course and
bought study materials.
In
January 1997 I got a year contract to teach at Kambarami Secondary
School and I elected to rent a room with electricity at Murewa Growth
point so that I could study. During the weekends, I would go to CIMA
library in Harare. I knew I needed to get a job in Harare. I got a
job as an apprentice at NCR Systemedia in Southerton Industrial area
next to CAPS Pharmaceuticals. My salary as a temporary teacher had
been $2 600.00 and now as an apprentice I got paid a stipend of $840
per month. I got slightly more as I worked overtime. Luckily I stayed
with my aunt and uncle Mr and Mrs Maphosa in Sunningdale and I would
walk to and from Sunningdale through Mbare and Ardbennie to work. By
the end of 1997, the Zimbabwean dollar fell against major currencies
and I knew I could not afford to continue with my studies. I really
regretted the decision I had made to leave temporary teaching. One of the jobs we were working on around the Heroes day holidays in August 1997 was printing the prospectus and share application forms for Commercial Bank of Zimbabwe. At that time the government was now privatizing CBZ and the bank was going to list on Zimbabwe Stock Exchange. Mr Gideon Gono then heading the parastatal CBZ came in to our printing section and spoke to my printing supervisor.
Fortunately,
since I was in Harare I could respond to adverts and attend
interviews. I responded to an advert in The Herald newspaper for
Trainee Underwriters. I nearly missed the opportunity. I was
interviewed by the Employment Agent on his way out of his office and
he gave arranged an interview for me with the human resources
manager at Eagle Insurance Company (then a subsidiary of South
Africa Eagle Insurance). I arrived for the interview around 4pm and I
was interviewed after 5pm. I was then called in for a second
interview with the head of departments. I went to the library at the
Insurance Institute of Zimbabwe old offices at the First Mutual
Life building in down town Harare. I learnt all I could about
Insurance. On 1 December 1997, I started work as a trainee
underwriter. The irony is that if I had not taken the risk to come to
Harare for a much lower salary, I could have missed this opportunity.
At
Eagle Insurance, I used the computer for the first time. We went
through a formal training program and we had to write the Certificate
of Competency Certificate in March 1998 and I passed it. The
next stage was to study towards the Associateship diploma either
through Insurance Institute of South Africa or Chartered
Insurance Institute (UK). Most of us chose the South African
route because the fees in Rands were more affordable than in
British Pounds. At that time most insurance companies in Zimbabwe
were controlled from South Africa and also we used the Multi- Mark
Policy Wording developed in South Africa. The company extended study
loans to us. The insurance Institute of Zimbabwe organised
many courses that were taught by Associates and Fellows of the
institute who were also senior managers in the insurance industry and
I attended those courses. For me my A-levels Mathematics background
came in handy especially probability that I had learnt in the
Statistics option as I found it very easy to understand the concept
of pooling of risks.
In
mid 1999, I joined Diamond Insurance company by that time I was
earning more than 3 times what I had earned as a temporary teacher, I
was grateful that I had not made it to UZ to study for one of the
B.Sc. degrees as chances were very high that I would have ended up
being a teacher. Towards the end of 2002 I got my first
management position at Zimbabwe Insurance Brokers. The month I joined
ZIB they were preparing for their strategy session for 2003 and all
managers went for a weekend strategy session 140kms away at Kadoma
Ranch Motel. I saw the managing director and the three general
managers taking to task every manager who had presented their
strategy. I learnt the importance of being thoroughly prepared. I
passed my Associateship exams in 2003 and got a job at Zimnat Lion
Insurance company as an underwriting manager starting 1 January 2004.
At Zimnat Lion management meetings and strategy sessions were quite
intense. In the management team we had chartered accountants,
insurance professionals, lawyers, human resources professionals, IT
professionals, engineers etc. and you had to be well prepared and be
able to defend your presentation and your ideas.
In
2005 I enrolled for the MBA and dropped out after completing one
module. The same year, I completed my Fellowship exams. Beginning of
2006, I joined the Society of Fellows and we held our first meeting
at Harare club. The same year, I was transferred to Bulawayo and
became the branch manager. The economic environment in Zimbabwe
continued to deteriorate characterised by shortage of basic goods and
record inflation. On 22 August 2007, I collected my 5 year quota work
permit at the South African Embassy in Harare. The following morning
I left Bulawayo and arrived in Pretoria to start a new chapter. I
responded to an advert in Pretoria News for a Business Claims Advisor
at OUTsurance. I did a telephonic interview and the recruiter told me
that I had not impressed her very much, what she did not know was
that when I received her call, I had been driving back to Pretoria
from another interview in Sandton and I had parked on the side of the
road along N1 by the Buccleuch interchange and switched the car off
and closed all the windows. She invited me for an interview at the
head office in centurion on Friday 31 August 2007.
During
the interview I was told I had got the job and I waited whilst the
offer letter was drafted. On Monday 3 September 2007, I started my
two months training and I did not struggle with the internal exams
and I maintained an average of around 97% in all the tests I wrote. I
worked at OUTsurance for 10 years and 1 month and left in 2 October
2017. I then came back on 1 April 2018.
I
was fortunate to go through formal in-house training in most
insurance companies that I worked for. The companies that I worked
for provided study loans for insurance related courses and this
was helpful especially with the constantly devaluing Zimbabwean
dollar. At AIG Zimbabwe the incentive was even better in that once
you passed the company would write off your study loans. Another
very important plus was all the mentors I came across at all the
insurance companies that I worked for. I wrote about these mentors in
my previous blog in 2007
http://kanyokad.blogspot.com/2017/09/what-i-have-learnt-in-my-21-years-of.html.
That decision I took in July
1997 to go to Harare although it looked not very rational at the
time. It opened many doors for me and I think the outcome exceeded my
wildest imagination.
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