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Access Bank CEO Sandile Shabalala champions CEO–corporate affairs alignment at JSE SymposiumThe annual JSE Corporate Affairs Symposium brought together South Africa’s leading voices from business, government, labour, and civil society to explore how corporate affairs leaders can shape national competitiveness in a time of slow growth, fragile confidence and shifting trust. ![]() Delivering the keynote address, Mr. Sandile Shabalala, CEO of Access Bank South Africa called for a stronger CEO–corporate affairs compact and practical, measurable commitments that translate belief into delivery. A moment for leadership and deliveryMr Shabalala opened with a powerful story of a young Gauteng entrepreneur who succeeded once she found a financial partner who believed in her and backed that belief with action. “Belief is not sentiment. Belief is a decision to move from intention to delivery,” he told the audience Against the backdrop of South Africa’s 33.2% unemployment rate and the 2025 Edelman Trust Barometer showing that 77% of South Africans trust their employer to do what is right, Mr Shabalala stressed that leadership must focus on credibility and tangible outcomes. “This is not a narrow communications conference,” he said. “It is a leadership forum about credibility, policy alignment, and national competitiveness.” The CEO–corporate affairs compactMr Shabalala outlined what he called a compact between CEOs and Corporate Affairs leaders, “CEOs owe corporate affairs the clarity of purpose tied to national outcomes, a mandate to work across silos, and cover when trade-offs become tough.” He added, “Corporate Affairs owes executives the foresight, insight into what communities value, visible progress and reliable execution”. He explained how Access Bank operationalises this through a quarterly “trust and impact review”, a three-page working session mapping key stakeholder issues, commitments and progress, and the next 90 days of action SA Inc as a Shared MandateHighlighting the concept of “SA Inc”, Mr Shabalala urged business, government, labour and civil society to align around executable outcomes. He proposed two practical steps:
“These outcomes are practical, measurable and within reach of every leader in this room,” he noted. Lessons from Access Bank’s journeyMr Shabalala shared three stories from Access Bank South Africa’s journey:
Practical tools for leadersIn his keynote, Mr Shabalala shared tools that any leadership team can use:
“If you cannot describe the proof in one sentence, do not say it yet,” he advised The broader symposium agenda explored G20 and B20 priorities, digital disruption, misinformation risks and sustainability and placing corporate affairs “firmly at the strategy table.” Mr Shabalala closed with a call to action: “Belief is not a press release. Belief is backing people with action. If we believe in our entrepreneurs, our young people and in women who are building businesses, and act on that belief, SA Inc will move forward.”
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