Fidelity Bank restates commitment to entertainment industry

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Fidelity Bank Plc yesterday reiterated its resolve to support operators in the entertainment industry.
The bank’s Chief Executive Officer, Mr. Nnamdi Okonkwo, said this on the Fidelity SME Forum monitored on Inspiration FM, which he anchored yesterday. The programme had popular comedian, Atunyota Akporobomerere, whose stage name is Ali Baba.

Okonkwo said when Fidelity Bank decided to play in the SME, management of the bank sat down and crafted a strategy about how to add value to the sector.

“For about seven years now, our strategy has been to focus on segments. A lot of people get entertained by musicians, they see people in the movie industry and get entertained. But we as bankers, we look at the business components of what people do and how to transform those talents into business.

“So, we are here to help this industry identify the business side of their industry and teach them basic business principles such as access to finance, access to business, and how you can even begin to diversify beyond entertainment,” he added.

According to Okonkwo, the bank has an SME division called the Managed SMEs unit which is saddled with the task of ensuring that operators in the SME segment get the desired support.
He revealed that the end of the sixth week of the ongoing SME Forum series on the entertainment industry, Fidelity Bank would thereafter run a free seminar for operators in the industry.
“A lot of people are clueless about finance. Indeed, that is why the CBN takes financial literacy seriously. It is in line with this that Fidelity Bank tries to help these people the money and business part of what they do.

Image result for Don Jazzy, P-Square

We have seen superstars go down to penury, from being millionaires and billionaires and we don’t want that to happen to our entertainment industry players. So, that seminar would look at people who succeeded in the past and suddenly became poor because of management of their finances. Whether you are an Ali Baba, Don Jazzy, P-Square, etc, what matters is at the end of the day is how you are going to sustain your brand,” he added.

On his part, while speaking about how he has been able to sustain his brand profile, Akporobomerere said: “First you must understand that showbiz is dynamic and you are as good as your last joke. So, like in every other kind of business, if you rely on old landmarks, you will lose the footprints of the future.

“So, for me, it is that I continue to make sure that I improve myself, I try to get better and that I am never complacent in my career. I try to make sure that I press the refreshal button all the time. For me, it is a case of trying to make sure you understand what the needs are. The current needs are what a practitioner in the entertainment industry should do.

“By next year, I would be 30 years in comedy. But if I stand on the stage, what people would be judging me with is not by the jokes that I tell, but by the quality of jokes I tell. So, if the quality of jokes I tell are still jokes of 30 years ago, nobody would listen to me.”

(Thisdaylive)