Vodacom harnesses ICT to empower learners, farmers, teachers, and end gender-based violence

Business has an obligation to adapt its corporate social investment (CSI) to changing needs and conditions rather than doggedly following an approach which may no longer be relevant.

Speaking at the 2019 Trialogue Business in Society Conference in Johannesburg, Ms Takalani Netshitenzhe Chief Officer Corporate Affairs Vodacom Group, said that Vodacom has allocated R500 million to education, gender empowerment and sanitation in schools over the next five years.

Netshitenzhe says that while Vodacom has pursued its Connect For Good initiative for 25 years and given 3,000 schools access to e-learning in the last 10 years, the Vodacom CSI efforts must, like any effective strategy, be adaptable to change.

In 2017 the company conducted a high-level analysis of its ICT footprint and the extent to which it addressed the UN’s Sustainable Development Goals. “We realized we can’t make an impact on all 17 SDGs, so we selected seven of the 17 to drive our business strategy. We then streamlined activities in accordance with this and, to have a better impact, the Vodacom Foundation focuses on two main streams, education and gender empowerment,” remarks Netshitenzhe.

As part of consolidating its education portfolio, Vodacom introduced early childhood development (ECD) into its education program, focusing on 15 ECD center’s across the country, and has also adopted one in Midrand where its head office is located. It has worked to bring about the eradication of pit latrines and to consolidate ECD initiatives.

Vodacom taken this decision because it believes it’s important for businesses to invest in CSI within communities in which they operate. The company also wants to develop an education ecosystem in Midrand and have identified 12 schools across the country, Schools of Excellence, which have computer labs.

Netshitenzhe continues, adding: “We are committed, with the Nelson Mandela Foundation and Global Citizen, to ensure schools have decent ablution facilities. Even though bricks and mortar aren’t our area of expertise, we need to be sure those attending school have dignity.”

The ECD centers and schools of excellence will, with the teachers’ center’s that Vodacom has established, effectively create a pipeline for nurturing talent and preparing them for the challenges of the Fourth Industrial Revolution.

The company has also established a command center for gender-based violence (GBV), where survivors receive valuable IT skills training. When the BBBEE ICT Sector Codes came into effect Vodacom had to decide whether to continue supporting the NPOs that are not ICT oriented in order not to lose BBBEE points. “We decided not to exit the NPOs but to migrate them to our gender empowerment stream and today we are now supporting them with ICTs and digital literacy.”

Last year Vodacom started a partnership with the United Nations and SAWIF (South African Women in Farming) and developed the Connect the Farmer app, which connects women farmers across the agricultural value chain. Many of the women were digitally illiterate so Vodacom provided them with computer literacy training. Now they’re setting up email addresses, building websites and business plans.

Netshitenzhe says Vodacom encourages employees to give back to the communities they live in, and for the beneficiaries of its CSI investment to tell their own stories, both of which can be a powerful tool for social co-hesion and employee well-being.

She added that in the current sluggish economic growth, “Companies are tightening their belts but they cannot do away with CSI. Instead they need to be creative and integrate it in all aspects of business and ensure it is included in strategies. Research indicates that investors want to be aligned with good corporate citizens, and millennials want to work for companies that give back to society.