Tendai Keith Guvamombe
NSSA Strategy Review and 2026 Annual Planning Workshop served as a powerful catalyst for change, emphasizing the critical need for an outward-looking and accountable organizational strategy.
The session, led by Mr. Joseph Wititu from the Corporate Governance Unit, centered on a compelling symbolic representation: the “empty chair.”
This “empty chair,” Wititu explained, is not a vacant seat but a potent symbol for the essential, often-unvoiced needs of all stakeholders. The forthcoming 2026-2030 five-year strategy must endeavor to satisfy these needs, ensuring they remain the core focus of NSSA’s mandate.
Mr. Wititu issued a passionate warning against the peril of organizational complacency. He challenged NSSA leadership to reject the tendency to become desensitized to critical internal and external issues.
He pointed to specific areas demanding vigilance, including structural flaws, client needs, stakeholder interests, employee burnout, and talent gaps. Accepting dysfunctional behaviors as “normal” is a direct pathway to strategic failure, he stressed.
Looking ahead, the Corporate Governance Unit’s guidance focused on alignment and purpose. NSSA was strongly urged to ensure its new strategic direction is fully aligned with the provisions of the PECG Act (Public Entities Corporate Governance Act).
Furthermore, in light of Zimbabwe’s national goal of attaining an emerging upper-middle-income society by 2030, NSSA must prioritize and improve the welfare of its pensioners.
The session concluded with a powerful call to action: NSSA’s strategy must embody clear, compelling goals that unequivocally reflect its “lifelong promise.” This strategic clarity is paramount to positioning the organization for a resilient, prosperous, and stakeholder-centric future.
The sentiment from the day underscored a foundational principle: a robust strategy is built on vigilance, accountability, and an unshakeable commitment to those it serves.
