Everyone has a story. Everyone is a leader in their own way,鈥 says Abdul-Aziz Garuba, AMBA'12. He should know. The Accelerated MBA grad is the host of Made to Lead, an up-and-coming podcast that鈥檚 all about leadership.
For Garuba, 35, whose day job is director of finance transformation initiatives at RBC Capital Markets, Made to Lead is more than a hobby. It鈥檚 a passion with a purpose. It showcases the personal and professional stories of leaders of African descent. 鈥淚t is easy sometimes to use the same paintbrush to label a whole group of people, particularly Black individuals,鈥 says Garuba. 鈥淏ut there is uniqueness in everyone. Africans and Black people have to tell our stories ourselves. No one鈥檚 going to do that for us. That鈥檚 what I鈥檓 trying to do.鈥
In this profile, we鈥檒l dig into his podcast, what drove him to start it, and what he hopes to accomplish. We鈥檒l also learn about his story and career path.
Q: Your background is in accounting and finance. So how did you become a podcaster?
Garuba: The idea started in 2018 with the Canadian Association of Urban Financial Professionals, which I鈥檓 involved with. For our 20th anniversary, we put on an event called Black on Bay Street to celebrate the progress of the organization and Black professionals on Bay Street. I thought: How do we continue this story? I was interested in podcasting so I wrote down a few concept ideas. At the beginning of 2020, I decided to do it. But I changed the focus to be not on Black people on Bay Street but about people of African descent globally.
Q: Why did you decide to focus on leadership as a theme?
Garuba: I鈥檝e always had a thing for leadership, impact, and influence. I wanted to profile people who are leading in their own way but don鈥檛 always have the title. Especially for Black people, leadership can be very community-focused. They may have leadership in their community but not necessarily a title in their professional lives. I started playing with the name and design and branding in early 2020. From all the research I did on podcasts, I thought people would listen on their way to work. Then the pandemic hit and everyone鈥檚 commute just stopped. But I launched it anyway [in March last year], and it just took off.
A year later, Made to Lead has two seasons and 23 episodes recorded. A third season started in April. Each episode runs around 45 minutes. Garuba asks the questions, then steps back to give his guests time and space to tell their stories 鈥 where they grew up, where they went to school, their influences, how they moved up the career ladder, their hardships and what drives them. It鈥檚 a fascinating mix of inspiration and information led by Garuba, a deft interviewer with a soft touch.
Few of his guests are famous. Yet they make for compelling interviews. Omonye Phillips [Season 2, Episode 9, 鈥淚t鈥檚 All in the Mind鈥漖, for example, is divisional vice-president of pharmacy operations at Rite Aid and one of the youngest executives at a Fortune 500 company. She pursued a career in health care after her mom died of cancer when she was 10. Mide Akerewusi [Season 2, Episode 10 and 11, 鈥淔racture to Failure to Philanthropy鈥漖 grew up homeless with a single mom. He now helps others as CEO of AgentsC, a non-profit consultancy specializing in social change.
Q: Your podcast has listeners around the world. Any thought on why it has caught on?
Garuba: I think because there wasn鈥檛 anything within the space on a podcast level that some of my audience could relate to. I modelled my show after Guy Raz鈥檚 How I Built This podcast, because I love that style. I love learning about not just the business that these entrepreneurs started but their personalities. And I wasn鈥檛 able to find something that did the same for Black people or for Africans in particular. And that鈥檚 what people have told me: 鈥淚 haven鈥檛 found anything like this before.鈥 鈥淚 didn鈥檛 know that I needed it until I heard it.鈥 So my podcast may fill a gap that people didn鈥檛 know was missing.
Q: You feature people in many different industries, but are there similarities to their stories?
Garuba: Yes. You always hear that Black people have to work twice as hard. And that is true. But for a lot of Africans on the show, that attitude was something we were already built with from childhood. That鈥檚 how we were raised鈥攏ot to work twice as hard because you鈥檙e going to compete with other ethnicities but work hard to get what you want. That鈥檚 a uniform theme. Yes, you will experience racism or discrimination in certain cases, but the one thing people won鈥檛 be able to take away from you is the actual hard work that you do.
In fact, Garuba would make for a good guest on his own podcast. He has his own story to tell.
He was born in Nigeria to parents who taught him to love learning and reading and to see the possibilities for himself in the wider world鈥攖o be a global thinker. Part of that came from his mom. 鈥淗er attitude was, you never know where you will find yourself,鈥 he says. But his dad, a Nigerian diplomat, also had an influence. In 1999, when Garuba was 13, his father was appointed ambassador to Canada, and the family moved to Ottawa. Garuba still remembers seeing snow for the first time.
鈥淢y first winter was probably one of the worst experiences of my life,鈥 he recalls. 鈥淭here was a day in January of 2000 when the temperature dropped down to minus 50 degrees. And I still had to go to school. My school was one of only three that were still open because it was so cold. And, of course, with Africans and education, nothing is stopping you from going to school. So that was traumatic.鈥
But he had a curious mind and loved exploring Ottawa. 鈥淚 would try and learn as much as I could. I read widely so I knew a little bit about a lot of things, which as a shy, introverted kid helped in conversations. I would drop these weird stats that no one knew or cared about but people would find very interesting. You know, the bird with the largest wingspan. So I was a little bit nerdy, but it helped in creating a social environment for myself.鈥
Despite the weather, Garuba鈥檚 dad thought Canada was a good place to grow up. So after his term as ambassador ended and he was recalled to Nigeria, the family stayed put and made Ottawa their home. After high school, Garuba enrolled in business school at the University of Ottawa. At first, he wanted to pursue a career in the aviation industry. That stemmed from a love of planes he鈥檇 had since he was a boy. But accounting soon piqued his attention. Upon graduation, he got a job at the Canada Revenue Agency in Ottawa.
Working for the taxman had its advantages, but after a while Garuba began to think about a different career, perhaps consulting or investment banking. To get started, he applied to Smith鈥檚 Accelerated MBA program at Queen's. But he worried about getting in. His undergraduate grades had been average at best.
He recalls one particular AMBA admission question: 鈥淒o your grades reflect your abilities?鈥 Garuba responded with a firm no. 鈥淎nd then I proceeded to explain why. In undergrad, a lot of folks that were with me spent a lot of time focused on the academics, focused on getting good grades. I loved being in class and listening to teachers, but I didn鈥檛 enjoy tests. Instead, I got involved in all these other things, being on the student council, case competitions. Those things taught me soft skills and I had opportunities to network with some interesting business leaders in Ottawa.鈥
To his surprise, Garuba was accepted into the AMBA program and loved every minute of it. Upon graduation, he was hired by RBC for its leadership-development program. In 2018, after five years at RBC, he joined Ernst & Young as engagement manager of financial transformation. Then, last summer, he returned to RBC.
When he first moved to Toronto from Ottawa in 2013, Garuba started attending events run by the Canadian Association of Urban Financial Professionals (CAUFP), which promotes the advancement of Black professionals. It was, he says, 鈥渢he first time I had ever actually seen a room full of all Black professionals in finance鈥 ever.鈥 He joined and eventually became president, a role that he used to expand the organization鈥檚 profile, especially with the banks.
Q: How did you grow the Canadian Association of Urban Financial Professionals as president?
Garuba: I focused on building deep relationships with Bay Street. I wanted to get us to a point where we could clearly articulate the value from a diversity and inclusion talent perspective that we were bringing to firms. I also focused on closing skills gaps so that our members were well-qualified for any opportunity, so that we weren鈥檛 always going to label a lack of opportunity as being due to discrimination or racism at the first instance. So, let鈥檚 fix the things that we can control. And after doing all that, if things don鈥檛 progress, then we can boldly say that there is a systemic issue or other problems that need to be addressed that are outside of our control. Fast-forward to where the organization is right now, and it has a membership of over 700 people and growing.
Q: You also looked to encourage Black high-school students to consider a finance career, right?
Garuba: The youth piece was a part of a strategy that we developed to do what I called at the time 鈥渇lood the pipeline鈥. If out of 10 people applying for a job, there鈥檚 only one Black person, the probability of that person getting hired is 10 per cent. What if we can put six, seven people on the bench? Then the probability of at least one or two Black people being hired is much higher. So we revamped our youth strategy. We put in place programs so that young people could be more informed about opportunities. We wanted the banks to provide internships. That was the only way students could get direct experience and have a good company on their resume, so that when they graduated, it would be easier for them to get a job in the industry. Today, the banks frequently hire Black talent from our youth programs and from our organization.
In 2019, Garuba was among the winners of the Chartered Professional Accountants of Ontario鈥檚 Emerging Leader Awards. The awards go to CPAs aged 34 and under shaping the future of the accounting profession. It was recognition of the substantial contribution that he has already made in his field.
Garuba believes that he does his best work when he is helping organizations transform. That dates back even to his undergraduate days when he was on student council and took the initiative to update the student organization鈥檚 paper-based system to electronic. He also points to the work he did with the CAUFP and, of course, his current role at RBC as director of finance transformation initiatives.
Then there鈥檚 his podcast. Two months after Made to Lead debuted, George Floyd was murdered by police in Minneapolis. His death sparked outrage, protests and the Black Lives Matter movement. Inevitably, some of his guests discuss their own experiences with racism and discrimination, despite the podcast being focused on leadership and people鈥檚 career journeys.
An example: Made to Lead鈥檚 first guest in Season 1 was Dr. Obi Jude Nzeako, a trauma and orthopaedic surgeon from England who spoke about the problem of Black doctors being disciplined at a much higher rate than non-Black doctors. So, Nzeako surmised that for himself, 鈥渂eing an average surgeon just wasn鈥檛 good enough.鈥
For Garuba, such stories further emphasize the importance of highlighting Black professionals, letting them tell their stories and how they are leading in their own way.
Q: Since your podcast is about leadership, let me ask you: Who are the leaders that inspire you?
Garuba: Number one would be my dad. He was the first in his family to go to university, he was born on the farm in Nigeria. When you think of someone that literally was given birth to on the farm, and then who made it through to the highest levels of foreign service, that鈥檚 an awesome story. He鈥檚 retired now but everyone that I鈥檝e spoken with who knew him in the prime of his career, they always tell me he was a man of integrity and a man focused on helping people.
Another is Barack Obama. His presidency was one of integrity and community. As a leader, you should be concerned about those around you. You鈥檙e a servant first. And that makes the best leaders, people that know how to serve, know how to galvanize people towards a common goal. Obama did that, and his entire administration was literally scandal-free, which you can鈥檛 say about a lot of other presidents.
And then there are people like my grandmother, my mother鈥檚 mother, in Nigeria. Nigeria had a civil war in the 1960s, and she lost everything, including two sons, and had to rebuild her life again. She lost her husband before the war, too. She went from being a housewife to almost a refugee in her own country. She started life again for herself and her remaining kids through entrepreneurship and through teaching. She was the one who taught me to read and write and count. And for me, she represents the resilience and ingenuity of women.
Q: In Made to Lead you ask guests to explain their purpose in life. So, what鈥檚 your purpose?
Garuba: To impact as many people鈥檚 lives as possible, one person at a time. That鈥檚 my personal mission statement, and it drives a lot of decisions that I make or things that I decide to get involved in. So let鈥檚 take the role that I have at RBC. The work that I do will have an impact on the business, which ultimately will affect the clients and our business leaders. The work that I did with the Canadian Association of Urban Financial Professionals was highly impactful to a lot of people in changing the course of their futures. Even the one-on-one coaching and mentoring that I do, I鈥檓 happiest when people come back and say that something has changed in their life in a positive way as a result of our interaction. And that鈥檚 what gives me the greatest joy.
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