Posts Tagged BBBEE
ABVA gets a new Board
Posted by Gavin in Uncategorized on July 5th, 2010
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The following individuals have been elected to serve on the ABVA Board for the 2010/2012 term of office.
1. Brigitte Brun, AQRate KZN (Pty) Ltd
2. Chris van Wyk, AQRate (Pty) Ltd
3. Dumisani Mpafa, Black Economic Empowerment Verification Agency t/a BEEVER Agency cc
4. Kate Moloto, Moloto BEE Verifications cc
5. Loyiso Majija, EmpowerLogic (Pty) Ltd
6. Tony Balshaw, Grant Thornton East London
7. Wade van Rooyen, IQuad Verification Services (Pty) Ltd
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With a new board comes new responsibility, let us hope that these new board members put the interests of True Empowerment and transformation first and not lobby for more business by offering interpretations that benefits verification at the cost of transformation.
The DTI Lashes out at Solidarity
Posted by Gavin in BBBEE Knowledge, General on March 25th, 2010
The Department of Trade and Industry has for the very first time defended its policies on B-BBEE by lashing out at Solidarity. This is of course very good news from an empowerment perspective because the DTI has now shown clear support for this policy and an intention to implement it correctly. A lot of credit can be given to the DTI for taking this very important step.
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The Department of Trade and Industry (the dti), has noted media reports
regarding the findings of trade union Solidarity research that Black
Economic Empowerment (BEE) has led to a remarkable increase in black
ownership on the Johannesburg Stock Exchange (JSE), as well as ownership
of insurance policies.
the dti is particularly concerned about these reports, as they do not
address the issue of direct ownership which is critical when measuring,
the level of transformation.
Department’s BEE Chief Director Ms Nomonde Mesatywa, says it appears
that the survey focuses on measuring indirect ownership through pension
funds, medical schemes and insurance polices, etc.
According to her, unlike the finding of Solidarity, government has
conceded a maximum of 40% in terms of measuring indirect ownership.
“In relation to the Solidarity findings of 23.8% it is still far
below the 40% mark in terms of the Mandated Investments Exclusion
Principle, where 15% of direct ownership (unencumbered) is still
required. The actual direct ownership in the JSE listed companies is
still encumbered; therefore it is premature to suggest that the
implementation of BEE has contributed more to the development and
promotion of a black middleclass than is recognized” she said.
Mesatywa added that BBBEE is about more than just ownership of the JSE
and that other elements need to be considered.
“We need to consider the other elements like employment equity,
skills development, Enterprise Development, Procurement etc as well. The
effective implementation of B-BBEE must be measured holistically by
utilizing the Balance Scorecard of Codes of Good Practice, thus a
research on one element can not presuppose that there has been
sufficient empowered and that the lives of black people across the
spectrum has significantly improved”
Last month at the inauguration of BBBEE Advisory, Deputy President
Kgalema Motlanthe, said that the pace of transformation has been
painfully slow. This statement has been amplified by the recent study
commissioned by Business Unity SA which revealed equality in the upper
echelons of corporate SA has not yet been achieved, as Blacks and women
continue to be under-represented in all directorships and top executive
leadership positions of the JSE-listed companies.
The department is in a process of doing a follow-up on the BBBEE
baseline study that was done for 2007/8 in measure the impact of BBBEE
three years post the gazetting of the Codes of Good Practice.
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The Department of Trade and Industry (the dti), has noted media reports regarding the findings of trade union Solidarity research that Black Economic Empowerment (BEE) has led to a remarkable increase in black ownership on the Johannesburg Stock Exchange (JSE), as well as ownership of insurance policies. the dti is particularly concerned about these reports, as they do not address the issue of direct ownership which is critical when measuring, the level of transformation. Department’s BEE Chief Director Ms Nomonde Mesatywa, says it appears that the survey focuses on measuring indirect ownership through pension funds, medical schemes and insurance polices, etc. According to her, unlike the finding of Solidarity, government has conceded a maximum of 40% in terms of measuring indirect ownership. “In relation to the Solidarity findings of 23.8% it is still far below the 40% mark in terms of the Mandated Investments Exclusion Principle, where 15% of direct ownership (unencumbered) is still required. The actual direct ownership in the JSE listed companies is still encumbered; therefore it is premature to suggest that the implementation of BEE has contributed more to the development and promotion of a black middleclass than is recognized” she said. Mesatywa added that BBBEE is about more than just ownership of the JSE and that other elements need to be considered. “We need to consider the other elements like employment equity, skills development, Enterprise Development, Procurement etc as well. The effective implementation of B-BBEE must be measured holistically by utilizing the Balance Scorecard of Codes of Good Practice, thus a research on one element can not presuppose that there has been sufficient empowered and that the lives of black people across the spectrum has significantly improved” Last month at the inauguration of BBBEE Advisory, Deputy President Kgalema Motlanthe, said that the pace of transformation has been painfully slow. This statement has been amplified by the recent study commissioned by Business Unity SA which revealed equality in the upper echelons of corporate SA has not yet been achieved, as Blacks and women continue to be under-represented in all directorships and top executive leadership positions of the JSE-listed companies. The department is in a process of doing a follow-up on the BBBEE baseline study that was done for 2007/8 in measure the impact of BBBEE three years post the gazetting of the Codes of Good Practice.
Steps to a successful BEE Scorecard
Posted by Gavin in BBBEE Knowledge, General, Scorecard points on December 1st, 2009
Your BEE scorecard is one of the essential tools required to ensure your customers are satisfied and you grow your business. However the problem is it can take a tremendous amount of time to prepare a complete scorecard, in particular Preferential Procurement, trying to get a copy of every suppliers BEE scorecard. It is also hugely difficult to calculate how many points each supplier is worth. The rest of the scorecard can also take unnecessary time and cost money collecting documentation.
Steps to a successful BEE Scorecard:
The rationale: Each business needs a BEE scorecard because their customers need a scorecard.
Start with a simple solution – understand the scorecard in its simplest form
- The elements
- The indicators
- The targets
- How the scoring works
This works really well and certainly encourages more businesses to comply. The difficulty though is not only producing a scorecard that satisfies everyone but also finding cheap and easy points that help you beat your competitors score.
The next step: Earning cost effective and easy points
- Track the areas where you have already earned points – ie Skills Development
- Find creative ways of earning additional points
Finally prepare a report. Make sure you have a competitive score. If it is below your competitors score, make sure that your score is at least compliant and then use your competitors score to benchmark your next years target score.
A word to the wise. BEE contributions are taken retrospectively like an accounting audit. If you did not reach your target this year you will have to wait until next to improve you score. Unfortunately you can’t wait until you have an audit to reach your targets.
I Feel Good After Enterprise Development
Posted by Gavin in Enterprise Development, Marketing, Scorecard points, True Empowerment on August 12th, 2009
Msizi of Mabuya Glass Merchants has now made a few sales after our newsletter talked about his business and the glass white boards.
It is really a great feeling to walk into the office and look over at the fax machine and see orders.
In addition to helping Msizi our business will earn points. A real win win.

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