The Leadership Brief: FNB Appoints New CEO, Continued Leadership Across Africa

A monthly snapshot of women in leadership across Africa, highlighting recent executive appointments and structural shifts across banking, law, sport and governance.

Leadership Brief
Leadership Brief

Across South Africa and continentally, leadership is shifting, not only in who holds power, but in how leadership itself is being defined. From financial institutions and legal education to sport governance and regional banking, women are stepping into roles that have historically excluded them, often bringing a blend of technical expertise, institutional experience and long-term operational perspective.

What stands out is the range of sectors in which they are taking place. Finance, law, sport and regional banking all point to the same direction. Leadership is expanding, even if unevenly and increasingly being shaped by women who have built their careers inside the systems they now lead.

Lytania Johnson – CEO, First National Bank (FNB)

Lytania Johnson has been appointed CEO of First National Bank following a major leadership transition within FirstRand Group.

Lytania-Johnson-FNB

She has spent over two decades within the organisation, most recently leading personal banking, where she played a key role in shaping customer strategy and operational execution across one of South Africa’s largest retail banking divisions.

Her appointment places her at the centre of a broader restructuring within the group, as FNB moves toward a more integrated operating model.

Mary Vilakazi – CEO, FirstRand Group

A chartered accountant with extensive experience across corporate and investment banking, Mary Vilakazi has built her career within FirstRand Group, holding senior leadership roles across multiple divisions before stepping into the group CEO position.

Mary Vilakazi

She is the first woman to lead FirstRand, one of the continent’s most influential financial services institutions.

Her leadership reflects continuity within the organisation, where long-term internal development remains central to executive succession.

Olugbemisola Odusote – Director-General, Nigerian Law School

A legal academic and administrator with over two decades of experience, Olugbemisola Odusote has held several senior roles within the Nigerian Law School, including Director of Academics and Deputy Director-General.

Dr-Olugbemisola-Titilayo-Odusote

In January 2026, she was appointed Director-General, becoming the first woman to lead the institution since its establishment in 1962.

Her appointment marks a significant moment in the leadership of legal education in Nigeria, placing a woman at the centre of training the country’s next generation of legal professionals.

Rebecca Mbithi – Managing Director & CEO, Ecobank Kenya

A lawyer and corporate executive with a background in governance, legal advisory and financial services, Rebecca Mbithi has built a career at the intersection of regulation and banking.

Rebecca Mbithi Family Bank

In February 2026, she was appointed Managing Director and CEO of Ecobank Kenya, joining a growing cohort of women leading major financial institutions in East Africa.

Her leadership reflects the increasing presence of women in executive roles within the region’s banking sector, particularly in institutions undergoing digital and structural transformation.

Kirsty Coventry – President, International Olympic Committee

An Olympic gold medallist turned policymaker, Kirsty Coventry has transitioned from elite sport into governance, holding ministerial and international leadership roles across the sporting ecosystem.

Kirsty IOC

In 2025, she was elected President of the International Olympic Committee, becoming the first woman and the first African to hold the position.

Her leadership represents a significant shift in global sports governance, where institutional authority is increasingly shaped by diverse regional and professional backgrounds.

While these appointments reflect progress, they also highlight a broader reality: women remain underrepresented at the highest levels of leadership across many sectors in Africa and globally.

What is changing however, is the structure of visibility and expectation around leadership.

Leadership is increasingly defined by sustained institutional contribution, technical depth and the ability to operate within complex systems over time. Across the continent, women are not only participating in this shift, they are shaping it.

  • Ade Uche

    Uche Adedoyin is the Finance Lead at Director Woman, bringing a sharp editorial lens shaped by her career in financial risk. She leads the platform’s finance and entrepreneurship coverage, translating business concepts into compelling, practical insights for ambitious women across the continent. Her storytelling focuses on demystifying money, exploring growth strategies and profiling the women redefining Africa’s financial landscape.