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100 LIONESSES: Dr Jennifer Riria, a business leader empowering Kenya's women

September 24, 2017 Melanie Hawken
Dr. Jennifer Riria

Dr. Jennifer Riria

Dr. Jennifer Riria is the Group CEO of Kenya Women Holding and one of Africa's leading women entrepreneurs who has always been on a mission to transform the lives of women and their families in her native Kenya. She is distinguished as a microfinance banker and practitioner, researcher and gender specialist. She has served in many leadership roles for which she has been recognized locally and internationally. In 2013 she was awarded the Ernst & Young (EY) Entrepreneur of the year, East Africa 2013, and subsequently, the EY Entrepreneur of the Year Award 2014, at which point she was admitted to EY’s Global Hall of Fame.

 

Kenya Women Holding is a microfinance, banking and insurance group that works with over 900,000 women, employs 2,800 people and since inception has disbursed $1.3bn of loans, each one averaging less than $600. It is Kenya’s largest micro-finance provider working together with many leading civil rights organizations. Kenya Women Holding also coordinates the Tuvuke Initiative for a Peaceful and Fair Electoral Process, which works to prevent violence and create a safer, healthier environment for Kenyan democracy. 

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The Startup Story of Jennifer Riria

If there is one woman that is proof positive of the power of individual entrepreneurs to make a difference, it is Dr Jennifer Riria. She has singlehandedly transformed the microfinance industry in Kenya in order to tangibly improve the lives of women. Because of her efforts, hundreds of thousands of Kenyan women now have access to finance, previously not available to them, and as a result, are today empowered to live their lives and fulfill their own potential and dreams. 

Jennifer’s story starts in a Kenyan village where she was born the fourth child and fourth daughter in a family of 10 children. Her father worked and lived off the garden and although the family was poor, there were other family members who were even poorer living with them. Each day she would walk the 4km to school in her bare feet, washing out her school dress each night. Her life consisted of schoolwork by day and doing her daily chores in the evening, fetching water, looking after the cows, chopping firewood, helping to cook and looking after the babies. That was her life. She performed well in primary school and, as a result, was offered a place at the prestigious Precious Blood High School in Nairobi which was 700km away from home. She saw it as an opportunity to get on in life and was determined to attend the school, despite her parents being opposed to the idea. She embarked upon her high school career, boarding a bus and carrying only her clean underwear and a clean handkerchief. At the end of high school, however, Jennifer found herself pregnant and a mother, to which her father objected strongly. She did not let her situation stop her education, and with her child went on to study at the University of Dar es Salaam in Tanzania, where she obtained a scholarship, after which she went on to study for her prestigious masters degree at the University of Leeds in the UK. On her return to Nairobi, she commenced work on her PhD, taking as her theme a subject close to her heart – women, education and development.  Having completed her PhD, she began working on policies to contribute towards child survival among communities in central Kenya, realising along the way that child survival is intrinsically connected to the welfare of the mother. She recognized that the country’s mothers didn’t simply need education just to learn how to read and write, but also how to make a livelihood. Importantly, they also needed to have access to credit finance, to be able to change their lives. This acknowledgement was to define Jennifer’s career path from that point onwards. But before she became the advocate for women’s economic empowerment that she is known as today, Jennifer taught at Kenyatta University in Kenya for ten years. It was only after a subsequent stint in the United Nations that she took a full step into the world of microfinance.

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“We take financing and products to the poor people in the villages. They do not come to us, and what poor people need is not big money. But, it is access to it and that is what micro finance has been able to do.”

In 1991, Kenya Women Finance Trust (KWFT), the precursor to today’s Kenya Women Microfinance Bank (KWMB), a subsidiary of Kenya Women Holding, was in a troubled state. Despite her lack of experience in the financial industry, Jennifer bravely took the helm of the company and relentlessly sought education, support and advice from those around her. In those early days, she was the loan officer, the accountant, the auditor – in fact, she did everything. Her advantage in the role was that she had personally experience of knowing what poverty and hunger actually means, and she knew these women needed access to finance to positively change their lives. Under her direction over the years, the bank emerged as a model microfinance institution, achieving its mission and positively impacting the lives of Kenya’s women. In fact, it won the first Women’s World Banking Excellence in Leadership Award launched in 2011. The award recognizes the “role-model” institution in the network that exemplifies both excellence in women leadership and excellence in performance. 

“Over the last 24 years we have reached more than 2.3 million women and their families. We have disbursed over 1.3 billion Kenyan shillings. We have products that address the concerns of women, that address survival.” 

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Today, Jennifer is the Group CEO of Kenya Women Holding Group working with 900,000 women, mostly in rural Kenya. She is the Kenyan country winner of the 2014 EY World Entrepreneur of the Year award. Her career has been focused on transforming the lives of women – and with them, their families – in her native Kenya. The company has grown substantially during her time at the helm and now employs 2,800 people and since inception has disbursed $1.3bn of loans, each one averaging less than $600. She is also chairwoman of Women’s World Banking, a global microfinance network consisting of over 53 MFIs from 30 countries, the Association of Microfinance Institutions, and an initiative focused on strengthening democratic processes in Kenya.

To cap what has been an incredible career to date, in 2014, Jennifer launched her autobiography at a dazzling event at the Fairview Hotel in Nairobi. She also launched a straight-shooting book she authored titled: 'A History of Higher Education in Kenya'. It spells out the weaknesses of the country's higher education system and the problems this has generated.

Learn more about Kenya Women Holding here.

Read Dr Jennifer Riria's full 100 Lionesses Profile here.
In 100 Lionesses Project Tags Jennifer Riria
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