Summit Bank, a non-interest financial institution, has activated its Market Storm Initiative for the benefit of market communities and the grassroots. Committed to ethical and financial inclusion, the bank took the initiative to Wapa and Kofar Wambai markets in Kano, Gumi market in Kaduna, and Wuse market in Abuja, in a recently concluded phase.
The bank
engaged traders, entrepreneurs, and small business owners through direct
conversations, financial education, customer pain point enquiries, product
awareness, and process onboarding. This is in line with its efforts to bring
ethical banking closer to people and businesses that are part of the system
that drives everyday economy.
Summit
Bank’s Corporate Communications Lead, Usaka Bana, noted that the engagement was
an opportunity for the bank to meet people in the places where their businesses
happen daily, listen to their concerns, understand their needs, and introduce
them to financial solutions built on fairness, transparency, and real value.
“Markets
are not just places where goods are bought and sold. They are living economic
communities that can be affected by the macro environment. And behind every
shop, table, stall, and small business, there is a family, a dream, a
responsibility, and a future to build,” she said.
According
to her, the recently-concluded exercise goes beyond customer acquisition. “We
did not engage these markets just to open accounts. We went there to have
conversations, answer questions, explain our model, and understand the
realities of traders and small business owners,” Bana said, adding that when
banking is built on trust, the first step is to listen.
The
activation provided useful insights into the day-to-day realities of market
communities. Information about access to finance, business growth needs,
transaction convenience, customer expectations, and non-interest banking
clarity were harnessed. All of these point out the fact that many small
businesses need more than banking products. They need support in ways that are
clear, practical, and responsible.
Bana noted
that small businesses are pivotal to community prosperity. She said when small
businesses grow, families are supported, jobs are created, livelihoods are
protected, and local economies become stronger. “This is why access to
responsible financial solutions matter,” she added.
Summit
Bank has always expressed its model as rooted in ethics, transparency,
responsibility, and value creation. With a mission to be the trusted partner,
providing ethical banking solutions that empower individuals and communities
while making a positive impact in the lives of stakeholders for a prosperous
society, the market storm has been designed to directly engage with communities
and business owners.
Since
inception, the bank has continued to build its identity around trust, customer
value, and prosperity with a conscience. The bank is intentional about
nurturing an ethical culture that enables the customer to be heard, valued, and
respected, while nurturing an ecosystem driven by innovation, partnership, and
integrity. Clearly, the market storm initiative is one of the channels for
translating these values into practical engagement with individuals, traders,
entrepreneurs, and SMEs.
Summit
Bank, having been at the forefront of non-interest banking awareness, has
expressed commitment to continue to deepen its community engagement, expand
access to ethical banking solutions, and support the growth of businesses that
contribute responsibly to economic activities across Nigeria.

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