UBA GMAP: The Ultimate Career Gamechanger Gen Zs Wouldn’t Stop Talking About

There are two words that followed us everywhere at Banking School: grit and resilience. These two words are not the kind you write in a notebook and forget, because you have to live it through the early mornings, tight deadlines, unfamiliar concepts, constant assessments, and the quiet pressure of knowing that this was bigger than you. At some point, you realise you’re not just being trained to pass exams, you’re being shaped.

That was how I knew the Graduate Management Accelerated Programme (GMAP) by United Bank for Africa truly is not just a graduate programme, but an intentional system designed to build bankers who can thrive anywhere in the world.

Executive Director, Finance, Ugo Nwaghodoh, Group Chairman, United Bank for Africa, Tony Elumelu; Group Managing Director, UBA, Oliver Alawuba, Executive Director; Deputy Managing Director, Chukwuma Nweke and Executive Director, Personal and Business Banking, United Bank for Africa, Chidi Okpala, flanked by graduands of the 2026 Graduate Management Accelerated Programme(GMAP) during the graduation ceremony held for over 700 trainees cut across Africa, in Lagos on Thursday.

From Classroom to Capacity

UBA’s GMAP Banking School is not your typical onboarding experience. It is immersive, intense, and deeply holistic.

Participants go through weeks of structured learning that combines technical banking knowledge, leadership development, ethics, customer experience, and real-world simulations. You get to learn and absolutely understand the whole finance ecosystem.

By the end of the programme, participants are not only equipped with practical skills but also emerge as certified and qualified bankers, ready to contribute meaningfully from day one.

Across multiple cohorts over the years, UBA has trained thousands of young professionals through GMAP, with each cohort representing a diverse mix of talent drawn from across Africa. The programme has consistently maintained a strong gender balance, with the most recent cohort recording over 60% female graduands, an important marker in advancing inclusion within the financial sector.

Group Chairman, United Bank for Africa, Tony Elumelu (6th left); Group Managing Director, UBA, Oliver Alawuba, (5th Left) and  Group Head, Human Resources, Modupe Akindele, flanked by some of the graduands of the 2026 Graduate Management Accelerated Programme(GMAP) class of UBA Academy, during the graduation ceremony held for over 700 trainees cut across Africa, in Lagos on Thursday.

The Experience Everyone Talks About

If you were on social media during any GMAP cohort, you probably saw the posts, the videos, the shared exhaustion, the small wins, and the friendships that formed along the way all unfold in real time.

From LinkedIn reflections to TikTok snippets, Tweets on X and Instagram stories, GMAP participants document their journey in a way that feels raw, honest, and deeply relatable.

The Gen Zs, often described as “hard to understand” or “too unconventional,” thrive on authenticity, community, and purpose, and GMAP meets them right there, channelling their energy into the whole holistic experience.

Executive Director, Personal and Business Banking, United Bank for Africa, Chidi Okpala; Group Executive, Treasury and Financial Institution, Samuel Ocheo; Executive Director, Finance and Risk Management, Ugo Nwaghodoh; Executive Director, Corporate Banking, Tosin Adewuyi; Group Managing Director, UBA, Oliver Alawuba, Executive Director; Deputy Managing Director, Chukwuma Nweke; Company Secretary, Bili Odum and Executive Director, Digital Banking, Emmanuel Lamptey flanked by prize winners of the 2026 Graduate Management Accelerated Programme(GMAP) during the graduation ceremony held for over 700 trainees cut across Africa, in Lagos on Thursday.

That’s why they won’t stop talking about it.

The programme has unintentionally become a digital storytelling movement, with each cohort amplifying UBA’s brand through lived experiences. In an era where employer branding is heavily influenced by peer narratives, GMAP stands out as one of the few programmes that organically trends, not through campaigns, but through people.

Beyond Training: A Pan-African Vision

To fully understand GMAP, you have to zoom out.

UBA, under the leadership of its Group Chairman, Tony Elumelu, has consistently pushed a vision of Africa driven by Africans. A vision that is not abstract but operationalised through initiatives like GMAP.

Participants are drawn from the 20 African countries where UBA operates, creating a melting pot of cultures, perspectives, and ideas. In one classroom, you’ll find Nigerians, Ghanaians, Zambians, Cameroonians, and more, learning, collaborating, and building networks that extend beyond borders pushing capacity building at scale.

By investing in young talent across the continent, UBA has moved on from just filling roles to strengthening Africa’s financial ecosystem. These graduates go on to support SMEs, facilitate trade, drive financial inclusion, and contribute to economic growth in their respective countries.

In essence, GMAP is quietly shaping the future of African banking.

Executive Director, Personal and Business Banking, United Bank for Africa, Chidi Okpala; Group Executive, Treasury and Financial Institution, Samuel Ocheo; Executive Director, Finance and Risk Management, Ugo Nwaghodoh; Executive Director, Corporate Banking, Tosin Adewuyi; Group Managing Director, UBA, Oliver Alawuba, Executive Director; Deputy Managing Director, Chukwuma Nweke; Company Secretary, Bili Odum and Executive Director, Digital Banking, Emmanuel Lamptey flanked by prize winners of the 2026 Graduate Management Accelerated Programme(GMAP) during the graduation ceremony held for over 700 trainees cut across Africa, in Lagos on Thursday.

A Moment Worth Celebrating

The recently concluded graduation ceremony in Lagos marked another milestone, with over 700 young professionals from Cohorts 19 and 20 officially inducted into the UBA workforce.

Giving a clear statement that, despite global economic uncertainties, investment in youth remains a priority, that Africa’s future is being built intentionally, and that young people, when given the right platform, will rise.

Looking back at previous cohorts, the impact becomes even clearer. GMAP alumni are already making strides across various departments within the bank, marketing, risk, operations, customer experience, and beyond. Many have taken on leadership responsibilities early in their careers, reinforcing the programme’s effectiveness.

What It Really Means

For me, GMAP was not just about becoming a banker as it was more about becoming more. More aware, more disciplined, more confident, and more ready for the realities of the professional world.

It taught me that growth is not always comfortable, but it is always necessary. It showed me the power of shared experiences and the importance of building something bigger than yourself.

And for many young Africans, it represents a chance to be seen, to be equipped, and to be empowered.

The Bigger Picture

In a time where youth unemployment remains a critical challenge across Africa, programmes like GMAP offer a scalable solution. They bridge the gap between education and employability, transforming graduates into professionals who can immediately add value, redefining what is possible.

For other Gen Zs, it’s about purpose, impact, and growth that comes with getting a job, as GMAP delivers on all three.

That is why the conversations won’t stop, why the stories keep coming, and ultimately why it matters, because beyond the hashtags and the social media buzz, there is something real happening here, something intentional, something transformative, and something truly worth talking about.

And at the centre of it all is United Bank for Africa, building careers, shaping a generation and, in many ways, helping to define the future of Africa’s workforce.

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