A respected global speaker and leadership expert, from Nigeria, Rev. Dr. Sam Adeyemi, has urged African and business leaders to move beyond short-term success and embrace leadership as stewardship, warning that decisions made for quick results have the tendency to destroy long-term trust and the future of institutions.
He made the call in a presentation titled 'Building a Sustainable Leadership Legacy' on Tuesday, January 13, 2026, at the Pentecost Convention Centre, Gomoa Fetteh, during day two of the 13th Annual Jospong Leadership Conference (JLC) 2026, themed "Building Tomorrow's Leaders Today".
According to Dr. Adeyemi, leadership is not ownership but stewardship, adding that leaders do not own power, institutions, or people but hold them in trust for a season and must pass them on stronger than they found them.
He noted that this mindset was what separated managers from true legacy leaders.
“Short-term fixes can give results today and create serious problems tomorrow,” he said, adding that many organisations suffer because leaders focus on performance while neglecting people.
Drawing from his consulting experience, Dr. Adeyemi explained that some high-performing managers often become the biggest challenge for organisations. While they deliver results and generate profit, they damage people emotionally through harsh leadership styles. He said this often leads to high staff turnover, especially among young professionals.
“Losing talent is losing money. Losing young talent is losing the future,” he stressed.
He, therefore, challenged leaders to balance the pressures of today with responsibility for tomorrow, reminding participants of an African proverb which says elders give the past, but the future is borrowed from children. He urged leaders to always consider young people in decision-making and leadership development.
Using a biblical reference from 2 Timothy 2:2, Dr. Adeyemi highlighted the importance of leadership continuity and mentorship. He said leadership should be passed on deliberately, from one generation to another, without blocking the process.
A major part of his presentation focused on values under pressure. He explained that values are easy to talk about when business is good, but they are truly tested during crises. According to him, true leadership shows up when values come at a cost.
To illustrate this, he cited the famous Johnson & Johnson Tylenol crisis in the United States, where the company recalled millions of products after tampering led to deaths. Though the decision cost the company about 100 million dollars, it earned long-term trust and reshaped the industry.
“Trust is a long-term asset,” he said, noting that in Africa, where trust levels are generally low, integrity has become a major competitive advantage.
Dr. Adeyemi also shared a personal story involving dishonesty driven by desperation, stressing that poverty and pressure must never justify unethical behaviour. He explained that where trust is low, organisations are forced to spend more on controls, bureaucracy, and monitoring systems.
Another case study discussed during the session was Microsoft’s cultural reset under CEO Satya Nadella. Dr. Adeyemi said the company focused on changing mindset, culture, and people, not just strategy, proving that even successful organisations must renew themselves to remain relevant.
He concluded by calling for a new generation of African leaders built on values, trust, and stewardship across all sectors.
According to him, leadership impact is not measured by titles, profit, or applause, but by what leaders leave behind and who they empower to lead next.
The Jospong Leadership Conference 2026 brought together leaders from business, government, faith-based organisations, and civil society to discuss leadership development and sustainable impact in Africa.






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