The FirstRand Empowerment Foundation's strategic approach to ending gender-based violence

In South Africa, gender-based violence isn't just a social crisis; it's a structural one - embedded in economic inequality, institutional failures, and the very systems that shape how communities function. Addressing it requires more than awareness campaigns or symbolic gestures. It demands strategic thinking, measurable outcomes and partnerships between organisations doing the vital work on the ground.

This is the philosophy that drives the FirstRand Empowerment Foundation's (FREF) approach to combatting gender-based violence and femicide. The FREF’s definition of success is deliberately specific in this regard, striving for “tangible results from interventions that culminate in verifiable changes - both short-term and long-term - through behavioural or attitudinal change of perpetrators, survivors and beneficiaries, leading to improved situations for survivors and communities, and their access to services, institutional and other reforms.”

This definition serves as the north star for the Foundation’s GBVF efforts - guiding every investment decision, partnership and intervention. It demands accountability, requires evidence, and rejects approaches that prioritise visibility over impact. The approach is underpinned by a strategic framework aligned with South Africa's National Strategic Plan on GBV, a built on three carefully selected pillars:

1. Prevention and building social cohesion. This tackles GBV at its source by addressing root causes. The Foundation supports community-based organisations deeply entrenched in the communities they serve so that they challenge the social and cultural norms that allow GBV to persist.

2. Economic power. This pillar recognises that financial independence is often the difference between leaving a dangerous situation and being trapped in it. The FREF supports initiatives that empower women through access to education, training, work and entrepreneurship—pathways to long-term economic independence that break cycles of violence.

3. Research and information management. This pillar ensures interventions are grounded in evidence. Proper research on gender-based violence leads to better understanding, more effective prevention and successful prosecution of perpetrators.

These pillars work together, creating a comprehensive approach that addresses immediate safety needs while tackling systemic causes.

Strategy in action

The FREF's strategy acknowledges the fundamental reality that corporations can’t solve GBV alone. Effective solutions require organisations that have earned community trust, developed innovative approaches, and demonstrated measurable impact. The FREF’s role is therefore to identify and partner with these organisations to amplify their work through strategic investment.

But strategy on paper is one thing. Strategy in practice requires translating frameworks into actions people can understand and support. A recent example of the FREF’s ability to do this took the form of a two-day initiative with FNB staff that exemplified how the GBVF pillars, partnerships, and definition of success work together.

On 5 November, FREF hosted a webinar entitled Let's Talk About GBV - Understanding, Awareness, and Action. Led by Employee Wellbeing Specialists Nombuso Kunene and Claire Kelty, the webinar provided crucial context about how GBV manifests in South African society and why addressing it is everyone's responsibility.

The following day, understanding was transformed into visible action as nearly 350 employees gathered for the GBVF Move IT Challenge at FirstRand's Johannesburg campus. More than a wellness initiative, this was a strategic showcase demonstrating how the FREF's pillars come to life through partnerships with organisations driving real impact. Two of those partners, Memeza and the GBVF Response Fund participated in the event to show employees exactly how strategic investment creates measurable change.

Move-It is more than an initiative; it’s a movement. It’s about turning intention into action with purpose. Through Move-It, our people come together to create meaningful impact, guided by pillars that focus on empowerment, collaboration and change. Move-It is a FirstRand internal movement that turns everyday activity into real impact. For every 30 minutes we move, FirstRand donates R30 to a Move-It initiatives. For 16 Days of Activism, every step we take is a step toward safety, dignity and equality for all. 

Dr. Thuli Mthethwa and the Memeza team demonstrated the Prevention and Justice pillars in action. They showed how their technology-based community safety solutions - panic alarm systems and digital safety networks - are bridging the critical gap between underserved communities and SAPS responders, creating tangible safety outcomes in vulnerable areas.

Ms. Koketso Rathumba from the GBVF Response Fund brought scale into focus. The Fund has supported over 235 grassroots organisations and benefited more than 950 000 individuals through interventions spanning prevention, care and empowerment.

Both these organisations represent the GBVF pillar approach at work with community-based entities driving behavioural change, institutional reform and improved outcomes for survivors, thereby multiplying impact beyond what any single entity could achieve.

According to Kone Gugushe, Head of the FirstRand Foundation, this is how corporate investment in social justice becomes meaningful - not through isolated events or symbolic gestures, but through strategic frameworks, clear definitions of success, and partnerships that turn resources into results. “The FirstRand Empowerment Foundation's approach to GBVF demonstrates what becomes possible when strategy meets partnership, resources meet impact, and when everyone involved understands exactly what success looks like and how to achieve it.”