BANKING ON A DREAM! How Equity Leaders Program Turned Shimon From Bright Scholar Into Banking Powerhouse

Atuyambe Shimon
For many university students in Uganda, higher education is often accompanied by financial uncertainty, academic pressure, and growing anxiety about life after graduation.
For Atuyambe Shimon, however, one opportunity changed everything.
What began as an academic milestone soon evolved into a life-changing journey through the Equity Leaders Program (ELP), transforming her from a student with ambition into a young banking professional with a clear sense of purpose.
Shimon was selected as one of Uganda’s pioneer Equity Leaders Program scholars in 2022 while studying at Solberg College on Rutooma Hill in Kabale District.
Being among the first cohort came with both excitement and uncertainty.
There was no blueprint to follow, no alumni to seek advice from, and no precedent for what the experience would become.
Together with fellow pioneer scholars, Shimon helped shape the foundation of a program that is now impacting thousands of young Ugandans.
“When we joined, we thought we were simply entering a bank internship,” she recalled. “Later, we realised we were joining a family.”
That realisation would define the years that followed.
From the outset, the program exposed Shimon to a blend of leadership development, mentorship, and practical workplace experience, helping her grow both academically and professionally.
While at university, she became actively involved in student leadership, first serving as a secretary in one of the university clubs before gradually taking on broader responsibilities.
The program also provided critical financial support.
Through structured holiday internships at Equity Bank branches, scholars were able to earn an income while gaining hands-on experience in the banking sector.
For Shimon, this eased many of the everyday pressures that burden university students.
“It gave us freedom,” she explained. “We no longer had to worry constantly about what to eat or how to buy academic materials.”
Freed from some of those financial burdens, she was able to focus more intentionally on her studies and personal development.
Her hard work paid off.
In 2024, Shimon graduated with a First-Class degree in Bachelor of Guidance and Counselling from Kyambogo University.
But graduation was not the end of her journey with Equity Bank. In many ways, it was just the beginning.
Her internship journey started at Equity Bank’s Kabale Branch before expanding to other branches where she gained exposure, training, and mentorship across multiple operational areas.
During this time, she worked in departments including the Equity Leaders Program coordination team, Know Your Customer (KYC), and digital banking support.
These rotations gave her practical skills while allowing the institution to observe her work ethic, discipline, and adaptability.
Today, Shimon works full-time as a Relationship Officer in Payments and Channels at Equity Bank Uganda’s Market Street Branch.
For her, one of the program’s greatest strengths is how it bridges the gap between education and employment.
“By the time we graduate, the bank already knows our discipline, our work ethic, and our potential,” she noted.
Unlike many graduates who face prolonged job searches after university, Shimon transitioned directly from graduation into employment, supported by the trust, skills, and experience she had built throughout the program.
Speaking during the recent Cohort 5 ELP Commissioning event held at Africa Bible University, Shimon encouraged younger scholars to fully embrace every opportunity the program offers.
From internships and leadership roles to mentorship and networking, she urged them to approach the experience with intentionality.
“Do not wait to be pushed,” she advised. “Be willing to learn, ask questions, and solve problems.”
As one of the pioneer scholars, Shimon says she is proud to witness the continued growth of the Equity Leaders Program and its expanding impact on students across Uganda.
Her story is more than an individual success.
It is a reflection of what becomes possible when talent is matched with opportunity.
Through the Equity Leaders Program, Equity Bank Uganda is doing more than supporting academic excellence. It is creating career pathways, nurturing leadership, and preparing young people for meaningful futures.
For Shimon, the journey from student life in Kabale to a banking career is proof that with the right support, ambition can become achievement, and dreams can become professions.
