Marketing executive succeeds long-serving brand leader Faye Mfikwe as the bank strengthens customer engagement and prepares for its next phase of growth
First National Bank (FNB) has appointed Linda Kachingwe-Sisya as its new Chief Marketing Officer (CMO), marking a significant leadership transition as one of Africa’s leading financial institutions positions its brand for the next phase of growth.
Kachingwe-Sisya succeeds Faye Mfikwe, who steps down after a distinguished 19-year career with the bank, during which she played a central role in shaping FNB‘s marketing, communications and corporate reputation.
Announcing the appointment, FNB said Kachingwe-Sisya will assume responsibility for the bank’s marketing, corporate affairs and brand strategy, with a mandate to strengthen market leadership, deepen customer relationships and ensure the brand continues evolving in response to changing customer expectations across its markets.
The appointment represents an internal leadership transition, with Kachingwe-Sisya moving from FNB’s Broader Africa and International business, where she led marketing and communications across several international markets, including Africa, the United Kingdom, the United States, India and China.
In that capacity, she oversaw initiatives designed to strengthen brand consistency, support commercial growth and improve customer engagement across diverse markets.
Commenting on the appointment, Chief Executive Officer of FNB, Lytania Johnson, described the decision as evidence of the bank’s commitment to leadership continuity and talent development.
“Linda brings extensive experience, strategic insight and a deep understanding of the role brands play in building lasting relationships. Having successfully led marketing across our Africa and International franchise, she understands the opportunities and expectations shaping customers in a rapidly changing environment.”
Johnson added that FNB’s long-term success has been built on its ability to understand changing customer needs while continuously adapting its products, services and brand positioning.
According to her, Kachingwe-Sisya’s leadership will help reinforce one of Africa’s most recognised banking brands while sustaining its focus on innovation, customer value and long-term impact.
Responding to her appointment, Linda Kachingwe-Sisya said she looks forward to building on the strong foundation established by her predecessor and the wider marketing and corporate affairs team. “I am privileged to take on this role and to work alongside talented teams who are passionate about delivering meaningful help to the customers and communities we serve. FNB has earned a strong reputation through its continued focus on innovation, relevance, help and impact.”
She added that her priority would be to strengthen the bank’s market presence while ensuring its brand continues to reflect the values and ambitions that have defined FNB’s growth over the years.
The appointment comes as financial institutions across Africa continue investing in customer experience, digital transformation and brand differentiation amid intensifying competition from fintech companies and changing consumer expectations.
BrandiQ Insight
The Modern CMO Has Become a Business Strategist
The appointment reflects the changing nature of marketing leadership within financial institutions. Today’s Chief Marketing Officer is no longer responsible solely for advertising and communications.
Increasingly, the role encompasses corporate reputation, stakeholder engagement, customer experience, digital transformation and business growth. Marketing has become a strategic function that influences how organisations compete, innovate and build long-term customer trust.
Leadership Succession Strengthens Institutional Resilience
One notable feature of FNB’s announcement is its emphasis on internal succession. Promoting executives with extensive institutional knowledge provides continuity while preserving organisational culture and customer confidence. In highly competitive industries such as banking, well-managed leadership transitions help minimise disruption and reinforce long-term strategic direction.
Financial Services Are Becoming Brand-Led Businesses
As banking products become increasingly digitised and commoditised, competitive advantage is shifting beyond traditional financial offerings.
Customer loyalty is now shaped by trust, convenience, service quality, digital experience and emotional connection with the brand.
This evolution elevates marketing from a support function to a strategic driver of business performance. For leading banks, investment in brand leadership is therefore becoming an investment in sustainable competitive advantage.
Implications for Africa’s Banking Industry
Across the continent, banks are responding to growing competition from fintech firms by strengthening customer engagement, personalising digital services and enhancing brand relevance.
This places greater strategic importance on marketing executives capable of integrating brand strategy with technology, data analytics and customer-centric innovation. Institutions that successfully align these capabilities are likely to strengthen customer loyalty while expanding their competitive position in increasingly dynamic financial markets.
The Bigger Picture
FNB’s leadership transition illustrates how the role of marketing continues to evolve within Africa’s financial services industry.
As customer expectations become more sophisticated and competition intensifies, banks will increasingly rely on marketing leaders who combine commercial insight, strategic thinking and brand stewardship with a deep understanding of digital transformation.
In the modern banking industry, strong brands are built not only through advertising but through leadership that consistently aligns customer trust, innovation and business strategy.

