Water, Sewage & Effluent January February 2019 | Page 27

a corporate where I found my personal vision in conflict with theirs. Their focus was making money, while mine was environmental issues — I couldn’t gel with this clash in values. That is why what I look for in an employee, is someone who shares the same value system as me and aligns themselves with the company’s vision. Also, someone who’s willing to go the extra mile; someone who’s a brand ambassador. WSE: Green Output Solutions has a Level 1 B-BBEE status and is 80% women-owned. Tell me more about the motivation behind that. AM: Women are not represented enough. Not just in the environmental space, but everywhere. I wanted to empower women in our company. We feel that women are often not given opportunity, but when they are, they often thrive. Plus, I believe in girl power! WSE: What kind of culture exists in your business; how did you establish it and how do you continue to cultivate it? AM: I think that, as a woman, my compassion allows me to understand that before you are an employee, you are a human being. Yes, I want results, and I want work to proceed, and my employees know that it’s not acceptable to just sit back and be average. But I do appreciate that an employee is also a mother, a daughter, a sister. They have a life beyond the office doors and I believe in an open- door policy. Our company culture is nurtured in that morning cup of coffee; that the first cup of coffee when you get to work is not to be spent sipping behind a closed door upstairs. That time should be spent downstairs, among your employees — the human beings behind their work titles. And those few valuable moments should be spent chatting about their evenings or weekends or families. I think we are more of a family before we can be a business. So, yes, I’d say it’s a culture built around mutual respect, integrity, and family orientation. innovations WSE: Green Output Solutions services Gauteng, Mpumalanga, Limpopo, KwaZulu-Natal, and the North West Province, as well as neighbouring countries that include Zambia, Botswana, Mozambique, and Swaziland. As policy and legislation differ from country to country, your services are tailor-made, sustainable, and cost-effective, depending on each client’s requirements. Can you give me an example of what a client’s requirements may be, and how your team would go about tailor-making a solution to fit their needs? www.waterafrica.co.za Water Sewage & Effluent January/February 2019 27 AM: One example is a mining house that had been spending a lot of money on the disposal of sewage sludge. The client had been transporting the waste, at quite a cost, to a secondary waste-disposal location — which was a waste of both time and money. He hadn’t realised that what he considered waste, could actually be reused and blended on site, for various purposes. Another example is a client who was generating boiler ash as a waste product. We consulted with him, and found another business in the area who manufactured bricks. The result was an ‘industry symbiosis’ whereby one man’s waste became another man’s raw material. And it was a Water Sewage & Effluent January/February 2019 27