The latest recognition from the Association of Small Business Owners of Nigeria signals a growing shift in how banks are evaluated in Nigeria’s small business ecosystem—moving away from size and product variety toward real-world impact on SME operations.
A New Standard for SME Banking
Traditionally, banking awards in Nigeria have focused on scale, profitability, and product range. However, ASBON’s approach prioritises a more direct question: which banks are actually making it easier for small businesses to function day-to-day?
This shift reflects changing realities for SMEs, where success is now defined less by expansion alone and more by:
- Stable cash flow
- Fast and reliable payments
- Timely access to credit
- Reduced operational friction
Union Bank’s SME Strategy Gains Recognition
One of the institutions recognised under this framework is Union Bank of Nigeria, whose SME-focused initiatives have been built around improving practical business operations rather than expanding product catalogues.
Key improvements include:
Faster Digital Onboarding
The bank upgraded its Union360 platform and introduced a Straight-Through-Processing (STP) onboarding system, significantly reducing the time required for SMEs to open accounts and begin transactions.
This has improved digital adoption and attracted new business customers, particularly entrepreneurs operating across multiple payment channels such as transfers, POS, and online payments.
More Flexible SME Financing
Access to credit remains a major challenge for Nigerian SMEs, especially for businesses lacking formal collateral or extensive financial documentation.
Union Bank has adjusted its lending approach to place greater emphasis on:
- Transaction history
- Cash flow patterns
- Account activity consistency
This shift allows more informal but active businesses to qualify for financing, particularly for working capital, inventory, and equipment expansion.
Relationship Banking Over Transactional Services
Beyond digital systems, the bank continues to rely on a relationship-driven model, supported by branch networks and dedicated SME-focused staff.
Its “Adopt, Engage and Grow” initiative is designed to maintain continuous engagement with entrepreneurs rather than one-off interactions, reflecting the realities of operating a business in Nigeria’s high-pressure environment.
ASBON Partnership and SME Discipline
Through collaboration with ASBON, Union Bank also supported an SME Empowerment Challenge aimed at encouraging better business structure and financial discipline.
The initiative promoted practices such as:
- Proper account usage
- Record-keeping
- Separation of business and personal finances
- Structured growth planning
These behaviours are widely seen as essential for SMEs seeking loans, partnerships, and expansion opportunities.
What the Recognition Really Means
Rather than serving as a ceremonial award, the recognition reflects a broader shift in expectations within Nigeria’s SME banking sector.
It highlights banks that are:
- Improving access to finance
- Reducing operational bottlenecks
- Supporting business discipline
- Building long-term SME relationships
In a market where SMEs remain the backbone of employment and economic activity, the award underscores the importance of practical banking systems that match real business conditions, not just formal financial benchmarks.
Outlook
As Nigeria’s SME sector continues to expand, institutions that combine accessible digital systems, flexible credit models, and consistent human support are likely to define the next phase of competition in retail and business banking.
The ASBON recognition, in this context, signals not just performance—but a shift in what “good banking for SMEs” now truly means in Nigeria.
