Entrepreneur, Finance and Economic Policy Analyst Senyo Hosi has shared a personal reflection on leadership, humility and public service, drawing lessons from his early experience running a small bread-baking business to support his family.
In a reflective piece titled “Service Over Ego”, Hosi recounts how his first venture began as he prepared to enter the University of Ghana, having assumed responsibility for his younger siblings at a young age. With limited resources eight 2kg bags of flour and modest savings from his job as an accounts assistant at Korle-Bu Teaching Hospital he began baking bread using a recipe he believed was correct.
Hosi said his confidence was misplaced. His first attempt failed after using half his flour. With no room for further mistakes, he reluctantly accepted his cousin’s suggestion to try an alternative, unwritten recipe remembered from experience. The result, he said, was a success that became the foundation of a growing business, eventually producing nearly 50kg of bread daily.
The experience, Hosi wrote, shaped his approach to entrepreneurship and leadership, teaching him the value of openness, candour and flexibility. He cautioned against excessive pride in one’s views, arguing that leadership should prioritise “getting it right” over “being right”.
He contrasted this lesson with what he described as an ego-driven culture in public advocacy and policy debates, where positions are often defended fiercely despite evidence to the contrary. Hosi observed that the consequences of policy errors are frequently borne by the public, not by decision-makers or advocates themselves.
Public advocacy, he argued, should be grounded in humility and service, recognising its far-reaching impact on lives beyond the immediate debate. Hosi called on leaders and advocates to remain open to better information, admit mistakes, and adjust positions when necessary.
He stressed that advocacy must be rooted in fairness and honesty, even when driven by personal agendas. “Service is humility in motion,” Hosi wrote, adding that true leadership begins with recognising that no one has all the answers.
The reflection, dated January 4, 2026, adds to ongoing conversations in Ghana about ethical leadership, accountability and the role of humility in public life.
