Interview with Mike Greeff – Staff - 2006 to 2015 Before joining St David’s in 2006 as chief executive officer, Mike worked in the banking sector for 20 years before running his own consulting company specialising in development finance mainly in South ... »
Interview with Mike Greeff – Staff - 2006 to 2015 Before joining St David’s in 2006 as chief executive officer, Mike worked in the banking sector for 20 years before running his own consulting company specialising in development finance mainly in South Africa, Eastern Europe and Africa. Mike enjoyed his business which was very successful and identified NGO’s or groupings that banks would not consider and, under the auspices of Shore Bank, (Chicago) would guarantee loans with the backing of the US government. Whilst in the banking sector, Mike ran leadership camps for grade 11 to matric boys through the auspices of Rotary. As a matriculant and head prefect at Parktown Boys, Mike had attended one of these camps himself and eventually his boss at the time asked him if he would get involved. Mike also saw this as a form of outreach through his own company and also his old school. Some of the youngsters who attended the camps asked him to come and speak at pupil development workshops such as the one he was involved with at St David’s. Whilst running his own company he continued with this as a form of personal corporate outreach. This extended to working with staff at schools and several strategic planning workshops. In early 2000 Paul Edey and Kevin Brewer asked Mike if he would facilitate a staff planning session at St David’s and look at a restructuring programme for the school management. In 2005 Paul Edey called him again and asked him if he would do an intervention to assess the success of the restructuring programme and at the same time told him he was resigning and suggested that perhaps Mike should consider applying for the position of chief executive officer. Mike then recused himself from the intervention process and recalls meeting with Tony Chappel, the then chairman of the board on a Saturday in May 2006. Mike was not a Marist pupil himself but was a practicing catholic and his grandparents had been managers of the Maristonian club at Woodmead. Mike’s mother was brought up there and loved everything Marist. Unfortunately Mike’s parents were not in a position to be able to send him to St David’s and he went the public school route but always had a very strong association with the Marists. Hs mother sadly passed away the day before Mike met with Tony Chappel and he regrets not being able to tell her about the planned meeting. Mike then went through a set of interviews with Br Jude, Mrs Sealand and others and eventually began his career at St David’s in September 2006 and has never regretted it. Mike’s involvement with the Marist Brothers was key to his move into education and he qualified as a teacher shortly after coming to St David’s; all his prior qualifications being commercial degrees. There were many different issues he was tasked to deal with and, apart from the absolute strengthening of the Marist link with the brothers and the rest of the Marist world; these included risk and governance; strategy and ethos. St David’s was and still is a Marist catholic independent school. Mike’s dream is that boys currently at the school will still have, in twenty years time a Marist school which is relevant to the times to which they can send their children. Shortly before he died Br Anthony expressed the opinion that St David’s was more Marist then than when the brothers were running the school purely because the lay Marists running the schools are so acutely aware of their responsibilities inherited from legions of Marist brothers who laid the foundations. St David’s performance is being acknowledged in education and catholic education circles with many members of staff being leaders in the educational environment having positions within the IEB, ISASA, the Catholic Schools Office etc . Br Jude was instrumental and brave in his support and encouragement of lay teachers and staff. Mike is very proud of how vibrant MOBS has become with a combination of both younger and older MOBS working together with Willy Castle in the chair. The Foundation has grown with Chantal Ratcliffe being the right person at the right time followed now by Lara Klement with whom the development has continued and flourished with a Marist perspective. Mike is intimately involved with the running of the Foundation which is now far beyond where it started and has moved to a different level of maturity. Lara has done an incredible job supported by Thierry Dalais, Rob Smith, Tony Chappell, Gianni Mariano and with Br Jude at the very heart of it. Mike is currently chairman of the African Law and Brothers Commission which covers the entire African continent and he reports to Br Javier who in turn runs the secretariat of the laity in Rome. Br Joe originally asked Mike to represent Southern Africa at the first meeting of this body. Mike has set in place a good financial management structure with the school being run along business lines but not as a business, with both schools being directed by the two headmasters and their staff. The school is currently in a good place and Mike feels that Rod Smith summed it up well in his retirement speech when he said, “On our day we will beat anyone but we are too small to be arrogant”. The school is in a healthy space but that can change overnight, it has to be maintained and sustained. Its strength lies in the numbers with people doing what they are good at, who are passionate about what they do and educating within the Marist ethos. Mike currently enjoys a little bit of teaching in guest slots with the grade 8’s through to matric, and is also involved with staff development assisting with the induction of new staff and is fully involved on a pastoral level with both headmasters. 2016, Willy Castle will be playing an active role and Mike is confident that what we celebrate in 2016 will be celebrated in the same vein in another 25 years time with a golden thread running through it. Mike feels that it has been a privilege for him to live at Maryknoll and to be part of the school for the past 10 years. Mike has, as from 1 March 2015 been appointed director of the Marist Schools Council. JLE January 2015