The Guaranty Trust Bank (Sierra Leone) Limited, will next week relaunch its breathtaking raffle series that will target and benefit every customer with a minimum monthly deposit of Le 2, 500.
The raffle will last for six months from the date of launching and winners would be exposed to a variety of prizes including bags of rice, vegetable oil and many more amiable goodies aimed at making the lives of GTBank customers across the country better.
Because GTBank is a caring bank, the raffle would be opened to all its customers; old and new as long as a customer can deposit the minimum of Le 2, 500 every month throughout the period of the raffle. The Grand Prizes are motorbikes commonly called ‘Okada’. ‘Okada’ is a popular means of transport in Sierra Leone and owning it is a guarantee to making life better, which certainly is the focus of GTBank Sierra Leone Limited.
During the maiden edition of ‘Kip for d Bambai’ raffle, several GTBank customers won plenitude of attractive prizes, much to the delight of Management and Staff who are with the conviction that by making lives of customers better through incentives from deposits with the bank, it will encourage a substantial percentage of the Sierra Leone working and business population to rather bank with GTBank Sierra Leone. This singular fair offer since its inception, has endeared the Bank to its customer base which is growing like wildfire on a Savannah grass field.
Guaranty Trust Bank’s growing reputation since it commenced operations in Sierra Leone in 2002 following its successful acquisition of 90% of the shareholdings of former First Merchant Bank of Sierra Leone (FMB), it has solidly fitted itself as a first among equals of the leading banks in Sierra Leone. Its global standing and reputation since 2007 underpinned by a successful US$750 million Global Depository Receipt (GDR) offering and the listing of the GDRs on the London Stock Exchange in July 2007 has made the Bank worthy of trust to do business with.
It is in the face of these impressive loads of confidence and trust indices that the Bank continues to grow at a faster rate in Sierra Leone, with branches spread across Freetown’s Western and Rural Districts and in regional headquarters towns.