
Ghana's First Sky Group Creates 6,000 Jobs Nationwide
A Ghanaian business conglomerate has employed over 6,000 people across the country, turning a single company into a job-creating powerhouse. The milestone shows how local businesses can drive real economic change.
When Eric Seddy Kutortse started his first company 23 years ago, he had a vision bigger than profits. Today, his First Sky Group has put 6,000 Ghanaians to work, proving that homegrown businesses can be powerful engines for lifting communities.
The announcement came during the company's 23rd anniversary celebration in Accra on January 25. Kutortse, now Executive Chairman of the diversified conglomerate, shared how his group has spread employment opportunities across Ghana's regions.
"Over six thousand people have been employed across the regions of our country, supporting families and contributing meaningfully to national development," Kutortse told attendees at the thanksgiving service. Each job represents a family with more stability, children with better opportunities, and communities with stronger economic foundations.
The First Sky Group started as a single enterprise and grew into a conglomerate spanning multiple sectors. This growth strategy allowed the company to create diverse employment opportunities rather than keeping all its eggs in one basket.
The Ripple Effect

Those 6,000 jobs multiply far beyond individual paychecks. In Ghana, where extended families often depend on working members, each position can support five to ten people indirectly.
The company's expansion across different regions means rural and urban areas alike benefit from steady employment. This geographic spread helps reduce the migration pressure that forces young Ghanaians to leave their home communities for work.
Kutortse emphasized that job creation sits at the heart of his business strategy, not as an afterthought. "Our mandate is to create wealth, to bring relief to the poor and the needy," he explained, linking business success directly to social responsibility.
The timing matters too. Ghana, like many African nations, faces youth unemployment challenges that require private sector solutions alongside government efforts.
The anniversary celebration highlighted how sustainable business practices and national development can work hand in hand. Rather than choosing between profit and purpose, First Sky Group demonstrates they can fuel each other.
Twenty-three years of steady growth shows the long game pays off when companies commit to their communities as seriously as their bottom lines.
Based on reporting by Myjoyonline Ghana
This story was written by BrightWire based on verified news reports.
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