From Skills to Sustainability: Zonda Tec Ghana’s Transformational Agenda

In Ghana’s rapidly evolving industrial landscape, few names resonate as strongly as Madam Yang Yang, the Executive Officer of Zonda Tec Ghana Limited, a company that has steadily reshaped the country’s heavy-duty automobile and equipment sector. In this exclusive interview with Nii Okpoti Odamtten, Madam Yang offers profound insights into leadership, localisation, and the future of Ghana’s industrial growth.
Under her stewardship, Zonda Tec Ghana has become an essential vehicle—both literally and figuratively—for national development. The company’s portfolio spans heavy-duty trucks, construction machinery, and after-sales technical services, with a growing influence across the West African sub-region. Yet, behind this corporate presence lies a deeper mission: building skills, empowering youth, and advancing Ghana’s industrial self-reliance.
Speaking with a calm authority shaped by years of navigating complex markets, Madam Yang emphasises that the company’s success is rooted in partnership and purpose.
“Our greatest achievement is not measured in the number of trucks we sell, but in the number of Ghanaian youths we empower to build and maintain those trucks,” she affirms.
Zonda Tec’s training academies and technical programmes have created pathways for young artisans, technicians and engineers, enabling many to secure employment in a competitive sector. For Madam Yang, industrialisation is incomplete if it does not translate into meaningful human development.
“A nation is built not by machines alone, but by the hands and minds that operate them. Ghana has the talent—our role is to help unlock it,” she says.
Her balanced leadership merges strategic discipline with a deep cultural appreciation for Ghana’s business environment. This blend has enabled Zonda Tec Ghana to expand its footprint while maintaining sustainability at the centre of its operations. The company has championed long-term partnerships with local transport unions, construction firms, government agencies, and academic institutions.
Reflecting on the company’s long-term vision, Madam Yang projects a future where locally trained Ghanaian experts dominate the heavy equipment space.
“We are here to build an ecosystem—not just a business. When local expertise thrives, the entire economy moves forward,” she states.
On the subject of resilience, she underscores that Zonda Tec’s philosophy is anchored in consistency and community trust.
“The real test of leadership is not how you perform when the market is favourable, but how you stay committed when conditions are tough,” she notes.
With a forward-looking approach, Madam Yang outlines the company’s ambition to expand assembly operations, develop advanced auto-mechanical training centres, and broaden its support base to industrialising regions in Ghana.
As the interview ends, her final words underscore both confidence and humility:
“We are guests in this beautiful country, but our hearts work as citizens. Ghana’s progress is our progress.”
By: Nii Okpoti Odamtten




