Profile
Who we are
Established in 2001, Sizwe IT Group is South Africa’s leading black-owned ICT services company. With an Empowerdex AA rating, we’re one of the few companies, along with our SMME Associates, listed as a direct acquisition company in the Government IT supply channel.
Convergenet Holdings Ltd is a majority shareholder in our company, and this has given us the financial muscle required to guarantee sustainability and the delivery of superior quality services.
What we do
Sizwe IT Group offers a comprehensive ICT service solution, from providing infrastructure, networking, security, servers and storage to end-user solutions and computer consumables. Our public and private sector clients benefit from the extensive experience of our team of highly skilled professionals.
Global best practice
Sustainability is a business imperative of Sizwe. That’s why we are constantly reviewing our processes and the technology we employ in the delivery of service excellence to our customers.
Read more about our services and solutions
Our SMME Partnerships
In line with Government’s drive to enhance skills development in regions across South Africa and attract revenue to those areas, Sizwe works according to an established BEE/ SMME methodology. An industry benchmark, our ‘franchise’ BEE/SMME methodology, giving major shareholding and leaving revenue behind in the regions to enhance economic growth.
Read more about our partnerships
Where you’ll find us
Sizwe IT Group’s national footprint is enabled by a unique network of SMMEs and associated companies.
Corporate Social Investment
With our social conscience woven into the fabric of Sizwe, we are determined to make a positive difference in the communities in which our clients, partners, suppliers and employees live and work. Together with clients, we invest in initiatives that aim to bring about a meaningful contribution to South Africa’s socio-economic development.
Broad Based Black Economic Empowerment
The Broad Based Black Economic Empowerment (BBBEE) Code is aimed at extending empowerment to the broader black population, who remain excluded from sectors of the economy in spite of BEE legislation. The South African government took the step towards BBBEE, because they realised that wealth disparities that are ethnically or racially defined, could be destabilising and, that without stability, the long-term sustainability of economic growth in South Africa would simply not be possible.


