Lawyer and business executive Dennis Paulo Kavuma has launched the Gravitas Leadership Institute (GLI), a new training centre designed to address growing gaps in youth leadership, self-awareness and strategic life planning.
Kavuma unveiled the institute this year, describing it as a movement aimed at helping young Ugandans develop clarity, purpose and practical leadership skills needed to navigate personal and professional life.
GLI, founded in 2025, targets secondary and university students, recent graduates, career changers and adults seeking reinvention.
It enters the market as employers and educators increasingly warn that although many young people excel academically, they lack goal-setting skills, resilience and the ability to plan their lives strategically.
“Success is not accidental. It requires clarity, planning, discipline and faith,” Kavuma said. “Many young people have big dreams but no roadmap.”
The institute blends biblical principles with contemporary leadership tools, with programmes focused on purposeful living, goal-setting, character development and long-term planning.
Participants receive mentorship and become part of a learning community that supports their growth beyond the classroom.
GLI’s philosophy, drawn from the meaning of its name — gravitas: depth, weight and dignity — emphasises intentional leadership rooted in values.
Kavuma says the institute is the product of lessons from his four-decade journey in education, media, law and corporate leadership.
He attended Saint Mary’s School Nairobi, where he interacted with children of Kenya’s former presidents, later pursuing social sciences and law studies in the UK and Uganda.
His career began in media, where he became the first East African contributor to CNN World Report.
He later moved into telecommunications, holding senior roles at Celtel (now Airtel), MTN and Uganda Telecom before working in the United States in sales and corporate leadership. He eventually became an advocate of the High Court of Uganda.
Unlike many leadership programmes, GLI welcomes learners of all ages, from teenagers to retirees. Kavuma argues that leadership is not tied to age or titles, but to “vision, character and intentional action”.
His own transition into legal practice later in life, he says, reflects the institute’s message that reinvention is always possible.
GLI’s curriculum is anchored in values such as resilience, integrity, empowerment and community. Kavuma says the institute seeks to nurture a generation capable of ethical and strategic leadership in business, public service and community development.
With Uganda’s large youth population and increasing concerns over unemployment, directionlessness and weak leadership ethics, GLI hopes to become a regional hub for transformational leadership when it begins virtual classes in 2026.
“This is your time to lead with gravitas,” Kavuma said. “Your dreams matter but you must plan, pursue and live them with purpose.”
Beyond leadership training, Kavuma also runs Dax Couture, a high-end men’s fashion boutique, which he says reflects his commitment to excellence and personal branding.