Derek Williams, president and CEO of Century Bank & Trust in Milledgeville, Ga., wanted to be a financier before finding his way to community banking. Photo by Harold Daniels
Derek Williams, president and CEO of Century Bank & Trust in Georgia, is bringing his passion for community banking to his term as ICBA chairman for 2023/24.
By Roshan McArthur
Derek Williams is, he says, excited, honored and humbled to make his debut as ICBA chairman at ICBA LIVE. A banking stalwart described by outgoing chairman Brad Bolton as âa passionate community leader and a staunch leader of our industry,â Williams has built a career by immersing himself in the community banking world. He has also served on ICBAâs executive committee for many years, including a term as treasurer from 2016 to 2018.
He has served as president and CEO of $365 million-asset Century Bank & Trust in Milledgeville, Ga., for eight years. But, unlike many in the industry, this profession wasnât in his blood. Asked if there is a history of banking in his family, he laughsâsomething he does often.
âThatâs an interesting story,â he says. âItâs kind of an anti-banking history!â
Williams grew up in Barnesville, Ga., at the time a small town of about 5,000 residents. It was something of a humble start, he says. He was raised by a mother who stayed home with her four kids and a father who built houses.
âHe was a craftsman by nature,â Williams says of his father. âSo the most experience I had with banking growing up was him as a bank customer. I knew the bankers in town because my dad knew them, and I learned a lot just from being around them and watching how dad dealt with them. He had a great relationship with banks and bankers, and that attracted me, just from the standpoint of what they did to help my dad.â

Williams (second from left) with ICBAâs 2022/23 executive committee, including outgoing chairman Brad Bolton, at ICBA LIVE 2022 in San Antonio. Photo by Chris Williams
That said, Williams left the University of Georgia, Terry College of Business, in 1984 with a BBA in finance, determined to get out of Barnesville and become âthe next great corporate financier.â But the world had other plans. He graduated into a recession, one of two that would have a profound influence on his career. During that time, at an interview for a job as a stockbroker, he asked one of the brokers how well his office performed. The response he received reshaped his career. âI donât have any idea what the office does,â the broker told him. âI only worry about what I do.â
The implication was simple: The broker didnât care about anybody he worked with, which was anathema to Williams. âSo many of the jobs that I looked at in the corporate finance world, and certainly the stockbroker world, were very much like that,â he recalls. âI was used to family, I was used to teamwork, and I need that. I needed camaraderie.â
So, he joined a training program at what was then Citizens & Southern National Bank, once the largest bank in the southeastern U.S., now part of Bank of America, before moving to Griffin, Ga., in 1987. âI went to work for a community bank, kind of by accident, and found the job love of my life,â he says. âI got a job with First National Bank of Griffin, and Iâve been a community banker ever since.â
That love of community has defined his career. âOne thing about community banking that I love is we get paid to be active in the community; thatâs part of what we do,â he explains. âWeâre committed to the community, not just from the standpoint of its financial health, but community banks, especially in small towns, are really their financial centers. Theyâre where everybody gathers, where people come in the morning.
âI like that, and I like the idea of being able to be active in the chamber and active on the local boards. This was a job that not only allowed me to do that but encouraged me to do it.â
Williams has a passion for relationship building, whether itâs sitting on the boards of local museums or fundraising for Relay for Life, and he admits heâs always the first person to stand up and take on those roles as a way of getting to know the neighborhood heâs working in.

Derek Williams and fellow Georgia community bankers at the 2013 ICBA Washington Policy Summit, now the Capital Summit. Photo by Stephen Gosling
A rapid ascent
Williams set himself a goal of becoming CEO of a bank by the age of 40. He achieved it at 34 years old at First Peoples Bank in Pine Mountain, Ga., where he stayed for 15 years, from 1998 to 2013. During that time, he took the community bank through the Great Recession of 2008â09.
âThatâs when the bottom fell out, and Georgia was markedly hit,â he reflects on the tumultuous period. âWe lost 90-plus banks to failure in between 2008 and 2013. So, it was a very, very difficult time.â

Williams with Tori Kala, Century Bank & Trustâs assistant vice president, loans; and teller Filicia Mohammed.
What drives Williamsâand what got him through that timeâis âan absolute belief in and a love for the model of community banking.â As chairman of the Community Bankers Association of Georgia during that recession, he would remind others of the importance of their roles.
âI told them, âGuys, what we do matters, what we do works and the model works,ââ he recalls. ââAnd yes, weâre having some exceptionally tough economic times right now, but thereâs always going to be a place for local banks to take deposits from people they know, live with and work with, people they understand, and loan that money to people that they know and understandâlocal community.ââ
Itâs a belief he still holds. âThereâs always going to be place for it, no matter how big the big banks get, no matter how automated they get, no matter how much things change. Thereâs always going to be a place for that model.â
We use the word âfamilyâ a lot. Weâre serious about it at Century. We believe in it. We believe in each other.â
âDerek Williams
Williams believes there is great potential for a resurgence in community banking, thanks to shifting demographics. He describes acquaintances in their twenties and thirties choosing local coffee shops over big names like Starbucks, local hardware stores over Loweâs or Home Depotâso why not, he suggests, choose a community bank over a national bank?

Williams with head teller Connie Davis (left) and senior customer service representative Jennifer Tarver
He recalls serving on FDICâs Community Bank Advisory Committee years ago and being introduced to a group of millennials who worked there. All but one of them had the same checking account they had opened in high school. When asked what they wanted from a bank, they told him, âIf youâll give us the technology, if youâll give us the ability to bank on our phones ⌠but assure us that Ms. Sally who we used to talk to at the bank is still there if we need to talk to somebody, then youâve got us for life.â
This approach is key to Century Bank & Trustâs success. âIf we can get them in the door, we can keep them,â he says, âbecause we can blow them away with the service that we provide.â
And that means putting ethics front and center. âWe use the word âfamilyâ a lot. Weâre serious about it at Century. We believe in it. We believe in each other,â he says. âI had an HR attorney tell me one time, âDerek, I want you to remember something. Just because something is legal, doesnât mean itâs right or ethical.â So, I always think about that. When we have situations, I know [my team is] going to respond with whatâs best for the people who work at the bank and whatâs best for our customers.â
Community banks have a great reputation with legislators and regulators because of our track record of safe and sound performance and our support of consumers and small businesses.â
âDerek Williams
Itâs his confidence in Centuryâs culture and in his team that has allowed him the freedom to work closely with ICBA. As CEO, he says, his job is âto create a culture and to encourage and to motivate and to live at the 30,000-foot level, trying to make sure that everybody else has an opportunity to do their job as effectively as possible.â
Keeping the flame burning
Williams foresees a challenging year ahead, with issues from inflation and interest rates to the ripple effects of the pandemic, but he plans to spend his year as chairman lending support to ICBA president Rebeca Romero Rainey and her team, as well as reminding bankers that the community banking model works and to take pride in what they do every day.
He believes ICBAâs advocacy work in Washington D.C., is critical to shaping the industry and affects all community bankers in profound ways. âCommunity banks,â says Williams, âhave a great reputation with legislators and regulators because of our track record of safe and sound performance and our support of consumers and small businesses. We just want that track record to be acknowledged and considered so that regulations can be tiered to fit the risk profile of the institutions.â
He believes passionately in the ThinkTECH Accelerator, saying itâs at the forefront of bringing technology to community banks and is making it possible for those millennials he met, plus the Gen Zers coming up behind them, to bank locally.
âThere are some brilliant, brilliant people who are doing some really cool things with not only advocacy on the hill but from an education standpoint and also from an innovation standpoint,â Williams says. âICBA is cutting edge on that. Theyâre working with technology firms to come in and not try to take our business away from us but help us do it better and more efficiently. Community banks can now provide technology thatâs just as slick, mobile apps and all the technology that the big banks have, but we back it up with personal service.â

Williams during a Community Banker Association of Georgia meeting held at the U.S. Capitol. Photo by Stephen Gosling

Williams filming a video to be shown at ICBA LIVE 2023
March will be a busy month. Century Bank is celebrating 125 years in business, and he kicks off his term as chairman with a speech in front of a large crowd of bankers at ICBA LIVE in Honolulu.
But thatâs not fazing him in the slightest. He recalls a conversation with Aleis Stokes, ICBAâs senior vice president of communications, at last yearâs convention, when she warned him that she would need the first draft of his speech by November.
He laughs, âI said, âAleis, that speech has been written for 10 years! This is something Iâve always wanted to do.ââ
So, while community banking may not be in Derek Williamsâ blood, itâs clearly a job he was born to do.
Family firstâalways

Derek Williams and his family at his daughter Betsyâs wedding in 2022. Photo by Justen Clay
Derek Williams has many strings to his bow, but ask him how he likes to spend his time most, and the answer is simple: with his family. He and his wife, Karen, just celebrated 37 years of marriage, and she has stayed by his side as he built his career, a fact he is keen to acknowledge, given the frequency of their moves from bank to bank as he advanced his career.
âHer dad is a retired lieutenant colonel in the army, and she still jokes that I moved her around more than he did,â he laughs. âThatâs pretty bad!â The couple have three daughters and spend as much time as they can with them, whether itâs boating near their home on Lake Sinclair or playing with their three granddaughters.
Century Bank & Trust turns 125
Century Bank & Trust originally opened as Merchants and Farmers Bank on March 1, 1898, in Milledgeville, Ga. In 1993, it rebranded to reflect its evolving role in the financial services industry. Today, the $365 million-asset community bank has two branch offices in Milledgeville, plus a loan production office in Greensboro and a diverse team that reflects its community.
Community service is as much a pillar of the community bank as it has always been. In October 2021, the bank raised more than $13,000 for the American Cancer Societyâs Relay for Life, and in March 2022, the bank made a $10,000 donation to John Milledge Academy to help provide scholarships for Kâ12 education in the local community. On March 1, 2023, it celebrates 125 years in business, with Derek Williams at its helm for the last eight.
Roshan McArthur is a writer in California.