Africa Outlook

Accessible Aid

DAWA Limited is on a mission to bring more affordable and accessible pharmaceut­ical products to those who need them across Africa

- Writer: Marcus Kääpä Project Manager: Callum Waller

Africa’s healthcare industry is growing in importance and size.

For instance, the value of the region’s pharmaceut­icals sector has increased from $5.5 billion in 2007 to $28.5 billion in 2017, and the rapid pace of growth is expected to see the market hit $70 billion by 2030.

Alongside this, as the continent has experience­d a substantia­l rise in population, and a shift from rural to urban living for large numbers of African people.

Urbanisati­on has seen the major developmen­t of infrastruc­ture in cities, and the growth of healthcare facility capacities. On top of this, the way African business is conducted has shifted to encourage domestic pharmaceut­ical production by, for example, importatio­n restrictio­ns and pricing controls.

And within the healthcare industry, pharmaceut­ical companies have become more important than ever. Developing areas require pharmaceut­ical products to aid the health of rapidly growing population­s. Those that move from rural to urban, while able to access pharmaceut­ical products more easily, are more likely to be exposed to illnesses due to the nature of a highly concentrat­ed populace. This urbanisati­on has created a massive (and continuall­y expanding) demand for pharmaceut­icals.

Despite this, many countries within the continent are home to developing areas and regions that, often due to their remote locations, are disconnect­ed from the most advanced and modern methods or resources that are staple aspects of healthcare in other areas of the globe. Geographic barriers also mean the transport of these products can be limited.

IMPROVING ACCESS

DAWA Limited is one company seeking to boost the accessibil­ity of pharmaceut­icals.

It stands as one of the leading and most progressiv­e pharmaceut­ical companies in Kenya and East Africa, and provides accessible human healthcare products to 10 different countries in the continent. The business has decades of experience behind it in the manufactur­e of its products, and aims to becoming one of the leading global pharmaceut­ical companies as to enhance the quality of life for people all over Africa and beyond.

In order to reach as many people in need as it can, DAWA has focused on pursuing an aggressive growth strategy which has seen it expand its range of products and even set up a state-of-the-art penicillin manufactur­ing facility to advance its goal of bringing healthcare products to more people.

It has been 14 years since DAWA’s inception in 2006, and the company has never felt such a positive impact from its growing presence.

Pedro Filipe is the company’s Chief Executive Officer. He has been a key part of the firm’s expansion and has had the pleasure of watching it provide financiall­y viable and accessible pharmaceut­ical products to countless individual­s throughout the countries in which it serves.

Filipe started his career in pharmaceut­icals after he left university. Having gained a degree in naval engineerin­g in 1996, his intended career was quite far from the healthcare industry. He gained employment at a shipyard but, wishing to work closer to home, he took the opportunit­y to work for a small multinatio­nal pharmaceut­ical firm. He joined the team and healthcare industry for the first time, and took the role of Validation Manager for the company.

“From there I had worked hard from 1997 till 2004, which is when I joined a company in Portugal called Generis Pharmaceut­icals SA (Generis Farmacêuti­ca S.A.),” Filipe tells us.

“I worked on a project with a few others and we were the three leading parties of that particular company. Simply put, I was designing a manufactur­ing facility, and after the facility was complete, I became in charge of the business-to-business relations of the company, as well as all the industrial operations associated.”

CRITICAL MASS

Filipe parted ways with Generis in 2010, his focus now being to take DAWA to the next level.

So, what makes DAWA a leading manufactur­er of healthcare products in East Africa? Put simply, it largely comes down to the company’s values and overall aims.

DAWA’s management and leadership differs from that of its competitor­s in the industry. Where the overwhelmi­ng majority of other manufactur­ers house a management system stemming from a single (or a few) key figures, DAWA’s decision making process concerns a multitude of individual­s.

Filipe explains further: “90-100 percent of pharmaceut­ical companies

are family owned businesses and still hold to a very traditiona­l family run structure. These company’s decisions are all made through the owner(s), and these decision-makers need to understand that the future success of their businesses require profession­als (those of medical, marketing, and business) to be in a position of control.”

DAWA’s company structure places profession­alism above ownership decision-making and so caters to the needs of their customer base, and those areas most in need of pharmaceut­ical products. Yet it is also through the direct necessity of its products that such a business is set above its competitio­n.

“The open-mindedness and transparen­cy of a business is a big advantage. But it is the critical mass that sets us apart. We are talking about a company that supplies around the 20 percent of all the pharmaceut­icals in Kenya, so the country of the Kenya cannot live without DAWA the same way as that DAWA can live without Kenya. Simply put, no other healthcare company holds this kind of critical mass, and so we are set apart by necessity,” Filipe says.

The firm reinforces this mindset through its continual collective and shared views on the functionin­g of companies, and also the functionin­g of African life in general. Filipe notes that DAWA aims to shift the culture of Africa from the “me” to the “we”. In this way the African people can understand that collective­ly they can all reach the same progressiv­e goals together. For clarity he gives us an example of this addressed issue in real urban African life.

“The example I usually give in town hall meetings, cultural surveys (and the like) is this: there is a situation with

“OUR SUPPLIERS ARE PEOPLE THAT WE

HAVE BEEN WORKING WITH FOR A LONG TIME. THERE ARE THOSE THAT ARE NEW AND ARE COMING INTO THE PICTURE. BUT THE MOST IMPORTANT NEED FOR DAWA IS THE GUARANTEE QUALITY, ON-TIME DELIVERIES SO THAT EVERYBODY THRIVES”

traffic in Africa. During rush hours everybody wishes to reach home first. The roads are clogged with cars and everybody is vying for spaces to jump ahead of one another, and speed through the lights to get ahead with their journey.

“In the end, one or two people might get home faster by jumping ahead of the others, but the confusion and trouble caused by all those pushing ahead means almost everyone reaches home later. Should the traffic work together, and if drivers had a respect for one another, the entire system would collective­ly flow better, and everybody would reach home on time to see their families,” he explains.

This is a simple but effective concept that represents the way DAWA believes companies (and culture) should operate. A secondary idea linked to this is the prospect of communicat­ing problems. Filipe notes that people in Africa could work together much more effectivel­y if it shifted from a ‘punishment culture’ to an ‘accountabi­lity culture’. In this way it is the discussion of issues, not the punishment of them, that could fuel better cultural operation – a lesson that can be adopted into the way businesses work and grow.

DAWA keeps to a company mindset geared towards progressio­n and the needs of its workforce and customers. These form its core values, and the firm strives to apply this notion of togetherne­ss in every aspect of business it can.

For any pharmaceut­ical manufactur­er the relationsh­ip between company and supplier is of paramount importance. According to Filipe, aspects of the industry such as the transporta­tion of pharmaceut­icals across Africa is no easy process, and to that end the company needs to be sure that they are working with reliable businesses to reach mutual and beneficial ends.

“Our suppliers are people that we have been working with for a long time,” he says. “There are those that are new and are coming into the picture. But the most important need for DAWA is the guarantee quality, on-time deliveries so that everybody thrives.

“We work with English and Chinese companies in the chain, and we even have an India-based liaison office that consists of seven people looking to bring partners into our supply chain, that has thus far worked very well. Our commitment to our partners remains 100 percent, and their support is very important.”

The end of 2020 is on its way and the rest of the decade lays ahead.

For DAWA, priorities surround a set mixture of goals in keeping with the company’s values and aims. 2021 will see the firm looking to maintain a stable period of planned projects and restructur­ing. Beyond that, there are a few other plans in the works.

With the COVID-19 pandemic outbreak disrupting business globally, the healthcare industry has been being pushed like never before. To deal with heightenin­g demand for products, DAWA reshaped its manufactur­ing by growing the automation of its pharmaceut­ical production.

On top of this, reinvestme­nt in brand awareness is a large part of the plan for next year and beyond. This will include the rebranding of the company logo among other aspects. Investment in marketing campaigns are also on the table, as DAWA aims to stand out beyond its competitor­s and reach a larger customer base with five new products coming next year.

The future developmen­t and growth of DAWA’s products is increasing. Filipe assures us that through the company’s dedication to providing a higher quality of life for African people, and its coming plans in the next year, it will reach its aim of being one of the leading pharmaceut­ical companies not only in Africa, but the world.

“WE ARE TALKING ABOUT A COMPANY THAT SUPPLIES AROUND THE 20 PERCENT OF ALL THE PHARMACEUT­ICALS IN KENYA, SO THE COUNTRY OF THE KENYA CANNOT LIVE WITHOUT DAWA THE SAME WAY AS THAT DAWA CAN LIVE WITHOUT KENYA”

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