South Africa provides four of Africa’s best brands
FOUR SOUTH African companies have made it to the 2017/18 list of 100 best brands in Africa compiled by Brand Africa.
Africa’s largest mobile operator, MTN, ranked No 6 on the list, up from No 9 in 2016/17; food giant Tiger Brands ranked 32, Shoprite 38 and DStv 56.
US sports apparel company Nike took the No 1 spot, followed by South Korean electronics manufacturer Samsung at No 2 and German sports apparel company Adidas at No 3.
Brand Africa chairperson Thebe Ikalafeng, who released the list at the Johannesburg Stock Exchange on Friday, said their survey received more than 15 500 brand mentions covering more than 2 200 brands.
The survey was conducted in 23 African countries accounting for 75 percent of the continent’s population.
South Africa’s DStv made the Top 3 brands in the media category, together with Google and Facebook.
First National Bank ranked No 7 on the list of Top 25 most admired financial services brand, with Stanbic/Standard Bank ranked at No 5, while Old Mutual ranked 14, Nedbank 19 and MTN Mobile Money 20. Nigeria’s Guaranty Trust Bank was ranked No 1, followed by the UK’s Barclays/Absa at No 2 and Togo’s Ecobank at No 3.
Ikalafeng said that if Africans created their own brands, they could create their own future. He said controversial prophet Shepherd Bushiri and Nelson Mandela were some of the “brands” mentioned by respondents to the survey.
It was concerning that 83 percent of brands in Africa came from outside the continent.
Fast-moving consumer goods (FMCG) company Trade Kings, which ranked No 49 on the list of Africa’s 100 most admired brands, was described as Zambia’s largest FMCG producer and has the largest media spend in Zambia.
Ikalafeng said African brands needed to empower consumers and be at the centre of relevant solutions, and that technology should be a key driver for growth.
Victor Kgomoeswana, a radio host, African business specialist and author of Africa is Open for Business, said African innovators were being challenged to bring something to the table.
He was part of a panel discussion, including Namibian businessman Lazarus Jacobs and Nigerian author and chief executive of Insight Communications Feyi Olubodun, among others.
@luyolomkentane