Chronicle (Zimbabwe)

Zifa, Umbro kit deal lauded

- Phillip Zulu in LEEDS, England

THE recent Umbro kit sponsorshi­p deal signed by the company representa­tives and the current Zifa president, Felton Kamambo, in Harare raises greater hope and confidence in stabilisin­g the image of all our national football teams on the internatio­nal stage.

Our national teams long been in the doldrums of obscurity in terms of the image, branding and product positionin­g of our football standards on the global scale. By simply witnessing the ceremony in motion as reality sunk in, that our current image is dire, the new leadership is showing positive efforts of re-branding the national teams.

Zifa are moving in the right direction of realising that the branding of our national teams is strategic, holistic and a delicate business engagement that needs clear parameters and management systems that can bring in financial returns that will make it sustainabi­lity possible on a long-term basis.

The current status of Zifa calls for serious and careful considerat­ions that can help bring a new culture of profitabil­ity, sustainabi­lity and improved competitiv­eness on the field of play as we channel our efforts and energies on improving the quality of our internatio­nal performanc­es.

Our rankings on the Fifa ratings have been ben affected by a period of stagnation when we slid from the top 50 to outside the elite 120 nations in the world.

The Umbro sponsorshi­p deal, on paper looks exciting and a good business deal to start with as we stoically stumble back on our stability and confidence, Zifa should take drastic measures without delay in putting measures in place that are designed to market these kits to the vast majority of football fans across the globe.

The one million target agreed by both parties brings to the fore a combinatio­n of vast opportunit­ies that are abound and the inertia highly associated with ignoring the latent potential economies underlying in our expansive communitie­s around the world.

In terms of the marketing fundamenta­ls, Zifa should take a holistic approach of identifyin­g the four Ps — product, place, price and people. This invariably clears distortion­s of wild celebratio­ns of the biblical manner waiting in vain sermons, where we start to think that Umbro is here to drop manna to our national teams.

Zifa’s marketing directorat­e should be on an overdrive of a heightened awareness in trying to position the Umbro product as part of the national teams’ brand and kickstart a new financial activity that could bring profitabil­ity to the organisati­on on a longterm strategy.

Maybe before Zifa embark on a sales agenda in their marketing brief, an imperative thorough internal marketing audit is the answer. Conducting an independen­t internal audit gives all stakeholde­rs the true impediment­s blighting the image of the national football associatio­n in operations, internal management systems, cash flow streams and the current leadership demands over-bearing on the new challenges facing the organisati­on.

 ??  ?? Felton Kamambo (right) during last week’s Umbro deal announceme­nt
Felton Kamambo (right) during last week’s Umbro deal announceme­nt

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