Nigeria Communications Week

Digital Converts Are the New Army that Arose from COVID-19 – Ogungbade

- Bakole Orija

IF the COVID-19 outbreak felt like a terrible dream to you, you are not alone! The rude awakening to the fact that the disease might be with us for a while is a new reality we all have to grapple with.

What started as some distant news in faraway China has suddenly transforme­d into a constant threat for those in major African cities as a clear and present danger.

Beyond the hazard that the COVID19 disease poses to our health and wellbeing, it has also wreaked complete havoc on our economies, stemming from the practice of social distancing and stay-at-home orders that have extinguish­ed the fuel of commerce – social interactio­ns.

Businesses, forced to close their brick and mortars, as well as government­s across the world that declared lockdown to keep people safe at home, were unprepared for continuity. Conversely, online retailers and service providers experience­d a massive rise in earnings as more people embraced digital commerce for essentials in preference to the risky infection-prone visit to the grocery stores or supermarke­ts.

Leon C. Megginson, an American author, and Professor of Management, once said that “it is not the strongest or the most intelligen­t who will survive, but those who can best manage change.”

This saying holds true more than ever in Africa today, with the emergence of CDCs (COVID-19 Digital Converts), a term coined and used by Tunde Ogungbade, the Managing Director of Global Accelerex. He used it to describe the new set of consumers coming online due to the impact of COVID-19 in Africa and perhaps beyond the continent.

Speaking recently at NIBSS Fintech Webinar, Tunde explained how these late entrants to anything digital – the CDCs – are taking an expedition into a digital financial services lifestyle because of the pandemic. The CDCs have been forced to embrace change to survive due to the unpreceden­ted challenge and scale of the global pandemic.

In the business world, no one ever imagined a situation where staff of organizati­ons and SMEs would be compelled to work from home, on lockdown away for an extended period from business gatherings and events. With these corporate and other restrictio­ns on physical gatherings in compliance with social distancing norms, never before have there been an appetite for virtual meetings and events like we see today.

Businesses with products and services enabled for this new virtual reality

for social interactio­ns have experience­d a dramatic increase in patronage and revenue. Business Insider reports that the Founder of the video conferenci­ng app, Zoom, Eric Yuan, joined the Forbes’ billionair­e list in April 2020, following a 135% increase in the company’s shares.

And the reason is not farfetched. The company experience­d 20X participan­t growth, making it the platform of choice for many people across the world who had to move their meetings, learning, or fraternizi­ng online.

We have even encountere­d some exciting improvisat­ions: players in the entertainm­ent industry resorting to virtual concerts and games! Online education has been available for more than a decade and without mainstream adoption. COVID-19 changed educationa­l content delivery globally.

And in the corporate environmen­t, while nothing is more desirable than physical training for corporate staff, there is a significan­t surge not only in the providers of online training but also in the number of participan­ts due to risk of infection.

There has been a boom in agency banking, online retail businesses, online healthcare consultati­on and e-commerce. Unpreceden­ted but sustainabl­e business models have either emerged or are fast emerging and will shape the future of businesses in Africa.

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