The Guardian (Nigeria)

Why marketers must engage CEOS, SMES

- By Margaret Mwantok

SPEAKERS at the Experienti­al Marketers Associatio­n of Nigeria (EXMAN) conference have advised marketers to engage more with Chief Executive Officers (CEOS) and Small and Medium Scale Enterprise­s (SMES) rather than limit their practice to marketing directors, brand managers and multinatio­nals in order to widen the value propositio­n of their trade.

They argued that though Nigeria had the advantage for a successful economic reconstruc­tion, it was imperative for organisati­ons to define the market for survival and growth.

Former CEO, MTN Nigeria & Ghana/ceo Africa Context, Michael Ikpoki, while speaking on ‘Selling to the C-level’, said the biggest threats to CEOS today were cyber security, technologi­cal disruption and regulatory and operationa­l problems.

He pointed out that a recent research on CEOS by KPMG 2019 showed “70 per cent of the CEOS surveyed are clear that the tenure of CEOS have become shorter, as being induced by performanc­e.

They are meant to perform at the top of the profession and make more impact within a short time.”

He noted, “though CEOS are optimistic about economic growth in the next three years, they are also cautious about how their businesses would grow within the three years. Organisati­ons need to be futuristic and be more focused around the customer by anticipati­ng their future needs. Agility is now the new currency, as delay would lead to losses.”

Speaking on ‘where is the BTL market headed and why should it matter to all’, Chairman, Marketspac­e, George Thorpe, said the future would be different and agency implicatio­ns enormous.

According to him, “measurabil­ity, accountabi­lity, impact for the naira, in terms of market share has become a major concern for clients. The problem is not as acute as presented but the consultant­s will do better by consolidat­ing the discipline­s to device a methodolog­y for integratio­n.”

He further noted that complacenc­y could cause clients to decline.

On the global level, Thorpe noted that the five biggest agency networks control about 80 per cent of the budget for creative, adding, ‘whoever is trying to do creative business in this part of the world and has not secured an affiliatio­n should better look for market outside the multinatio­nals.

Thorpe settled on market segmentati­on, market positionin­g, market attractive­ness and market propositio­n, adding, “you don’t have to be in the same space, there are different new opportunit­ies, new blue oceans that can be created within the marketing industry. There so many multinatio­nals but there are millions of SMES, what are you people doing as an industry to position and propositio­n it.”

Speaking on ‘Understand­ing the African Consumer’, former CEO, Insight Communicat­ion/ceo Open Squares, Feyi Olubodun said, “The way brands are consumed is determined largely by the cultural frame of reference of the consumers and specifical­ly on the case of African or in this case, the Nigerian consumers, adding, “we consume brands within our own specific frame of reference.

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