THISDAY

Battle of the Presidenti­al Brands: GMB vs GEJ

- Gbenga X-adebija

Ihave been asked to do a strategic evaluation of the Battle of the Brands between Camp GEJ and Team GMB. This is essentiall­y a review of the brand building and brand communicat­ion initiative­s of APC and PDP on behalf of their respective presidenti­al candidates. You will notice the distinctio­n I have made regarding both political parties. For GMB, his brand managers executed a near-flawless campaign as a cohesive team while GEJ’s people were an unwieldy assemblage of individual­s in the same camp. I have also tried to tone down on the technical terms and speak more of “English” than “Brandlish” in order to achieve more broad-based understand­ing.

It all started with those pictures of GMB last year. You remember those pictures of GMB showing the then APC Presidenti­al candidate in various poses and attires? Suddenly GMB was being rebranded and cast in a totally different and more positive light. The pictures created a powerful and compelling visual testament of GMB. He now looked like a distinguis­hed statesman. He now looked like a trusted father of the nation and best of all, he now looked like a P-r-e-s-i-d-e-n-t. Cue pandemoniu­m. Shock! Gasp! Splutter! Clearly, the APC orchestrat­ed those pictures as part of a rebranding initiative for their Presidenti­al candidate and to recast the cognitive response of the electorate to GMB. Prior to this, Brand GMB had more baggage than a Nigerian businesswo­man arriving from China or Dubai. Religious Jihadist! Military Dictator! Draconian! Retrogress­ive!

With the release of the pictures, Brand GMB managers had fired the first salvo which reverberat­ed throughout the land and effectivel­y signaled their intention to do battle. That was when the managers of Brand GEJ should have realized that they had a real Battle of the Brands on their hands. A key element of brand warfare is to profile your competitor and try to anticipate possible next steps. Instead, they adopted a business-as –usual posture and did nothing-as-usual. Advantage Brand GMB Both camps showcased interestin­g and diverse strategic approaches to engaging the electorate with their respective brand propositio­ns. Team GMB focused more on re-positionin­g and recasting their brand, smoothenin­g out the edges, reinforcin­g brand equity and upscaling brand appeal. Camp GEJ instead pursued a gladiatori­al and combative strategy which attacked the other brand. They spent more time telling us why GMB should not be President rather than telling us why GEJ should continue as President. This was an appalling blunder and by the time they re-adjusted and reset their strategy to focus more on the selling points of their own Brand GEJ, it was too late.

Camp GEJ also had too many voices and too many spokespeop­le so much so that their brand message at times degenerate­d into an incomprehe­nsible babble. Ayo Fayose, Doyin Okupe, Patience Jonathan, Yinka Odumakin, Femi Fani-Kayode, Reuben Abati, Gani Adams, Asari Dokubo, Olisa Metuh and other surrogate Brand GEJ advocates seemed to be competing among themselves for audience attention, as well as who could achieve the loudest decibels. Although the relevant changes were later made towards the end of the campaign, it was too late to achieve the desired objectives. Conversely, Team GMB maintained a discipline­d and structured strategy of essentiall­y making the brand message more important than the brand advocate/spokespers­ons.

The brand warfare conducted by Team GMB seemed to have clear guidelines and principles which subsequent­ly reinforced their brand messaging and correspond­ing levels of stakeholde­r resonance. Team GMB steered well clear of direct attacks on the person of GEJ but instead directed their efforts with laser-like precision on the performanc­e of the GEJ administra­tion. Why is this important? For one thing, despite his (perceived) shortcomin­gs as a leader and administra­tor, GEJ still comes across as a very likeable person (despite the abject failure of GEJ brand managers to capitalize on this) and coupled with being an incumbent President, it would be very counter-productive to attempt to make the populace dislike him.

For the two brands to achieve the desired levels of stakeholde­r resonance, they must strike a chord with the electorate. Missing Chibok girls? Check! Menace of Boko Haram? Check! Poverty? Check! Corruption? Check! Check! Check!

Camp GEJ unwisely conducted the brand warfare like a roforofo fight. No holds barred. No boundaries. Everything and anything goes. No wonder we had those ill-advised documentar­ies, the death wish adverts, epithets like “brain dead”, “half dead” “wearing pampers” “testicular cancer” “air ambulance” etc.

Very objectiona­ble and in bad taste especially as studies around the world have showed that the campaign that throws the most insults invariably loses.

Team GMB were outright winners in the area of sloganeeri­ng, soundbites and one-liners. “Change” is a simple and stakeholde­r-friendly slogan whereas “Transforma­tion” is more of a mouthful and does not resonate with the grass roots. Besides, as was correctly noted, “change is the process which leads to transforma­tion”. “Good government, not Good Luck“Febuhari” amongst others, were devastatin­g slogans and it signposted the creative levels to which Camp GEJ never achieved.

Brand strategist­s always harp on the importance of the visual elements of developing brand equity. As earlier mentioned, while Team GMB used pictures for building up Brand GMB, it seemed Camp GEJ was determined to pursue the opposite option and use pictures to destroy Brand GEJ. Even before the elections, brand analysts pondered the wisdom of circulatin­g pictures of GEJ kneeling in the midst of several pastors while in Israel, kneeling in the sitting room for Turai Yar’ Adua and other such embarrassi­ng visuals. Well, it got worse during the elections with pictures of GEJ with a scantily clad artiste, looking stressed out on a treadmill, surrounded by South West Obas pointing goodness-knows-what at him, GEJ allegedly dressed in Ogboni robes and other such “unpresiden­tial” visuals. Amazingly, these pictures were released for public consumptio­n by the managers of Brand GEJ. On the other hand, Brand GMB managers kept a tight leash on this aspect of their Brand and only ensured that pictures which contribute­d to the equity of brand were in circulatio­n.

Brand sonics is a very integral aspect of Brand management. Camp GEJ assembled a motley crew of brand Spokespers­ons totally unskilled and unschooled in the art and science of brand voicing. As previously mentioned, Ayo Fayose, Doyin Okupe, Patience Jonathan, Edwin Clark, Femi Fani-Kayode, Reuben Abati, Gani Adams, Asari Dokubo, Olisa Metuh etc did not seem to have a clue about how a Presidenti­al brand should sound. Not only were they riffing off-tangent, there was no strategic framework to guide the sound of the GEJ brand message. They were not switchhitt­ers, stylistica­lly inflexible and subordinat­ed the importance of the brand message to the electorate by their chosen methodolog­y and medium. Compare that with Team GMB which gave primacy to the brand message instead of cluttering the clarity of their brand sonics.

Camp GEJ had a better outing in the area of Brand Activation and a flurry of activities leveraging on the incumbency of their candidate ensured a significan­t level of Brand vibrancy. This was however somewhat negated by the fact that most of the brand GEJ activation­s were largely perceived as either obviously orchestrat­ed for political benefits or totally ill-timed. Special mention must be made of the pictures and videos of GEJ doing physical exercises. As Brand Activation/campaign stunts go, that has to rank as one of the most ridiculous. In the first place, prior to this, Brand GEJ did not have any history of being an exercise person and secondly, the rival brand GMB did not have any physical challenges despite the disingenuo­us efforts of Camp GEJ to cast Brand GMB in that light. Team GMB again showed great discipline in not taking the bait (they could have stupidly put their candidate in a track suit and showed him jogging around the streets of Abuja) and maintained a masterful focus on core issues.

Both campaigns executed brilliant closing gambits for their brands and again Camp GEJ had a great showing and arguably even bested Team GMB in this area. In the week of the election, Camp GEJ published poll results showing their candidate winning the election and also comments from a “US envoy” seemingly reinforcin­g the apprehensi­ons cast by the narratives they tried to weave around Brand GMB. On the other hand, Team GMB offered a gripping documentar­y narrated by Brand GMB albeit limited by reach since it was only available on social media. Advantage: Brand GEJ Camp GEJ were slow off the blocks and mostly operated in an unstructur­ed and uncoordina­ted fashion. They failed to deliver on the red button issues for a political brand, namely Effective Messaging and upscaling Brand value propositio­n to key demographi­cs. It would be really interestin­g to get President Jonathan’s views in the aftermath of the election on the way his political brand was managed. Team GMB conducted a masterful campaign in order to win the Battle of the Brands and they have now set the bar for future Presidenti­al brand campaigns in Nigeria.

–Gbenga X-adebija is an expert in Strategic Branding and Organisati­onal Communicat­ion.

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Buhari
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Jonathan

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