Adebayo Adekanmbi is Chief Marketing Officer of MTN Nigeria. He
combines multi-disciplinary competencies as a Brand /Marketing Strategist,
Consumer Insight Data Analyst and Business Intelligence professional. Continue to read his interview...
Taking a look back at your career trajectory before your appointment as
CMO, would you have dreamt that you’d be marketing lead for one of the biggest
brands on the continent ten years ago?
I have always been a
self-driven professional. Ten years ago, I was already on a high pedestal of
business management with senior level leadership responsibility and C-level
commitment at a multi-country level, which then meant that I was on the path
for something big to happen. Prior to that, I had also prepared myself for the
opportunities that life would bring in terms of capacity building and exposure
to the best training and gaining certifications in the best places in the
world. I had also garnered some hands-on experience with some of the global
brands as well as professional validation of my skillsets, both in the hard and
soft side of marketing. I was generously exposed to some of the best mentors
and managers who provided the shoulder to see beyond the time and I am grateful
to God that all these things have helped to mould me into what I am today.
·
What we are
seeing today wasn’t a fluke or a random happenstance?
My rise and elevation
hasn’t been a fluke. It was a consistent journey of self development, global
exposure, multinational work experience, proven results and development of
multidisciplinary skillsets. As you may
be aware, I led Analytics/Business intelligence at General Manager level, in
addition to my hands-on brand management expertise as an agency strategy
director, and at global level at MTN South Africa, where I managed the expanded
portfolio of global go-to-market strategy and implementation. It is a big
pleasure to have transversed a broad spectrum of Strategic marketing practice, from
the logical side of number crunching to the excitement of creative brand
expression.
You know, there are people
who move up by knowing somebody or perhaps it’s a family business – often the
expression is ‘it’s not what you know but who you know’. I’m sure you know what
MTN stands for in terms of recruitment, following global best practices and
standards. My sincere advice to the emerging future talents is to take time to
build valid and proven career and not sucked in the euphoria of media blitz. No
one builds a great career on the pages of magazine. You must have tangible
competence that is tired and tested and avowed to be superior than your
contemporaries. You must proactively seek to earn the reputation of a global talent
via cross-border work exposure and professional/academic endorsement. They must
invest in knowledge and be willing to go beyond their comfort zone. Why can't a
brand person learn the financial analysis and mathematics of the business he or
she manages? Marketing is a serious intellectual business and the mental rigour
requires both the logic and the magic. We must inspire the next generation to
build intellectual capacity at a young age and then build experience with it.
It is the surest way to your destination, especially with the favour of God.
·
You have just launched the BetterMe campaign. What has informed the
need for this campaign as the BeBetter campaign was considered to be very good?
This journey started about two years ago with the Be Better campaign, which was our
digital brand positioning message to the market. We were saying that people
need to leave good behind and look for the next frontier enabled by MTN's vast
digital portfolio. We saw that the Internet was a game changer for an average
Nigerian, though voice has done a lot. An average Nigerian teacher for example
must have access to content like a teacher in America, with the only difference
being your location. Since all the content needed for a teacher is already on
the Internet, why not promote it and let people know about it? It is still a
part of our quest to make information available to ordinary Nigerians. We felt
that you as a person, plus the internet, will deliver something, which is BetterMe.
BetterMe is a simple equation, myself as an ordinary Nigerian
plus the power of the Internet that is the leverage, the connection and the
opportunity that comes with the Internet will make you become a better me. BetterMe
for us is a new social lexicon that defines an ordinary Nigerian who leverages
the power of the Internet to do extraordinary things. It is that ordinary
mechanic by Obalende Bridge who has become a master in fixing Honda cars, not
because he has gone to any school, but because he knows how to go to the Honda
website and check the latest trends from Honda, hence attracting more
customers, reducing the time he serves the market and making more money for
himself. With the My2015 BetterMe app we are bringing the
Internet down to the level that every Nigerian can understand and not just
talking data. A young lady who is a hair stylist for instance, can post the
hair she does on Whatsapp, as a
platform to attract a new clientele base. This also speaks to our strategy why
small and medium scale entrepreneurs should have their own websites. Going
forward, you are going to see instances like www.chukwudiandsons.com, where
more Nigerian businesses position themselves for global opportunities. Why
should a business use Gmail.com as a corporate email address? There are
companies that even disqualify a firm from competitive bid when emails are not
sent from official emails like info@yourcompanyname.com. MTN enables this with
ease. The my2015 BetterMe app dramatises the role of the Internet powered by MTN
in the lives of ordinary people and the resultant effect of the transformation
that comes through the power of the Internet.
·
A lot of young entrepreneurs have a fear of
approaching large multinational corporations like MTN with their business ideas
and plans. Are these fears justified?
At MTN, we run an open door
policy because we serve 60 million customers and we won't pretend that we know
it all. As a learning company, our biggest source of learning is our customer
and our ecosystem. We want to learn and gain fresh insights. If you are a young
man out there looking for a platform where you can share and express your
ideas, MTN is the place to go. There are many content developers who have taken
the risks to come to MTN. Some people have lost out because they are afraid of
their ideas being stolen when they put them forward. For us at MTN, as a
responsible organisation, we have succeeded based on our ethical values which
we treasure so much and have placed at the core of our operations. We respect
every idea of our partners and anyone that comes to us. If you can't come
directly to MTN, we have created a proposal platform online where you can drop
your ideas.
Secondly, you can also walk
in through our ecosystems via vendors and suppliers such as advertising and
events agencies who work with us and share our values. They can help put your
ideas forward to us. You can also bring in your ideas through organised
knowledge groups like CCHub. I know that there are various clusters like that
around. CCHub has a working relationship with us. They come around and we share
learning, we show them our strategy and they understand our focus and where we
are going as a business. They in turn aggressively seek content that serves
those purposes.
·
What three
things would you say to a young professional or entrepreneur who is looking at
moving to the next level in order to achieve success within their own space?
I will capture this as the
3 Rs - Relevance, Reputation and Revenue.
First is Relevance. How can
you enhance the relevance of your skillsets consistently? Can it serve a need,
is it a solution? Can it be customised to bridge a gap? Secondly, you must
build a reputation for the relevant idea you have. Build a reputation for
yourself around the ecosystem where you function. We have many super guys out
there that are excellent at creating relevant solutions but do not have the
right reputation around them. They have a reputation for being late for
meetings or not meeting expectations, that’s not a good reputation to have. Lastly,
the question of revenue mindset must be addressed. You must have a commercial
mindset. A lot of young chaps with great ideas lack commercial mindsets. They
are great thinkers, they have a solid reputation, but they don’t know how to
take their products to market. These three principles must guide the logic of
every young person who has the desire to get to the top. Even at MTN, we
approach things from this angle – make sure the product is relevant, hinged on
our global reputation as an innovative company and executed with a mindset to
deliver optimal value to our subscribers and better return to our stakeholders
(government tax returns, shareholder returns etc.). There is also room for
collaborations in these 3R models. In enhancing your relevance, collaborations
and endorsements come in. Reputation often comes by aligning with established
partners, either through cobranding, ingredient branding, or tactics
endorsement. Within the three levels enunciated above, you will find the power
of collaborations, co-creation and engagement running through the value delivery
pathway.
No comments:
Post a Comment