TBWA Unveils Strategies For Creative business Excellence
TBWA Concepts Unit is one of Nigeria's foremost advertising agencies.
THE international
Strategy Director of TBWA, top-notch advertising firm in the world, Marie
Jamieson, has revealed that one of the best ways African agencies can achieve
commercial success is by packaging their creative works in compelling
narratives.
Speaking at the TBWA
Magna Carta symposium for creative practitioners and business communicators recently
held at the Civic Centre, Victoria Island, Lagos, she explained that Africa has
quality narratives that practitioners can envelope their works around to capture
attention globally.
She pointed out some
globally acclaimed ads with African background that had millions of clicks
online. A recent ad created by Procter and Gamble for the United Kingdom
audience and the ad introducing Skype were two of the many materials she
showcased to encourage Nigerians to believe that creativity resides in Africa.
Jamieson emphasized that brands should dare to
be different when marketing their products by engaging their customers with
authentic, relevant, emotional and insightful ads.
According to her, the
country’s advertisement industry is yet to attain its full potential, adding
that several opportunities still exist in the creative industry.
“There is a dearth of
creative talent in the industry, and we believe this is because in Africa, this
is not a conventional career path, hence, the few available talents are not
even liberated,” Jamieson said.
The analysts also
noted that Africa’s lack of infrastructure should place the continent as a den
of opportunity, however, adding that some of the world’s existing
business models do not work in Africa, hence, the need for the continent to
chart its development course with its own ideas.
Jamieson also
introduced two other members of the team she led to Nigeria for the special seminar
on commercial success in creativity. The two experts were David Blythe,
Managing Director of Yellowwood, who spoke on the fundamentals of getting
marketing right in Africa, and Vincent Magwenya, Managing Director of Magna
Carta Reputation Management Consultants, who spoke on effective leadership in
delivering quality communication in the digital era.
In his own
presentation, Blythe revealed that Nigeria’s rebased Gross Domestic Product
(GDP) which currently stands at $509.9 billion will significantly rise in the
future when operators in the retail, insurance and health industry leverage on
the full potentials available in their sectors.
The Yellowwood boss
said while opportunities abound in the economy, brands should desist from
seeing the opportunities from the huge population’s perspective insisting that
consumers are not just about numbers but about the ability of brands to offer
products and services that create values to consumers.
“Opportunities
currently abound in financial services, telecommunication industry but we
believe the future of the Nigerian economy rests on sectors such as retail,
insurance and health,” Blyth noted.
Blyth who is a brand
strategist stressed that the country’s current retail structure though still
informal is already evolving and will eventually metamorphose into a
major component of the economy.
He however pointed
out that it is pertinent for players in the sector to desist from imitating
what is obtainable in other parts of the world to rubber stamp in the country,
adding that Nigeria has her own unique system of trade.
Citing Shoprite as a
case study, Blyth maintained that the brand has excelled in Nigeria’s retail
scene because of its ability structure itself to suit its environment by
stocking and offering its customers what is relevant to them.
“We also believe that
the insurance industry will be a major contributor to this economy in the near
future because this is evidently an under-insured market,” Blyth further said,
pointing out that as the growing middle class acquires more goods and services
they will need to insure them.
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