Business
Capitalizing on Brand Africa
African brands are growing beyond the continent by simultaneously catering to local needs and doing business on a global scale. Thebe Ikalafeng, CEO of Brand Africa stated, “Local brands are still the dominant brands that Africans support. In the Brand Africa 100 survey, about two thirds of the most valuable brands in Africa are global brands, the rest are African brands. Within those brands, 72 per cent of those brands come generally from South Africa, 26 percent from Nigeria and two per cent from Kenya.”
With the world being more open, African brands such as MTN, Dangote, Safaricom and Tastic Rice are not only carving a continental niche for them, and fruits of their growth are allowing them international exposure. The remnants of Afro-Pessimism, according to Ikalafeng, however make it difficult for African brands to grow as quickly as others, as Africans themselves prefer to buy products and services not made in the continent.
Ikalafeng said, “The purpose of bodies such as Brand Ghana, Brand Kenya, Brand South Africa, is really to drive the central messaging or positioning of the country. Secondly, to really push competitiveness of the country. If we have a clear, consistent, coherent and desirable value proposition as an African country or Africa holistically, people will begin to support products of those countries.”
He then stated, “The purposes of those institutions are really to drive that value proposition, that unified value proposition as well as to ensure that the countries themselves are very competitive. Having a unified national and Pan-African identity is quite important.”
African Brands by Africa
According to a Brand Africa 100’s Most Admired and Valuable African and Global Brands in Africa 2013 report, the top 10 African brands included telecommunications company South Africa’s MTN, Woolworths, and Shoprite, Kenya’s Tusker beer and Globacom in Nigeria. In fact, 90 percent of MTN’s revenue comes from the continent, and 100 per cent for the rest of the brands.
Other South African companies in the list include Pick n Pay and Tiger Brands. South Africa, according to Ikalafeng, is a strong example of strong brand diversity which was born out of self-reliance. An enabling infrastructure and sturdy institutions also make its local conditions favorable enough to expand its products and services beyond its borders. Ikalafeng went on to say, “South Africa was excluded from the rest of the continent and world for a long time, so it had to become self-sufficient, inward looking [and] self-resourceful. As a result, it created an internal capacity and capability to supply their needs.”
Nigeria leads African banking category in Brand Africa’s 2013 report with Guaranty Trust Bank, Zenith Bank and Intercontinental Bank. In retail, South Africa emerges at the top spot with Woolworths and Shoprite. Brands from both countries are responsible for gaining 100 per cent of their revenue from the continent.
