PHOTO | BILLY MUTAI | FILE IEBC Chairman Isaac Hassan arriving with
commissioners at the Bomas of Kenya's auditorium ahead
of a briefing. IEBC officials have remained mum over claims that
commissioners were divided over the manner in which the General Election
was handled.
NATION MEDIA GROUP
By BY MUTHOKI MUMO
In Summary
- About 41 per cent of the consumers who are loyal to particular brands do so because they believe in goods they have used before. An equal number are loyal to particular brands because they are of a higher quality than others with less familiar offerings.
Companies migrating to the region hoping to tap
into a booming consumer base will have to work harder to get their
brands noticed and picked up by local consumers. A new report shows that
local consumers are largely conservative and remain loyal to certain
brands.
In its latest statistical release, Consumer
Insight Africa (CIA) indicates that 88 per cent of Kenyans consistently
purchase the same brand in various product categories whenever they go
shopping.
“In Consumer Insight’s recent REJA study, Kenyan
shoppers revealed a faithfulness to familiar brands that resembles
religious belief,” said the company in the research note.
About 41 per cent of the consumers who are loyal
to particular brands do so because they believe in goods they have used
before. An equal number are loyal to particular brands because they are
of a higher quality than others with less familiar offerings.
Only 16 per cent of those surveyed indicated that
they opted for their preferred brands because they were cheaper than
those offered by the competition.
This is good news for brands that have already established a presence in the country.
In the quest to sway consumer preferences,
Consumer Insight says positive testimonials from fellow shoppers might
go further than clever advertising or even competitive pricing.
In a report titled “The Rising African Consumer”
released last year, McKinsey Company argued that consumers on the
continent were developing sophisticated tastes and becoming more brand
conscious.
With a discretionary incomes that are growing in
tandem with the continent’s economic growth, the middle class no longer
judges goods only on price, quality and brand status are also crucial.
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“African consumers demand quality products and are
brand conscious, belying the view that the continent is a backwater
where companies can sell second-rate merchandise,” writes McKinsey
Company.
According to McKinsey, 55 per cent of consumers in
Sub Saharan Africa are loyal to a single brand while 70 per cent are
loyal to a small selection of brands.
McKinsey warns that companies that want to make
headway in Africa will have to invest heavily in their brand identity
and visibility.
The company projects that Africa’s consumer-facing industries will grow to be worth Sh33.84 trillion ($400 billion) by 2020.
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