Friday Okuwe
Nothing prepared the business and
marketing world for the shocks and sweeping impact of
COVID-19. No
economic, political and business forecasts for the year 2020 factored
the possibility that almost the entire world would be forced into a
lockdown without a clear terminal date. Nations and leading businesses
are on lockdown. Every government in the world is occupied with one
thing: surviving and finding a lasting solution to COVID-19. The
developing countries and weaker economies cannot get assistance from the
developed nations. Industries and service sectors that propel the
global economy and keep the world growing and going are virtually at a
standstill. The global aviation industry, the oil and gas sector with
its associated industries and allied products are almost comatose.
Professional football, the world’s biggest game with its billions of
fans and all its associated industries, are equally on hold.
Businesses and marketing always operated
on the premise that we live in a changing world and therefore the need
to refine and adapt strategies accordingly. But today businesses are
caught in a sudden change. We are in a changed world, a new world and a
new reality.
COVID-19 is change with a shock.
Marketing in all its various applications will need to undertake
increasingly bigger roles and responsibilities in the Post COVID-19
world. Marketing embraces the art of designing and packaging products
and services that people need to live better lives and delivering them
in the most convenient and appropriate manner that will appeal to their
desires and expectations.
Peter Drucker said, ‘the ultimate aim of a business is to create and keep a customer’. Marketing creates and delivers value which enables businesses and corporate organisations build a community of highly satisfied, loyal and profitable customers.
Peter Drucker said, ‘the ultimate aim of a business is to create and keep a customer’. Marketing creates and delivers value which enables businesses and corporate organisations build a community of highly satisfied, loyal and profitable customers.
Customers are not just buyers and
consumers of goods/services. They are not just targets for our marketing
activities. They are first PEOPLE. They are people with dreams and
aspirations, with hopes and fears, and with desires and expectations. In
Nigeria, as in other countries of the world, there are people who were
forced into a lockdown that has had physical, psychological, social
impact on them.
These are the issues that the people we
classify as target customers and consumers in our brand and marketing
initiatives, have had to deal with as result of the pandemic. As it
appears they will continue to deal with the aftermath in the post
COVID-19 era. When the heat and threat subside, the impact and upsets
created by COVID-19 will still be a reality we will have to deal with
going forward.
Refresh Organisational Purpose, Values and Vision
Marketing needs to start from the
inside. Employees are the organization’s first customers and internal
army. Businesses and organizations should recognize that employees are
not returning from vacation to resume where they left off. They are
returning from a forced lockdown where a lot happened within a short
space of time. People had their confidence shaken, their convictions
tested and their perspectives altered. The way they lived, worked and
played also changed. It is a new world for both the organization and its
employees. A strong internal marketing programme is essential to engage
employees at all levels in a strategic dialogue. Whether a large
organization or a small organisation with only five employees, nothing
should be left to chance.
First, organisations should have
engaging conversation with staff to understand where they are coming
from, hear their concerns or reservations and discuss any personal
challenges they have. The new work environment and style may have
different implications for each employee. It is necessary that these
issues are taken into consideration, discussed with the respective
employee and clearly addressed to secure confidence and trust.
Second, the organisation should create programmes and platforms to market itself afresh to employees and all critical internal stakeholders. The objective should be tailored to provide reassurance, inspire hope and a sense of safety in everyone.
Everyone needs to be plugged in and carried along on the organisation’s goals, priorities and practices as a result of the crisis.
Second, the organisation should create programmes and platforms to market itself afresh to employees and all critical internal stakeholders. The objective should be tailored to provide reassurance, inspire hope and a sense of safety in everyone.
Everyone needs to be plugged in and carried along on the organisation’s goals, priorities and practices as a result of the crisis.
Re-ignite Your Brand Purpose
In the Post-COVID world, both corporate and product brands will need to find a point of connection to engage with the new consumers within the context of their desire to be alive, to feel alive and stay alive. A brand should project an idea, a point of view and a purpose that defines its uniqueness, its mission in the life of the consumer and the difference it is in the market to create. Nancy Orsolimi, a Starbucks District Manager was quoted as saying that “Starbucks doesn’t sell coffee. We have identified a ‘third place’. And I believe that sets us apart. The ‘third place’ is that place that is not work or home. It is a place our customers come for refuge”.
In the Post-COVID world, both corporate and product brands will need to find a point of connection to engage with the new consumers within the context of their desire to be alive, to feel alive and stay alive. A brand should project an idea, a point of view and a purpose that defines its uniqueness, its mission in the life of the consumer and the difference it is in the market to create. Nancy Orsolimi, a Starbucks District Manager was quoted as saying that “Starbucks doesn’t sell coffee. We have identified a ‘third place’. And I believe that sets us apart. The ‘third place’ is that place that is not work or home. It is a place our customers come for refuge”.
In the new post-COVID world, businesses
and organizations need to re-ignite their brand purpose, engage with a
clear point of view and communicate in a refreshing and reassuring way
that project them as relevant, sensitive and in tune with the new
normal. Jean-Marie Dru, Chairman of TBWA Worldwide and author of
Disruption, noted that a brand cannot remain static in a world where
everything moves. In his views, “If a brand rests on its heritage, fails
to question itself, and builds only on its past, before long it will
come to appear complacent and static. It needs to be nourished with
fresh ideas and initiatives, people need to sense that it is attentive
to the times and that it knows how to remain contemporary”.
Inspire Hope and Boost Confidence
Inspiration, hope and confidence are essential commodities Nigerians will need in a large dose in the Post-COVID world. Marketing needs to do a lot more than sell products and services. There is heightened fear and anxiety all round. People now fear going to hospitals. People cannot go to hitherto safe places like schools, places of worship, cinemas, etc. Shopping for essential needs and requirements is with a lot of precautions and fear. Many weddings ceremonies are on hold.
Inspiration, hope and confidence are essential commodities Nigerians will need in a large dose in the Post-COVID world. Marketing needs to do a lot more than sell products and services. There is heightened fear and anxiety all round. People now fear going to hospitals. People cannot go to hitherto safe places like schools, places of worship, cinemas, etc. Shopping for essential needs and requirements is with a lot of precautions and fear. Many weddings ceremonies are on hold.
In this atmosphere of fear and
uncertainty, people need to be assured and reminded that there is still a
bright future ahead. They need to be inspired with hope and confidence
that the fulfilment of their dreams and desires is still possible.
Products and services are bundles of benefits and solutions designed to
deliver improvement and fulfilment to customers. Marketing of these
products and services should be focused with an added social mission to
help the customer see more meaning and opportunities for a good life.
Product attributes and benefits, value
proposition and offers need to be packaged and leveraged to fuel dreams
and inspire possibilities for customers. We need to take a step further
from “people don’t want a quarter inch drill, they need a quarter inch
hole” to the sense of accomplishment, fulfillment and joy of having a
quarter inch hole.
Union Bank of Nigeria not long ago
created a campaign and product bouquet that provided customers the
platform to fulfil their dreams. It assured customers, pronouncing that,
‘that house you go build am, that business you go start am, that woman
you go marry am…etc.”
Foster Unity and a Sense of Inclusiveness
Marketing should be used as a platform to galvanize people and drive inclusiveness. The world is growing apart instead of coming together in the fight to contain the COVID-19 pandemic. There is chaos and disaffection among countries and within countries. China is taking knocks for the outbreak and fast becoming the enemy of the world. In Nigeria, we still have debates whether COVID-19 is real or not. State governments fought over how the COVID-19 intervention funds were disbursed. Lockdown or no lockdown had its fair share of controversies. Distribution of relief materials provoked more anger than relief. Interstate lockdown restricting travel between states is unknowingly turning Nigerians into enemies of each other. People are beginning to exhibit some level of unspoken discrimination and suspicion of each other.
Marketing should be used as a platform to galvanize people and drive inclusiveness. The world is growing apart instead of coming together in the fight to contain the COVID-19 pandemic. There is chaos and disaffection among countries and within countries. China is taking knocks for the outbreak and fast becoming the enemy of the world. In Nigeria, we still have debates whether COVID-19 is real or not. State governments fought over how the COVID-19 intervention funds were disbursed. Lockdown or no lockdown had its fair share of controversies. Distribution of relief materials provoked more anger than relief. Interstate lockdown restricting travel between states is unknowingly turning Nigerians into enemies of each other. People are beginning to exhibit some level of unspoken discrimination and suspicion of each other.
It will take unity and unified effort to
find a lasting solution to COVID-19 pandemic, rebuild the economy,
stimulate demand and revive consumption.
Marketing efforts need to be used to drive ideas, initiatives and benefits that emphasise and promote unity. The only enemy is COVID-19 and it is no respecter of age, status, gender or tribe. Nigerians need to be reminded that they are one and that recovery and growth are only possible if they unite, band together and see value in each other.
Marketing efforts need to be used to drive ideas, initiatives and benefits that emphasise and promote unity. The only enemy is COVID-19 and it is no respecter of age, status, gender or tribe. Nigerians need to be reminded that they are one and that recovery and growth are only possible if they unite, band together and see value in each other.
Businesses and organisations can
creatively explore opportunities within the key stages of the marketing
chain like packaging, distribution, channel design, advertising, and
consumption moments to emphasise values, ideas and behaviour that
promote the joy of unity and beauty of inclusiveness.
Governments across the three tiers, public sector organisations and relevant NGOs also need to play a pivotal role. Mass mobilisation and orientation programmes to promote love, unity and oneness of all Nigerians is critical.
Governments across the three tiers, public sector organisations and relevant NGOs also need to play a pivotal role. Mass mobilisation and orientation programmes to promote love, unity and oneness of all Nigerians is critical.
Nigerians must be of one heart, one mind
and one cause. The programmes should educate, inspire and ignite a new
awakening of the desirability and beauty of love and unity: love for
each other and love for nation. Orientation programmes and ideas should
be created to promote the need to rise above politics, ethnicity, class
or place of birth and unite in love to build the Nigeria of our dreams.
Inspire National Pride
Customers don’t buy products or services. They buy value. Marketing efforts and initiatives are geared towards the delivery of value to customers. Value extends beyond products and services that improve life, alleviate pain and deliver fulfilment. It also includes ideas, sentiments and meanings that help consumers feel good and make sense of the world around them.
Customers don’t buy products or services. They buy value. Marketing efforts and initiatives are geared towards the delivery of value to customers. Value extends beyond products and services that improve life, alleviate pain and deliver fulfilment. It also includes ideas, sentiments and meanings that help consumers feel good and make sense of the world around them.
In their early years, Nigeria’s Telco
brands did not market just Sim-packs and recharge cards. They sold the
idea of progress, new possibilities, empowerment and achievement. Glo
leveraged its Nigerian heritage to become the positive symbol of pride,
freedom, enterprise and ingenuity for every Nigerian. It inspired
Nigerians to ‘Glo with Pride’ and empowered its customers with the
confidence and passion to take charge and ‘Rule Your World’. MTN, on its
part, gave its subscribers the platform to ‘Be What You Want To Be’ and
‘Achieve What You Want To Achieve’.
In the post-COVID world, we need to
leverage marketing ideas and platforms to connect with insights and
sentiments that are uniquely Nigerian to inspire pride and belief in all
that is beautiful in us as a people. Nigerians are relentless,
enterprising and forward pushing people. They find creative ways to
cope, survive and keep moving. ‘E go better’ is the ‘never give up’
attitude and unshakeable optimism that resides deep within every
Nigerian. It is the proudly Nigerian spirit that inspires pride and
fuels the belief that Nigerians can rise up to any challenge and fight
to win against all odds.
As Kevin Roberts pointed out, “a great
idea needs to either solve a problem or understand an opportunity. A
great idea should leverage powerful, locally relevant emotions, ones
that overcome multiple barriers…. It must be an embodiment of simple
truths that connect straight to the heart. That is why great ideas don’t
need selling; they are already in the heart of the receiver”.
With the global economy badly hit,
industrial and commercial activities seriously halted, the post COVID-19
era will almost be synonymous to recovering from a war. It is a tough
road ahead. Brands and marketing initiatives need to play a vital role
of stirring up the unbeatable Nigerian spirit, inspiring pride in their
Nigerian-ness and reminding them that they have what it takes to win.
Not too long ago, Peak Milk reminded Nigerians that “It’s in YOU”.
It is time to begin to speak to the salient virtues of creativity,
persistence, enterprise, resilience, doggedness and industriousness in
the heart of the average Nigerian.
In concluding, the foregoing are some of
the ways marketing, in its different applications, can be leveraged to
inspire hope and confidence, stimulate demand and consumption, support
business objectives and national growth. There are still many more
possibilities. As Eric Hoffer said, “in times of change, learners
inherit the earth while the learned find themselves beautifully equipped
to deal with a world that no longer exists”. In the post-COVID world,
we need to be open minded and listen, learn and adapt.
Okuwe, Director of Strategy & Planning at SO&U Advertising writes from Lagos
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