The Citizen managing editor, Mr Mpoki Thomson (left), during an interview with Ms Beatrice Nyamari, the managing director of Smart Codes. PHOTO | FILE
Summary
·
Digital
inclusion, which would increase access to online communication channels even in
Tanzania’s remote regions, is necessary for the seamless integration of
conventional and digital media
Dar es Salaam. With technology and digital development impacting almost every sphere of life, it is
inevitable that the disruption will lead to conversations about sustenance and adaptability.In the world of advertising and
marketing, evolution and revolution have been felt far and wide. But to what
extent has technology affected this field where visibility creates perception
and builds brand affinity, thereby influencing the choices consumers make?
The Citizen recently sat down with
Ms Beatrice Nyamari, the managing director of Smart Codes, a company that
prides itself on being one of the most technologically advanced in the field of
advertising and marketing in Tanzania. The conversation occurred against the
backdrop of the 2023 marketers’ summit, dubbed the Tanzania Digital Summit,
with the theme “The Future is Fusion”.
It is from this concept of blending
two contrasting realities that the need to focus on what lies ahead in the
field of brand communication becomes potent.
Ms Nyamari, a Kenyan national,
describes herself as a marketing innovation champion. When we had a chat with
her right after she was appointed to the top job at Smart Codes in 2022, she
said that one of the things that influenced her to accept the new challenge was
her passion for innovation and the path that her new employer was taking in
that regard. “Smart Codes has been on a journey to lead innovation to stem
change in how brand communication is done with innovative solutions,” she said.
With innovation being the
cornerstone of communication in today’s corporate world and beyond, and going
by the discussions that are happening in the fields of public relations,
advertising, and marketing, it begs the question of whether brick-and-mortar
advertising and marketing companies are dying away.
Ms Nyamari, however future-focused
and ahead of her time she is, still finds relevance in the rudimentary ways of
brand communication. She grounds her reasoning by highlighting the basic role
of what advertising and marketing companies do. “Agents deliver context to
consumers based on what we call briefs from the clients or the projects they
are working on for a specific audience. So, depending on what audience they are
targeting, what determines where you go is a media mix,” she elaborates.
Ms Nyamari says a media mix is a
blend of traditional media, or what is known as “offline media,” and digital
media, all integrated to create one experience.
“We cannot safely say that one is
going to die over the other. Market data shows that traditional media is still
key but that there is growth in digital media, and hence it is important for us
to have the fusion because one cannot live without the other, and this is
justified by market trends,” she says.
The marketing expert then highlights
the core role of brand communication and what agencies are expected to deliver.
“We are supposed to steer clients in the direction that is important in the
delivery of their objectives. It is the objective that determines where you
land,” she explains. But what should be considered before even deciding whether
to blend digital and traditional media, she says, is knowing who the consumer
is and understanding what they want.
In order for the fusion between
traditional and digital media to work seamlessly, there is a need for digital
inclusion that would expand access to online channels of communication even in
the remote parts of Tanzania. In this endeavour, the government has in recent
years ramped up efforts to increase digital penetration, be it through
constructing the National ICT Broadband Backbone (NICTBB) or auctioning
spectrum that enables telecom companies to offer multi-band frequencies that
increase internet speed, reduce operating costs, serve more Tanzanians, and
accelerate digital inclusion.
“The biggest point of contact for
consumers in Tanzania is the mobile phone, before we even go to things like
tablets. So when we talk about the mobile phone, we cannot escape talking about
mobile phone penetration. When we look at how many people have smartphones
versus feature phones, you will realise that we are not there yet,” Ms Nyamari
says.
She says there is perhaps a need for
mobile network operators and the government to come up with a mobile
acquisition plan that will enable consumers to access high-tech services such
as 5G. “There is a need to ensure that the handsets are actually accessible to
the users,” says Nyamari, believing that it is the only way we can start
talking about an integrated, faster way of digital growth. “We need to make
phones cheap enough so that they can reach even people in rural areas,” Ms
Nyamari reiterates.
She says that it is clear that
digital transformation is the path we are currently on, but how we get to the
destination in 10 years is still a learning path for all of us.
Sharing market insight into what is
trending in Tanzania’s advertising and marketing space, Ms Nyamari is quick to
point out Artificial Intelligence (AI).
“We can’t run away from the AI
conversation. We have had AI for a while; it is only now that marketers have
access to it for the advancement of their marketing campaigns. Those who are
quick to adapt to the use of AI will reap the benefits of productivity, move
faster, and achieve their objectives faster,” Ms Nyamari says.
Some of the benefits of using AI, as
Ms Nyamari shares, are the ability to get consumer data faster, which enables
you to use those insights to change your marketing plan much quicker.
Even though Tanzania is already on
top of global trends, Ms Nyamari believes that the untapped potential lies in
predictive analytics, which is a branch of advanced analytics that makes predictions
about future outcomes using historical data combined with statistical
modelling, data mining techniques, and machine learning.
While looking to the future,
partnerships remain crucial to the success of brand communication. Smart
Codes, which now identifies itself as a hybrid company, recently entered into a
partnership with a global data, insights, and consulting company, Kantar.
“Kantar walked us through some
trends from a media perspective. Some of the key trends are that, as it
currently sits, traditional media is still king in Africa, but if you want to
effectively deliver content in Tanzania as it currently sits, Facebook is your
best platform right now because of the effectiveness of its conversion rate,”
Ms Nyamari says.
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