learning from a connected africa

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www.scroll.co.uk © 2016 Scroll LLP Photo credit, Rahel Anne Bailie Learning from a Connected Africa Lessons in digital marketing for the continent

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Page 1: Learning from a connected africa

www.scroll.co.uk © 2016 Scroll LLP

Photo credit, Rahel Anne Bailie

Learning from a Connected AfricaLessons in digital marketing for the continent

Page 2: Learning from a connected africa

Starting with the first Digital Marketing Summit

in Sudan…

Page 3: Learning from a connected africa

Digital Marketing Summit organisers and volunteers, Khartoum, Sudan

Page 4: Learning from a connected africa

Where is the UX?

Design?Content strategy?

Page 5: Learning from a connected africa
Page 6: Learning from a connected africa
Page 7: Learning from a connected africa

People doing business

in various African countries

explained a few realities…

Page 8: Learning from a connected africa

Mariam ElfadilDigital Marketing

Sudan

Page 9: Learning from a connected africa

Resourcefulness to overcome barriers

Working around sanctions

• Barred from using US marketing tools, no credit cards in Sudan

• No access to paid services from US companies (Google, FB, etc)

Adapting to cultural contexts

• Conservative society – images, clothing, messages

• Struggle to reach middle-aged and older markets

Access to resources

• No curriculum at university level, bringing professors from Singapore

• Use workarounds to get access to resources (e.g. Khan Academy)

Page 10: Learning from a connected africa

Resourcefulness to overcome barriers

Country of extremes

• Access to technology – only minority can afford smart phone

• Affordability of bandwidth – under 5MB, no video

• 4G = 40USD = 400SD = living expenses for a month

• High academic standards vs low literacy rates

Country of work-arounds

• VPN is used for access to sanctioned services

• Contacts living abroad become the de facto ecommerce partner

Page 11: Learning from a connected africa

Real Sufi dancing on Friday evenings

Page 12: Learning from a connected africa

Banan AlKilaniTelecomm

UAE

Page 13: Learning from a connected africa

Focus on market-specific needs

Investing in infrastructure: mobile networks for enterprise apps

• LPWAN (low-power, wide-area networks) using LPLR (Low Power,

Long Range), GSM, 2G

• GSM for large-scale IoT operations (smart meters, light grids)

Continent is very price and bandwidth sensitive

• Looking at a new frequency (SIGFOX out of France) because

hardware is cheaper

• Lots of the country still on 2G; must be inexpensive with lots of

functionality

Page 14: Learning from a connected africa

Focus on market-specific needs

Listen to what the market wants

• Keep the principles but overhaul the tactics

• Lots of great talent in Africa not being utilised

Joint collaboration is the way forward

• Bring expertise and work locals to do the development

• Need sense of ownership to make it work

• They will identify and develop the products that are viable

• Products that work in other markets won't work in the African markets

Page 15: Learning from a connected africa

The ubiquitous signs for local telecommunications companies

Page 16: Learning from a connected africa

Kago KagichiriEducation

Kenya

Page 17: Learning from a connected africa

Culture, then technology

Know your cultures across Africa

• In Ghana, appeal to patriotism, but not in Kenya

• In Kenya, new telcos all offer bundles but not other countries

• Ghana has more smart phone usage because of ads: YouTube, FB,

Instagram, all social media

Cultural approach to use of technology also matters

• Top up mobiles via scratch cards or subscriptions?

• Prepare for banked minutes or top up “just in time”?

• Can vary by country, by demographic, by generation

Page 18: Learning from a connected africa

Culture, then technology

Product configuration matters• Software variants to handle multiple device types

• Start basic with “graceful augmentation”

Currency fluctuations

• Reaction to inflation affects income and internet use

• Political atmospheres have noticeable effects on markets

Monitor the technology maturity curve by country

• Some countries are still in sceptical phase of mobile money

• In some countries, can sell exclusively on social media (WhatsApp or Instragram)

Page 19: Learning from a connected africa

Youth involved in traditional dance at the Digital Marketing Summit

Page 20: Learning from a connected africa

Content CurationKaveer BehareeSocial intelligence

South Africa

Page 21: Learning from a connected africa

Big continent, many consumer groups

A market for every solution

• A market for every solution, from basic needs to products for the well-

heeled, tech-savvy millennials to tech-adverse with purchasing power

• Internet growth rates are double that of other global growth rates

Lots of untapped sophistication

• Develop unique solutions for unique African problems, resulting in first-

in-world solutions

• South Africa has the most advanced banking sector, in terms of robust

legislation, operational, regulatory, and technology innovation

Page 22: Learning from a connected africa

Similarities across nations

Similarities in technology advances

• Africa has adopted technology as a key to economic growth

• Bypassed landline phase, moved direct to cellular

• Lack of retail banking infrastructure drove incredible tech advances

• Turned telecom providers into banks, with high security features

Connectivity and energy

• Africans are increasingly connected and easier to reach

• Need for cheap energy led to producing cheapest kilowatt in the world

Page 23: Learning from a connected africa

Typical café, shaded by the bridge

Page 24: Learning from a connected africa

Antonio SeparovicFintech

SA>UK>Croatia

Page 25: Learning from a connected africa

User-centric with cultural specificity

Truly understand the business problems

• Really understand what leapfrogging means

• Don’t parachute in solutions that solve Western problems

• Break problems into market-specific elements

Go small or go home

• Can bring best practices to third-division markets

• Adapting products to infrastructure is a basic principle

• Design for most fuel-efficient devices (tablets, mobiles, not desktops)

Page 26: Learning from a connected africa

Huge opportunities for the right investors

Green field opportunities

• Thinking in new ways brings new apps

• Lots of local talent – African-specific development

• Elevated entry level, e.g. use the cloud as a starting point

Developing a parallel universe

• Approaches are unconstrained by conventions of US tech

• Can stay outside of US constraints and monitoring

• Free of the paradigm of monopolies driving growth

Page 27: Learning from a connected africa

Sali OsmanSecurity and Risk

Management

USA

This speaker? She’s the American.

Page 28: Learning from a connected africa

Questions?

Page 29: Learning from a connected africa

By email:

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