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With Motribe, You Can Build Your Own Mobile Community

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Motribe is a platform enabling users, brands, agencies and publishers across the world to build and manage their own mobile social communities. Motribe HQ is situated in Cape Town, South Africa and was started by the co-founders in August, 2010.

 


Motribe enables you to build your own mobile community or social network around a common area of interest.  Features that community members can use include chat, mobile blogs, photo sharing and private messaging. The platform can be used by marketers, community cordinators, fans, hobbyists and mobile users of all sorts sharing a common interest.


The platform has a wealth of features which can help make your experience and intereaction with your community very effective. Being mobile in nature means your network is available almost anywhere.

Why use Motribe?

Motribe brings you and your brand to the mobile web and optimizes the experience for billions of untapped mobile users who are discovering social networking and online communities for the first time. Using Motribe allows you to customise your own mobile community, own the user information and experience without giving up control.

According to ActivSpaces Cameroon, GoogleCameroon was Great

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According to ActivSpaces, G-Cameroon passed the litmus test. Another good outing by Google Africa.

 

G|Cameroon, a training workshop that ran from June 15th – 16th at Immeuble MAH, Akwa, Douala, saw an amazing turnout of Cameroon’s ICT vanguard. At ActivSpaces, we dubbed the theme of the workshop “G-Tools 101”. The lucky participants got the scoop on how to use Google’s numerous applications to enhance their businesses and projects with the benefit of contributing to Google’s mission of organizing global information.

 

 

Photo credit/ActivSpaces

[News Flash] Fasmicro Unveils Integrated Web Solutions – FasCMS, FasLocker, FasLeaser, FasWebshopper and NativePay

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Fasmicro CMS a web-based Content Management System that will enable customers to build their sites. What happens is that as soon as you pay for Fasmicro CMS script, we send you a link. After installing in your host platform, you can update the page site easily. To certify on this technology, visit Fasmicro IWS Training & Certifications


Fasmicro Locker We provide a tool that will allow online sellers to protect electronic products – online transactions and download offerings. This solution will protect the products from unauthorized access as well as manage download link and IP address. Locker will manage expiration of download link and offers a 128 bit file path encryption. With Locker, when someone buys your product online, a download link will be sent to the person’s email with an expiration timeframe. After the lifetime of the link, it expires and becomes un-usable. That way your digital asset is protected. This will power our Android Apps in Ovim tablet. We have figured out how to ensure your e-products are protected.


Fasmicro Leaser – For service based businesses, we will help you manage your licenses by controlling their terminations with your clients. We take those piracy acts and make them history because after the due date, the system will stop working. When the customer renews, the system is reactivated, automatically. This is a perfect technology to go with your software and web technologies.


Fasmicro WebShopper – We provide a cart for Nigeria in Naira – do away with those foreign web charts. With WebShopper, you can create e-stores and products as well as manage large sales. Contact Fasmicro to deploy this solution.


Fasmicro nativePay – will be used to validate payments and issue payment validation, and automatically send SMS and email with validation code to the client (payee). This solution is ideal to complete online payments. We plan to link with banks as this project matures. 128 bit encryption.

[Rejoinder] Global Products, Package Local Designs (part 2)

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The concluding part of the rejoinder

 

Meanwhile, Unilever/LBN shifted gear to introduce Rin detergent powder as an economy offering in flex packs of less than 250gms or so and later in smaller sizes and detergent bar, too. There was a rolling launch across major cities pan-Nigeria. PZ had Zip detergent powder and bar. By 1987, the Unilever senior brand manager responsible for Rin had left the company for a position in an advertising agency.

 

From the foregoing and other angles to be related next, it is plain that during the period of which we speak; P&G was not in the frame yet as a local operator. And in retrospect, it is logical to say that, like in many successful marketing organizations, perhaps it was the big-brand syndrome that swayed Unilever from forcing the flex issue with Omo. Who could blame them when the brand consistently delivered over 55 per cent of the company’s net proceeds on sales, which was a significant metric in LBN’s universe? As for the flex producers, it is possible the economics for local production were not compelling enough hence top-grade cylinder etching and final production had to be done in India still. Perhaps the desire to salt money out of the country also played a role.

 

Meanwhile a combination of factors, from rising production cost to dwindling consumer incomes, had prompted rapid roll out of bulk powders. Unilever/LBN had as many as three targeting different regions with Rin being cascaded on to bulk bags. PZ Cussons had Tempo. Nasco had Brytex and Doyin Group operating out of Kwara State had one, too. Offered in polypropylene sacks of 5 to 15 kilograms, they abetted the practice of decanting detergent powders in mudus. Further down the chain table-top sellers and corner kiosk operators would break into single-serve wrappings.

 

As the bulk segment was crystallizing, the likes of Unilever/LBN and Nasco had between 1988 and 1990 commissioned creative designs and aborted further developments of their lead brands in consumer packs of 15 to 25 grams, While they vacillated the most audacious initiative in flex packing in fabric wash was taken by an Indonesian-owned company with the product So Klin. It came in flex pack sizes that keyed met the needs of the retail trade and consumers. It branded and validated the single portion, and it was white coloured. So, if at all any one company/detergent powder ate another’s lunch in flex packaging that would be So Klin and B-29! They caused ripples in the market and regrets in marketing cubicles at Unilever and Nasco. That much I know having been involved in those pack designs.

 

So, where does this entire story leave P&G’s Ariel? As mentioned a while ago, its relative smooth entry and immediate acceptance had so much to do with the auspicious time of entry as with what had become a shift in attitude toward that kind of packaging of consumer goods. Thanks in large part to the dogged drive of another company in an unrelated product field – instant milk powder.

 

About the same time soap and detergent majors were facing serious challenges, their counterparts in foods and beverages were locked in a fight to stay relevant: mainstream consumers were starting to rationalize some food products like milk, cocoa beverages and cereals. They were seen as “additives” or non-essentials. Between Nestlé’s Milo and Cadbury’s Bournvita combined tonnage was ebbing. By the mid 1990s, they were yet to beat 10,000 metric tons. Meanwhile, those two had unleashed cross-category competition, knocking milk products with loud and graphic claims of “no need to add milk” in TV commercials and print adverts. .

 

Interestingly, ingenious market women had taken to most unhygienic practice of decanting instant milk powder, cocoa beverage and granulated sugar into nylon, using in-pack scoop and tablespoon measures. That many have helped to keep those products within the reach of many consumers. As that trade took shape, the import of milk powder spiked beyond what was needed by the producers of ice cream, yoghurt and other dairy products. 1990/91, Nigeria Television Authority was fighting a losing battle with documentaries aimed at discouraging the unhealthy practice.

 

Nido instant milk powder in tin pack, one of first to so commoditized, was being imported by a local businessman and the local Nestle team may have seen no reason to get into any rofo rofo fight. That much the group product manager (Milk & Nutrition) was to mention in passing some years later. Friesland-WAMCO, the only maker of milk of any kind at the time, would rather stick to its well branded and highly profitable Peak evaporated full cream milk. They had no interest in diving into the powdered milk fracas albeit they made unconvincing noises later with its economy filled-milk Three Crowns evaporated milk. In point of fact, all the branded instant milk powder in the market came in 450 and 900gms tin packs; no flex or refill pack as they were later called. It was not until 1994/5 that Peak moved into 450gm refill sachet of flexo-packaging and another five or six years to move into smaller pack sizes by which time the field had become crowed and rowdy.   .    .   .              .

 

Meanwhile in 1990/91, out of the blue came a group with roots in southern African to change the face of the dairy product offerings.  Wonderfoods, now called Promasidor, practically seized control of a low-end milk segment the majors had scoffed at. By resolutely pitching flexo-packed Cowbell instant milk as a veritable brand with portion packs and large sizes, theirs was a pivotal role in generally getting consumers to embrace that format of packaging. Also, the huge orders of the material may have helped the producers of such packaging materials as more products came in that format and its local production rocketed. So widespread were the efforts of the likes of Cowbell, So Kin and B-29 detergent powder that when P&G entered with their established brands in flex packages, they were going into a rapidly crystallizing situation.

 

On the food processor, if you had UAC Foods/GALA sausage roll in mind, the rumblings it faced over its main raw material some years ago was not as much about suspicion of using dead or insensitivity about the mode of slaughtering the cows as it was about unfounded stories that the company sometimes was probably using pork meat for the product. Calling a wake-up call for a product had been in the market all over Nigeria for over three decades before that dust was raised. For a company widely involved in the production of a range of meat products, including beacon, that was always going to be a touch charge to debunk.

 

The resulting fire fight involved enlisting northern muslim icons in music, use of sound bites of a cow, panning shots of live cows in TV commercials and the silhouette of a cow’s head on the primary wrapper. Today, other brands in the category make a point of associating with cow meat in brand name or other product features.

 

With all sense of modesty, I have offered this intervention from the standpoint of one who was close to the situation, privileged to work as a strategic planner and subsequently with an account service remit that covered Unilever, Nestle, and FrieslandCampina/WAMCO businesses in a leading communication outfit over the period the developments you cited in your commentary unfolded. The Gala challenge was a case study at the 1995 Unilever Advanced Marketing Programme directed by the current chief marketing officer of MTN Nigeria with one of the embattled Gala marketing people as a faculty member and this writer a participant. .

 

IDAHOSA

 

[Rejoinder] Global Products, Package Local Designs (part 1)

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Hello readers, I have written many articles over the years and gotten many personal emails on my posts. But this one is simply different. I asked the person that sent it for the right to share with you. The author, C. Idahosa, is very experienced. I thank him for the insights. Nothing serious – it is more of space in HBR. I wrote in details on this in my doctoral dissertation in finance while in the banking industry in Nigeria and conducted research on this as an EMBA student in UNICAL. Of course, I have to cut some details for a piece in HBR. Specifically, I presented my work in June of 2001 in a workshop in Airport Hotel, Ikeja.

 

Hi Mr. Ndubuisi Ekekwe,

 

Within the last week or so, I read came across your interesting narrative on Global Products, Package Local Designs published in BusinessDay on Monday, May 23, 2011 as part of the Harvard Business Review series. In the absence of a direct mailing address, I gambled on reaching you via the website of African Institution of Technology just to make a few observations, particularly on the entry of Procter & Gamble into the local space for detergent powders, and the meat processor that ran into a storm up north

 

With all due respect, while your account is correct in context, it is sort of off track in some aspects. To the extent that the intention is to instruct on serious strategic marketing, I reasoned it might help to take a closer look at some of the issues.

 

To begin with, you are right on the money about some retailers decanting detergent powders into nylon materials   – a phenomenon that has deepened over time and somewhat disruptive in the supply chain of some products. In the days of “essenco” (essential commodities), people were wont to buy and share large quantities of foodstuff and other household consumables. Also true and still in common practice is people banding together to buy live cows and share the slaughtered meat. However, what I cannot recall is when it was an established trend for economically pressured families to club together, buying and splitting detergent powders so as to get round the issue of large expensive carton packs the producers were shifting. If that ever occurred, it must have been as isolated and insignificant as two buddies occasionally sharing a bottle of lager beer. I do not think such a practice would be settled enough to warrant the interest of the makers of booze.

 

Further still, I do hope someone has not gone around suggesting (be it in some marketing literature or company records) that P&G (Ariel) was first to market or brought a new game to town with flexo-packaging in the relevant market space. It has to be said though that their marketing initiatives indeed caused some lethargic competitors in different product categories, including Cadbury’s Tom Tom, to sit up and be more driven. Nonetheless, it was in female sanitary pad/towel and baby diapers that they dramatically changed the ground norms. P&G’s Always sanitary pad practically walked past the major brands, Simple, Tampax and LadySept, to grab market leadership. I know so because yours truly saw successive Indian managers of Pharco Products Ltd, makers of Simple, dismiss suggestions for audacious marketing support when theirs was #1 in the market. Their argument was that sanitary towel is not a product type that lends itself to robust TV presence, billboard display and street-level consumer bugging.   .

 

Truth be told, it could be argued that as far as flex packaging goes, Ariel’s market entry was auspicious in timing because it keyed into a market situation that was fast taking shape. So, what happened? To address the query, a little bit of history might help.

 

Through the late 1970s and early 80s, Unilever/Lever Brothers Nigeria (Omo and Surf), PZ (Elephant), and Nasco Marketing (Brytex), three majors who competed across the broad spectrum of consumer products and every so often behaved like a cartel were already offering their powders in different carton-pack SKUs, ranging across (I think) 100grams 175/200grams and way up to 1 or 1.5kilograms. Not all the companies offered the different sizes. Other marketing nuances included Unilever having a male model on the pack sold in the northern markets to reflect the preponderance of male shopping in that region. Sunlight and Premier soaps were beginning to be proposed as multi-purpose washing soaps. While further down the scale the likes of Key and Canoe laundry bars. With such varied offerings and price points, marketers went a long way to meet the needs of different income levels. However, by the mid-1980s, consumer resistance, as a measure of the straitened times, was becoming obvious. The IMF-inspired Structural Adjustment Programme was biting.

 

About that time LBN was mulling the retrenchment of (white-coloured) Surf detergent powder from ythe local scene and word was coming in from Indian’s Hindustan-Lever – acting in some sense as Unilever’s laboratory and lead market for developing economies – that fresh thinking was required in soaps and detergents to rein in spiraling cost and hold on to large segments of consumers. They were looking to flex package as the way forward.

 

Procuring that class of packaging material was a distant cry from the off-the-cuff offering it was to become a few years later. Bodpak division of UAC of Nigeria, which met much of the carton packaging, label and photogravure printing needs of all Unilever-related companies – UACN/A.J. Seward, Lever Brothers, Nigerian Breweries and Guinness – was not geared to do that kind of stuff. There was only one proper flex packaging company (Indian-owned InterPlas Nigeria Limited) with operations largely hinged on wrappers for candies and other confectionery products. Another in the printing/packaging sector was Colodense, with focus more on flow-wrapping, a format  that was yet to become popular for packing low-end personal and laundry wash bars/tablets. Poly Products Ltd was majorly a maker of plastic containers, nylon bread wrappers and shopping bags. The current leader in that packaging space, Messrs Vee Pee/Arvee Industries, through its sister company, Gee Pee Ltd, was in the main a producer of water storage tanks bearing the name, Gee Pee tanks. That was what the packaging business looked like.    .

 

To make progress, recourse was made to Indian suppliers to enable Blue Omo to be test-marketed in flex packaging. Shelf off take was sluggish, to say the least. Consumer engagements results shared with advertising agencies as standard practice in Unilever’s playbook, had mainstream Omo users saying, inter alia, (1) they couldn’t fathom their “premium” Blue Omo in a cheap polythene bag, and (2) if it is Omo, which had become the default name for powdered detergent, it had to blue coloured. By and large, it did not count for much that affluent consumers had accepted mostly white-coloured imports. In the main, consumer resistance was the major reason Omo did not go full blast into flexo-packaging when first introduced in Nigeria. On the sideline, not a few brand people wondered whether there was indeed a convergence of understanding between the Omo’s pitch as premium offering in its class and the consumer’s appreciation of that.