Setting goals
It’s a given that the pandemic has disrupted every aspect of our normal life. However, in the case of digital, it has not been necessarily disrupted, but accelerated. As a business, we had always planned to build out digital as a service, but the pandemic resulted in a huge shift in marketing budgets – almost overnight. Digital budgets went from contributing less than 2% to overall marketing budgets to now taking up more than 20% of the pie.
Anticipating challenges
The biggest hurdle for a third-world market like Zambia is finding the right skill set. In 2020, marketing consultant Alberte Touani shared a quote by Mike Berry in which he outlined the lack of understanding of the benefits of digital marketing in both small and large markets:
“Digital marketing is still a mystery to many companies in Africa. Some think it is only about creating a website – that’s just the start. Some turn to their agency for help, only to find the same old answers: print, outdoor and TV (if the budget is big enough). Others take it a step further to add a social media presence on Twitter and Facebook or even building brand awareness via banner ads and lead generation via Google AdWords. The digital-marketing picture in Africa is very fragmented at the moment, but that’s completely normal at this stage of development of digital marketing in any country.” – Mike Berry, 2013, Digital Marketing Conference 2.0: Deploying Digital Marketing for Competitive Advantage
Touani added that there is a lack of help or guidance offered to clients by local digital agencies.
Combining old and new
The general assumption is that the appetite for digital media has grown exponentially. However, the question we need to ask is whether clients are ready to shift their budget from traditional media to new media that allows them to make real-time changes and track campaign performance with various KPIs. To answer this, clients must first fully understand their core business and marketing objectives.
Furthermore, it’s important to understand that very few African countries went into hard lockdown. As a result, only the middle-income earners and upwards made meaningful changes to the way they live – that is, working from home and shopping online. Conversely, the lower-income earners could not afford to stop trading or move their business to an e-commerce platform. We need to remember that the lady selling vegetables on the side of the road and the farmworker are still desirable customers with purchasing power; they only lack the surplus income, meaning they can’t make changes to the way they live or work. Hence they will most likely continue with their old way of life in what is the new normal for others.
Therefore, our task as communicators is to adapt to, adopt and combine the new media and old media. We are in a position where the digital divide has widened in Africa as the upper- and middle-income earners have zoomed into 2021, working flexible hours and, therefore, demanding more convenience, while the lower-earning demographic – who commute to their destinations and wait for their favourite television programme because they don’t have access to streaming services – are still stuck in 2019. As marketers, our challenge is servicing both segments, providing solutions relevant to where they are right now.