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Africa: More Devices, Relevant Content and Cheap Data are Needed

“Huge opportunities”

“Africa is a very important market and there are huge opportunities. For every 1% of Internet users, there is 4.3% increase of exports; it’s awesome,” St Clair told a recent GIBS marketing and innovation forum in Illovo, Johannesburg.

“It’s all great that a number of Africans are accessing the Internet through their mobile devices, but we need to get more devices. Besides, the price of data is terrible meaning we need cheaper data – that is Google’s mission in Africa,” he said.

“We are living in disruptive times and in the connectivity revolution made possible by mobile phones, an era where knowledge has now become a commodity,” said Janine Hutton, Nielsen director for telcom practice in southern Africa.

“We have got to go further than data”

“We have got to go further than data – there are over 2000 languages in Africa and we have to translate all these languages to help people fully understand the Internet,” St Clair noted, adding that sustainability is also one of the factors his company is working on for its Africa Internet mission.

St Clair said African communities may be developed by providing tools, such as giving them the knowledge and capacity to start making money on the Internet. However, he said every single country in Africa is different culturally, with its own regulations and banking systems, thus requiring ubiquitous solutions.

South Africa, which has the fourth largest mobile advertising market in the world, has been described by Hutton as a region of extremes.

“We need to market to those extremes”

“We need to market to those extremes, and the key point is that companies should be client-centric, with mobile treated as complimentary, not competitive; consumed together they will amplify reach and engagement,” Hutton urged.

There are over 37 million registered mobile users and nine million active users, and there are more 4.7 million more households with more than one cellphone, according to Nielsen. South Africa is ranked fourth in the world in data usage, just after Indonesia, India and the US, and 60% of South Africans have bank accounts.

“State of chaotic change”

“The world is in a state of chaotic change; are you changing?” asked Hutton, revealing that 12% of Kenya’s GDP moves through M-PESA.

It is believed that more than one-third of urban SA consumers have an Internet-enabled device, and mobile banking and shopping are gaining popularity in Africa, especially with the growth of mobile.

According to St Clair, there are four trends that make mobile one of the main attractions of today’s business environment.

Entertaining, immediate, effective, local

“Mobile entertains us,” he said, adding that there are thousands of mobile playbacks a day on YouTube.

“Mobile is immediate, effective and local,” he listed, revealing that one in three mobile searches is local, and it is the ultimate shopping companion as 79% of smartphone Internet users use their devices to help with shopping.

“Smartphones are exploding, and Smartphones queries have increased a lot in 2011 in Africa, with 250 000 applications in the market place and 150 000 android activations globally,” St Clair revealed.

St Clair, who spent a decade in London, is also the co-chairman of Mobile Marketing Association in SA, while Hutton is the former MD of Ogilvy Interactive.

The GIBS Marketing Concepts & Innovations Emerging in Africa Forums are hosted in partnership with FinWeek magazine. The next forum, themed ‘Innovation Management in the SA Context’, will be held on 27 October 2011.

Source: allafrica

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