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Ogilvy deliberates challenges in Africa

30 Mar 2009 11:561 commentsBizLike
Despite the onset of a global recession the Ogilvy Africa network is not planning to downsize, says Ogilvy Africa MD, Ato Afful. Afful was speaking at a conference for leaders and creative heads from Ogilvy offices in Africa and the Indian Ocean islands, who gathered in South Africa to, among other things, deliberate on Africa's advertising and marketing challenges.

Ato Afful, Ogilvy Africa MD
“This is not to say that because our business is in developing markets, we will not be affected by the global crisis. Potential cuts in foreign grants and loans, which constitute about 40% of some of our national budgets; drops in remittances from emigrant workers; price drops on commodity exports; declines in export-led production and employment; and the inevitable suspensions of some government programmes and projects in the coming years will have their impact,” says Afful.

Ogilvy Africa has 49 offices in 31 African countries including South Africa, Lesotho, Morocco, Egypt, Ethiopia, Kenya, Cape Verde, Cote d'Ivoire and Cameroon.

Afful believes interest in Africa has heightened over the past five years.

“When Ogilvy Africa started out 15 years ago, interest in the continent was not nearly at the level it is now. It changed in recent years with large organisations such as SABMiller, M-Net, SuperSport, DStv MultiChoice, British American Tobacco, IBM and Vodafone spreading their tentacles into Africa,” he says.

Afful says the key to adapting to the new economic environment is the ability to change fast. “This does not mean going off-course. Agencies need to adopt the best possible means for quality delivery, while remaining frugal, professional and valuable to their clients,” he says.

For Afful, great work is the obvious route to success. “In the words of Ogilvy Worldwide chairman, Shelly Lazarus: “Advertising is the work that is usually most visible and that we are most judged by. We will not be seen as a great creative agency, a great idea company, without great advertising," he says.

“Your work is what speaks beyond your voices. It is why clients come to you. While agencies must continue to compete on price, they need to focus on making the work better and providing superior service. The associated benefits of this approach include more opportunities, higher rewards, greater trust, stable relationships and new business,” says Afful.

While current challenges may be new, Afful says clients will nonetheless want good work and service, even if they buy less. “It would be tragic to strip out quality from the service mix. The trick will be to continue articulating and working tirelessly at two primary interlocking platforms: quality of work and value of service.”
 
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Nick
Arrogant Ogilvy Durban-
A lesson in humility and professionalism is in order for Mr X... What a great brand ambassador he makes for Ogilvy... (not).
I got sent this email below from one of the horrified and humiliated applicants...


From: [email deleted]

To: (he listed the email addresses of about 35 applicants)

Date: Wed, 3 Feb 2010 11:11:43 +0200

Subject: RE: Copywriter position at Ogilvy DBN


To: Everyone who applied for the Copywriter position at Ogilvy Durban,


Thank you for your interest in Ogilvy. The response to the advert was truly overwhelming. Unfortunately, if you’re reading this, it means that your application was unsuccessful.


I sincerely hope that this does not dampen your creativity and future plans.


At this point, I would also like to offer some advice to all/some of you...


To those of you who were/are journalists: we’re still battling to find a correlation between journalism and writing sound strategy that leads to groundbreaking advertising campaigns. Perhaps you should pursue what you are qualified to do, and do it well. Journalism is a craft that has the potential to change the world, don’t dilute your craft.


To those of you who are in HR and want to be copywriters (there was a surprising number of you): please re-think everything. The life of a commercials writer is something that has to be learned and then lived. You will be very unhappy as a writer if you can’t live up to the title and responsibility.


To those of you who are client service and want to be copywriters: you should know better.


To those of you who are qualified copywriters with spelling and grammatical errors in your CV (almost all of you): this is unacceptable, I’m sure you will agree. You have to love and respect language to be a copywriter. Sort that out before your next application.


To those of you who are students and applied anyway: I love you guys. You are looking, hunting, searching for, any opportunity. That is a great quality. Don’t stop it. In fact, do it more. Literally knock on the door of your favourite agency and insist on showing someone your portfolio. Refuse to leave until they offer you something. Anything. Make coffee in exchange for briefs. Work for free. Go and take the success you want. I love you guys.


Ogilvy DBN is committed to developing young talent. We are busy forming a brand new internship program that will allow the best-of-the-best to work on real briefs and prove their mettle to real clients. Oh, and you will develop a great portfolio in the process and perhaps even get a job. But that will only happen towards the end of this year. So keep an eye out for it.


I hope that this has been a learning curve for you. It certainly has been so for us.


Thank you and goodbye...

[details deleted]
.............................................................
OgilvyAction

76 Mahatma Gandhi Road, Durban 4001
Office: +27 31 334 5603 +27 31 334 5603
Fax: +27 31 334 5645
Mobile: +27 72 389 6922 +27 72 389 6922

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