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Articles tagged: Yusuf 


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Reminiscential Notes about APCON written by Yusuf Danesi
The Nigerian advertising industry should honour the memory of late Chief Olu Adekoya by reviving the Forum for Advertising Practitioners, which was his brainchild. Launched in October 1997, the Forum was charged with the responsibility of fashioning a future for the outfit and organise elections. It aimed to create a favourable atmosphere for advertising practitioners of all grades registered by APCON to meet on a social and professional platform for meaningful interactions.

Lethal Conviction (John 17-18) written by Yusuf Danesi
The Jews preferred Barabbas, a rebel and criminal, to our Lord and saviour Jesus Christ- what a shame! It is no different today- how we are made second/third class citizens in our society, where we work, in our family, etc. How we are constant targets of slander, hatred, humiliation, bully, harassment, discrimination, victimisation, etc. All because of the FAITH that we profess!

Determine not to come down! written by Yusuf Danesi
But my victory was short-lived! God’s victory on the other hand is TOTAL! Was it really worth Christ giving up his life for so many who were most reluctant to respond? I know how I easily focus on my sacrificial dedication to work and the deliberate lack of appreciation by my work colleagues. Sometimes I am tempted to stop giving my best and I ask if it is really worth it. For Jesus the real temptation could even be: come down from the cross for people to actually believe.

Touching the Sore Spots written by Yusuf Danesi
I decided to travel by Virgin Nigeria to London last December primarily because I considered its association with Virgin Atlantic. Also I could not imagine Virgin Nigeria without thinking about Richard Branson, who is so passionately committed to the Virgin brand such that it resonates across the Virgin Group of companies, which include international music mega-stores, air travel, mobile, financial, retail, music, Internet, drinks, rail, hotels and leisure, with about 200 companies in over 30 countries.

A Dose of Virgin Nigeria written by Yusuf Danesi
A trip scheduled for 5 p.m. on a Sunday, saw us checking in from 1 p.m. and nobody said anything about an impending delay. At the check-in lounge I bumped into a former post-graduate school mate who was also traveling to London but with her family and I engaged the husband in a discussion. Ironically it was from him that I learnt that our flight would not take off until 8.30 p.m. despite personally approaching the check-in staff more than thrice earlier to know what was responsible for the delay. All I could get from them was: “we shall soon leave.” There was no announcement at all to explain the problem and I also noticed that affected passengers behaved like they were used to delays.

Our Resilient Outdoor Advertising Sector written by Yusuf Danesi
How do our advertising practitioners survive all these laws? While speaking with Charles Chijide, rpa, managing director of Charella Nigeria Limited, a frontline outdoor advertising company based in Lagos, I found that multiple taxation had always been the bane of outdoor advertising practice in Nigeria. A well-traveled professional, Chijide strongly believes that there should be specific and uniform tax laws governing outdoor advertising in the country rather than the multifariousness presently being witnessed.

If Nigerian Lawyers were to Advertise written by Yusuf Danesi
Why are Nigerian lawyers not advertising? I understand that a twin-reason is the need to protect the consumer and to protect the public’s perception of the profession. The latter reminds me of a good friend who would not stop asking why “most” Nigerian lawyers speak bad English. Is it not amazing that English, which is the lawyer’s medium of communication, is seen by my friend as the solicitor’s albatross? The lawyer should simply be a master of the language. I have a lawyer-nephew who speaks and writes good English and I also know another who speaks good English but writes poorly. However, she is just fantastic compared to many people I know who went to school to study mass communication but speak the precious language in their native dialects.

It Goes Beyond the Logo! written by Yusuf Danesi
New in the UK sometime this year while vacationing, I needed to convert my traveller’s cheques to pounds sterling and so I headed for Barclays Bank. Why on earth did the teller and her supervisor make me sign each cheque before disclosing their commission-charge? HSBC, upon approaching them, said they would have cashed the cheques for me at 0% commission if I had signed before them! 3% commission was a lot of money especially when you consider that my bank in Nigeria had made its own deduction from my account- was it painful! Thomas Cooke, owners of the TC was even talking of 5% commission! The Post Office also offered 3% but said I had voided the cheques for not signing before its staff.

Issues in Change of Name written by Yusuf Danesi
However, I am disturbed that the network might, unintentionally though, be taking its customers for granted. I cannot just understand why it had to undergo name change about four times in five years- yet we, subscribers, are still loyal! Before I traveled out on vacation lately, I was only reading in the papers that my network was about to be “acquired” once more by a foreign company but by the time I returned, I was initially confused by the rapid changes it had undergone in just 30 days!

MBAs at a Crossroads written by Yusuf Danesi

Imagination: Broadcasters' only Limit written by Yusuf Danesi
As digitization came to be discussed on the agenda, with the NBC appealing to stakeholders to brace up for the transition (from the current analogue format), there was an understandable panic among media owners because they usually have trouble understanding technology, and really do not want to see change on their watch. It was a shame that ‘advertising’ became the ‘scapegoat’ as media owners held agencies responsible for their licence renewal indebtedness to the NBC.

The Functionality of Logos in Brand Heritage written by Yusuf Danesi
Your logo is a component of your brand identity and consumers’ perceptions of the roots and origin of your brand are crucial to its strength. The first Kellogg’s product (corn flakes) for example, started out in 1876 at a health institute which specialized in ‘purifying’ the soul through a grain-based diet.

Knowledge as Corporate Power written by Yusuf Danesi
Practical steps in knowledge transfer include: selecting a unit that has interesting knowledge sharing; establishing a steering committee; conducting a knowledge assessment; establishing a framework for knowledge transfer; identifying an organizational goal and corresponding knowledge component; identifying the appropriate transfer process for each type of knowledge; locating current informal systems that can be enhanced; identifying resources and; developing an integrated system of knowledge transfer.

Interactive Media Planning written by Yusuf Danesi
The form your ad will take may not be certain because in the world of interactive media you are closer than ever to the “medium being the message.” The easy way out producing a 30-second TV spot or a page four-colour bleed print ad, and then figuring out where to run it will soon be over for Nigeria’s ad industry (Smith 2002). As a media planner in the interactive world you must evaluate each new medium based on the potential of the technology and its limitations.

The Digital Challenge for Ad Agencies written by Yusuf Danesi
The brand will not continue to be an image established through print and broadcast media; it will function as a measure of relationship capital as customers gain new power. Someday media will converge whether we like the idea or not and anybody can own media. Our ad agencies should be smart enough to change their approach to supporting their clients’ brands in the digital world.

Wireless Advertising Agenda for Nigeria written by Yusuf Danesi
Wireless advertising will do well in an environment whose population is mobile oriented, e.g. Japan, where most people walk and not drive, thereby making it easier to interface with the device. The Japanese phone screens (wide) are also tailored toward surfing; wireless devices can be used for Internet access. Because wireless is an entirely new medium, it requires an entirely new approach to marketing and advertising (David Haskin 2001).

Sex in Advertising: Going Beyond Shock Value written by Yusuf Danesi
I do not agree with some of my professional colleagues who preach that we should not take ads seriously while basing their conviction on the slogan “creative light-heartedness and freedom of expression.” Advertising is a pervasive, powerful force that shapes attitudes and behaviour in today’s world that it would be foolhardy not to take commercials that seriously!

Disruptions in Advertising written by Yusuf Danesi
Ours is now a brave, new world, replete with alternatives to straightforward advertising. P&G recently embraced channel planning which is about putting media or communications planning at the front end of one’s campaign creation. The organization realizes that the first step in any marketing programme is to understand one’s consumers and how they might be reached rather than what might be said to them.
Channel planning is about trimming traditional media ad budgets and spending more on other marketing activities

Technology: Password to the Future of Advertising written by Yusuf Danesi
What does the future hold for advertising in Nigeria? It is assumed that we would experience political stability and our economy would be favourably responsive. These are vital variables for any meaningful human endeavour, advertising inclusive. The future therefore cannot but be bright and unlimited considering the fact that without advertising support, the media communications industry would almost grind to a halt

Indecency in Advertising written by Yusuf Danesi
These advertisements are targeted at men for the simple reason that sex is just one of our basic strong emotions. And advertisers will always attach their products to these basic emotions in order to sell them

Advertising as a Threat to Innocence written by Yusuf Danesi
Do you still remember our own immoral outdoor advertisement for a condom brand and the issues it generated? We are starting to find it difficult to protect our children from suggestive subjects and images that they are not emotionally and psychologically prepared to handle. Do we not owe our children the duty of protecting them and guarding their childhood? There is no doubt that things have changed from being decent and proper, to being indecent and morally corrupt.

Tsunamis, Advertising And Our Future written by Yusuf Danesi
In reality, advertising is a valid component of modern life. Paradoxically, however, all products, packaging and services have some environmental impact, although the degree varies from one to the other.

Guinness, Legend and the Ship of Fools written by Yusuf Danesi
I feel beer advertisers should complement APCON'S role by monitoring themselves, e.g. the Beer Institute, an American group comprising Miller, Coors and Anheuser - Busch, does have a marketing and advertising guide that contains suggestions for what should and should not be in advertisements. Also, the Union of Russian Brewers has a "Code of Honour", which guides its advertising.

Advertising obesity to children written by Yusuf Danesi
However, obesity is not confined to rich industrialised countries. In Egypt, surveys of 4-year -old children reveal that over 25 per cent of them are overweight or obese. In Nigeria and Kenya between five per cent and 10 per cent fall within these categories. The most likely causes, according to WHO, are redundant physical activity and over-consumption of energy-dense convenience foods.

Sack Your Media Planner! written by Yusuf Danesi
When, recently, a leading Nigerian advertising figure with much foreign exposure, openly declared that agencies were satisfied with traditional media and that they would rather stick to them, my heart sank. May be this eminent ambassador of our industry is unaware of the untold havoc wreaked, for example, by NEPA (now PHCN) on advertisers’ ROI.

Hype: The Advertiser's Wet Dream written by Yusuf Danesi
When will the real brand with real advertising and real branding emerge? Advertising practitioners need to guide their clients in identifying the real market and its needs. They should introduce the much needed realism in their brand communications i.e., candid-cam advertising, real-life cameo branding, such that a real interface of the brand with the real consumer is established in the market place

The Poverty Of Religious Advertising written by Yusuf Danesi
If Nigeria’s population is truly 120 million, which may comprise 60 million Muslims, 48 million Christians and 12 million Traditionalists (F.Awoyemi 2003); one can then understand why churches threaten to take over Nigeria’s airwaves. In its self-assessment vis-à-vis these statistics, the church probably believes it has, so far, failed to deliver on the Great Commission (Matt. 28: 19-20).

Audience Motivation in Advertising written by Yusuf Danesi
I find the market age concept interesting. In their research paper, “What to say when: Advertising Appeals in Evolving Markets,” Chandy et al submit that market age is crucial to understanding the inverse relationship between motivation and ability to process ads. For a particular product or service, one market is considered older than another if the product or service has been around and enjoyed advertising longer in the first market than in the second market. Market age therefore refers to the length of time that a product or service has been available and advertised in an identified market

Of Untruths and Compromises in Journalism written by Yusuf Danesi
I wonder how we will be able to maintain our editorial integrity if we are on the pay-roll of advertisers and their communication agents. It even gets murkier when we allow our reporters to be sponsored on local and foreign trips or allowed to be given “professional” awards by these same organizations or their affiliates.

Branding with the 'Third Screen' written by Yusuf Danesi
Enyimba F.C. could collaborate with MTN in a promotion to persuade fans to vote for their favourite player on an AIT telecast, for example. These three organizations would share the text revenues, which average between N12 and N15. However, by the time we have multimedia messages, complete with colour video and music, the revenue would move up. Proactive companies will then build up files of cell phone numbers whose owners opt-in for advertising.

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