Marketing A Nation!
When I had landed at Kenneth
Kaunda International Airport on my first visit to African Continent in the
afternoon of Zambian summer in 2012, my first take was its calm and quiet green
environment. Being in the field of marketing Communication and brand building
for past over 2 decades in India as well as the United Arab Emirates working
for a diversified range of brands cutting across categories -- my natural
antennas stood up trying to catch many visible marketing communication efforts along
the road from the airport, while inhaling the very fresh & clean air from
the car window. It didn’t really feel like it was summer!
Need a Road Map: The nation of Zambia needs a Marketing Road Map to
establish and position itself in a progressive and concerted manner (brand
building does not happen overnight!) at all possible touch points in communication,
while at the ground level all good work actually takes place to support such
brand building exercise. The connection between the what is there and what is
being spoken about is so very important, as an adage goes in my native language
“one cannot sell sour mango twice!”
Looking for Positives: Manuals in Public Relations (one of the tool
within marketing communication) might
tell that “any news is good news” in
terms of remaining in contention or to grab the public nay the Target Audience’s mind share on a continuous basis. This
could be true for a Broadway or Hollywood actor who mostly have nothing to lose
from even negative publicity, as it is their acting which matters more and not
their many scandals. In fact these stories help them keeping afloat in public
memory. But for a nation? It needs to be a different approach altogether.
Negativities whichever are there have to be managed or addressed in a truthful
manner while focus need to be on the positives. Just to give a hint, the “fact”
that this country has had a very peaceful existence for past fifty years, in
spite of turbulence in countries very next door -- itself could be a big
positive as a selling point or ‘talking point’ from a PR perspective. The
general gentle nature of people in public life and the respect that is shown to
fellow human beings in day to day interactions – there could be so many such
positive aspects which might not be visible to people otherwise as these have
become almost part of a nature of the people. It is noticed by ones who are new
to this region.

Going by an example: By virtue of being in Dubai for nearly one and half decades, seeing it grow from just a small city to a modern metropolis – I take it to be a perfect example to cite as to “How to market a Nation”. However it is needed to be kept in mind that Dubai did such an overdrive in brand positioning and marketing as a preferred location for investment, business, leisure and sports -- until today many people from far flung countries think Dubai to be the capital of UAE! From about 1996 within more or less 8 years period it built up the city with all modern civic attractions facilitating investors across the globe. Nevertheless, it is a perfect example to show how a city could be marketed with the right ingredients in action and a strategized marketing plan.
Its real estate projects were sold like in a share markets -- an unprecedented phenomenon never seen anywhere in the globe. Licensing processes have been simplified so much that the convenience of opening a business became as easy as one could only imagine. Numerous free zone centres have been laid out with composite facilities within where investors just got pulled in. Dubai became the unchallenged role model in the gulf peninsula which made others in the region follow suit like Bahrain, Saudi Arabia, Qatar et all --- when they took this marketing route to their positioning and success. Even their airline Emirates has been marketed so well that people feel it to be the UAE’s flag carrier, which factually it is not. The way the world largest unmanned metro system has been unveiled with a strictly followed time line in project completion, added to the build up of the desired image for the city. Until the great global recession in the last quarter of 2008, which hit Dubai with a severe blow with most of its real estate markets crashing, the city had an unimaginable growth and perhaps was the only city in the world which could attract such levels of foreign investments in a very short period in time. UAE having a local population between 17 to 25 percent with over 60 percent being from the Asian subcontinent, an achievement like this, engineered through well strategized marketing and positioning plan supported by the visionary rulers is un-paralleled in the history of modern marketing era. Currently Dubai is trying to regain its envious position as a sought after destination, by regrouping its marketing activities while fighting the negative facts with a bold positive PR outlook. They are not shying away from the hard facts rather are addressing them upfront by using communication experts at work, taking a 360 degree approach in utilizing all possible tools in marketing communication. That’s the way to go!
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