Quadrant MSL, premiere strategic communications and PR firm, as well as partner members of the Africa Communications Week (ACW), penultimate Thursday, hosted communications professionals across Lagos to a conversations-and-cocktails event, to commemorate Africa Day and Africa Communications Week 2023.
The event and dialogue, which was spearheaded by Oluwarantimi Olaniyan, Business Lead at Quadrant MSL and the ACW host, Victoria Uwadoka, Corporate Communications Manager, Nestle Nigeria, was designed to promote intentional and responsible communications practices for a stronger African narrative.
The event, themed ‘Telling the Africa Story: The Communicators’ Responsibility’, was hosted by Quadrant MSL on the grounds of the Insight Redefini Campus, the integrated marketing communications group housing Insight Publicis, All Seasons Zenith, Starcom Media Perspectives, Digitas, Quadrant MSL and Leo Burnett, Lagos, as members of Publicis Groupe.
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Oluwaseyi Layade, Account Management Director, Insight publicis, during her opening remarks, highlighted the importance of strategic communications in garnering national support, using the example of late Mrs Dora Akunyili’s ‘Great People, Great Nation’ campaign. She welcomed the dialogue and implored communication professionals to proffer solutions on how Africa’s stories can be best told.
The main panel discussion, with speakers from communications and media, included Victoria Uwadoka, ACW host and Corporate Communications and Public Affairs Manager at Nestle; Dr. Ogho Okiti, Chief Product Officer, Think Business Africa, and former Managing Director of BusinessDay Newspaper; Anthony Osae-Brown, Nigerian Bureau Chief, Bloomberg; and Oluwarantimi Olaniyan, Co-host and Business Lead of Quadrant MSL who also moderated the discussion.
In her statement, Oluwarantimi Olaniyan, the Business Lead of Quadrant MSL, stressed the importance of getting Africa’s story right. She said, “Africa’s development is dependent on the perception of its activities by both dwellers and continental colleagues. This perception of Africa determines the volume and degree of trade and investment, patriotism, and hope.
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“For this reason, the African story must be apt to deliver the positive outcomes Africans desire. We must look beyond ourselves to collaborate across sectoral and specialisation borders in order to enhance the true story of our diversity, bringing in content creators, media and non-communicators into the mix.”
Oluwarantimi who is quite keen about responsible communications reiterated that what communicators say and how they say it, have an impact on Africa’s reputation.
Panellists, Okiti and Osage-Brown, agreed that the African story was about its diversity and uniqueness, stressing the roles that internal competence and history play in the collective narrative. Sharing their excitement about the dialogue, attendees referred to the event as perhaps the most impactful dialogue on responsible communications, in recent years.
On why Africa Communications Week is important, ACW host in Lagos, Victoria Uwadoka disclosed that dialogues like ‘Telling the Africa Story’ are instrumental in shaping and amplifying the dynamic narratives of Africa. She said, “As African communicators, we have a responsibility to represent and reflect the realities, challenges, and opportunities of our continent. As we engage, it is my hope that we all embrace our responsibility as communicators and make a positive impact on Africa’s narrative.”