Trends and growth
South African brand remains consistent
#SABrandIndex
panel @productivitysa Sello
Mosai @IrajAbedian @brand_sa Dr Petrus de Kock @ROIAfrica @TonyaROI pic.twitter.com/rn6OyCV2PH
—
Brand South Africa (@Brand_SA) November 18,
2015
Abedian is the founder and chief executive of Pan-African Capital Holdings, as
well as a highly respected economic policy adviser, researcher and author. Khoury
is a leading expert on South African and African media analysis and the founder of
ROI Africa media monitoring company.
#SABrandIndex
@Brand_SA CEO Kingsley Makhubela
welcomes guests, speakers to the event. pic.twitter.com/d8CzAtjwGL
—
Brand South Africa (@Brand_SA) November 18,
2015
The event was opened by Brand South Africa chief executive, ambassador
Kingsley Makhubela, who spoke about the changing dynamics of global geopolitics.
He cited the Paris attacks and the Syrian crisis to illustrate how perceptions could
affect the way the rest of the world saw individual countries. He urged that South
Africa, as a nation, use the findings of the index, as well other global economic and
social barometers, to look at what other nations were doing right and change the
things the country was doing incorrectly.
South Africans could be proud of the country's performance in a range of
indices in the past year, Makhubela said. "The Global Competitiveness Index
produced by the World Economic Forum ranks us 49 amongst 140 countries and
number two in Africa… (together with) the Mo Ibrahim Index on African Governance
placing us at number four amongst 54 countries on the continent… now, the Nation
Brand Index places us at number 38 of 50 countries."
#SABrandIndex
Introduction by Sello Mosai @productivitysa pic.twitter.com/I8b6510rBI
—
Brand South Africa (@Brand_SA) November 18,
2015
The country needed to embrace a culture of continuous improvement and be
able to tangibly measure those improvements through surveys such as the Nation
Brand Index in order to become a better country, Productivity SA's Mosai said in his
introduction to De Kock
The Nation Brand Index
The Anholt-GfK Roper Nation Brands Index is a global survey, started in 2008 by British policy researcher Simon Anholt, the "father" of nation branding. The index measures perceptions and opinions of 50 country-brands, including 20 core countries and 30 economically and regionally representative member countries, based on the six dimensions of national competence, known as the Nation Brand Hexagon. These include governance, exports, tourism, people and culture, as well as investment and immigration. An overall score is determined from the average of the six scores. Anholt called the index a vital barometer for how countries perceived each other and how it affected relationships with one another. In an overview of the survey on its website, he explained that "it is (a country's) perceived impact on the world that affects reputation more than assets or achievements".The dimensions of the nation brand hexagon
- Exports: This is what marketers call the country of origin effect – whether knowing where the product is made increases or decreases people's likelihood of buying it, based on a country's particular strengths in science and technology, as well as creative energy.
- Governance: This dimension incorporates the perceived competency and honesty of the government, while also taking into account perceptions on how the government respects citizens' rights. A country's global behaviour in international peace and security, its environmental protection policies and efforts to reduce poverty are also factors.
- Culture: The score is based on perceptions of a country's heritage and its contemporary culture of music, art and sport. The survey gauges the strongest images and recollections of a country's cultural product.
- People: Assessment of the sociability of a country's citizens and the appeal of the people on both personal and professional levels (tourism and business relationships).
- Tourism: The appeal of a country is scored based on three major areas: natural beauty, historical significance, urban modernity.
- Immigration and investment: This assesses the perceptions of a country's economic prosperity, equal opportunity and quality of life – would it be somewhere you would want to live and/or invest in?
South Africa's brand index rating
#SABrandIndex
2015 ratings. #NationBrandIndex pic.twitter.com/zrs9NbWlyN
—
Brand South Africa (@Brand_SA) November 18,
2015
South Africa's brand index rating per dimension is:
- Exports: 36th out of 50 countries surveyed
- Governance: 39th
- Culture: 30th
- People: 36th
- Tourism: 36th
- Immigration and investment: 39th
@brand_sa 's GM: Research Dr
Petrus de Kock presents the 2015 #SABrandIndex
results pic.twitter.com/FSY5LlSA5T
— Brand South Africa (@Brand_SA) November 18,
2015
So how can South Africa play to its strengths to improve on the weaknesses of
the country as a brand?
The panel discussion offered a variety of choice words and some typically
South African out-of-the-box thinking to define and solve the conundrum.
Khoury said South Africans were celebrated for doing things differently. She
spoke of how the grassroots campaign #FeesMustFall used social media to put
forward its ideas and build a following. At the same time, it communicated the
campaign to the rest of the world, inspiring similar questioning of the issues
globally. This, she said, was an organic and fluid process, something that could be
applied to any kind of campaign with
the right intentions.
Abedian spoke about the differences between policy frameworks and the state's
stance, and finding a common ground to make the country's economy work. He also
said that the private sector, while remaining strong in South Africa, needed to play
a more proactive role in highlighting its important role in South African society.
Mosai said building a quintessential South African identity was something that
should have been created from the beginning of the post-democratic era, yet it was
not too late to start. "The identity of South Africa is every individual in the country
and we have to build a united front out of all those elements," he explained.
De Kock argued that while 21 years may not be enough to form a definitive
South African identity, he agreed that more in-depth interrogation of what we
wanted as a nation was needed.
In closing, all the panellists agreed that the country's best course of action was
to play to its
strengths, while also changing perspective and being more creative
thinkers. Mosai concluded that the country might have a trust deficient, politically,
socially, globally: "If we can't trust each other then we can't work together. We
need to find a common ground for all in the country."
"Our diversity is still our greatest strength," concluded Abedian. "Let's see how
we can use that to feed positively into a national narrative in order to build on past
failures and improve our successes."
South Africa's overall brand index rating in 2015 is 38 out of 50 countries surveyed. The country remains consistent in the fields of exports and governance and raised its rating by one place in people and tourism. The results were released on 18 November 2015. (Image: Brand South Africa)