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BusinessDay 26 Mar 2018

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24 BUSINESS DAY C002D5556 Monday <strong>26</strong> <strong>Mar</strong>ch <strong>2018</strong><br />

CEO<br />

INTERVIEW<br />

Interview with Private Sector Leaders<br />

Stakeholders keen for the national<br />

ERNEST DEBO AKINLOLA is the chief executive officer of Ntel. With vast knowledge in telecommunications, Akinlola<br />

for every player in the industry. In this interview with JUMOKE LAWANSON, he talks about the steady growth of N<br />

Why and how did you decide to<br />

join Ntel?<br />

When my predecessor<br />

left, the company<br />

started a search<br />

and because telecommunications<br />

is<br />

a very small world, I was contacted<br />

in August last year and came for a<br />

three days rigorous interview process<br />

and I was very happy to finally<br />

emerge as the chosen CEO. I take<br />

this as my own company and I am<br />

very keen to see growth. To me, it<br />

is more about the pride of Nitel, all<br />

of my colleagues from around the<br />

world have sent me messages on<br />

Linkedin saying that I am now running<br />

the BT (British Telecoms) of<br />

Nigeria and that is exactly what it is,<br />

it is the BT of Nigeria. We definitely<br />

have a mountain of challenges but<br />

we also have massive opportunities.<br />

It is not going to happen overnight<br />

but the opportunity to make it happen<br />

was irresistible to me. I actually<br />

said yes to the job before I asked for<br />

the package. I was keen to re-vitalise<br />

the business and put it in the right<br />

path before we then start talking<br />

about it, so that is what I have spent<br />

my time doing.<br />

What have you tried to do to<br />

grow Ntel, considering that the<br />

telecoms sector is currently<br />

swamped with challenges and<br />

what have you seen within the<br />

company that you are working<br />

to change?<br />

The macro telecoms environment<br />

has had a fair share of challenges but<br />

these challenges including the MTN<br />

fine and what is currently going on<br />

with 9mobile are not terminal. MTN<br />

was able to weather the storm. I talk<br />

to me peers, and there is one thing<br />

that is really clear, that is the fact<br />

that the eco-system has to survive.<br />

Nobody wants another player to fail.<br />

If MTN collapsed it would not be<br />

good for us, neither would it be good<br />

for 9mobile. We need confidence<br />

because as a body, we work very<br />

closely together. There is a high level<br />

of indebtedness across the whole<br />

industry but we also have a very good<br />

regulator as enabling body. Every<br />

single role I’ve had in my career, the<br />

company I work with is always the<br />

last one to come into the industry,<br />

so I am naturally drawn to problem<br />

cases and when I see challenges in<br />

the market, I also see opportunities.<br />

In the last five months I noticed that<br />

when Ntel launched into the market,<br />

we had the 4GLTE only preposition<br />

and my view was that this was the<br />

wrong strategy to have because if<br />

you have a 4G LTE service which is<br />

really high-end, how are you going<br />

to get the mass market when you<br />

are the fifth entrant, arguably the<br />

sixth entrant because a lot of people<br />

compare us to Smile Communications,<br />

although we should surpass<br />

Smile this year in terms of subscriber<br />

numbers. We launched with 4G LTE,<br />

with limited handsets into a market<br />

where there is a massive barrier to<br />

entry, so that was a concern to me<br />

and I made it very clear when I was<br />

discussing with the board of Ntel. Although<br />

I was challenged on it, I gave<br />

them the example of what Swaziland<br />

did with Swazimobile. They grew<br />

their customer base to about 100,000<br />

in about a month because they had<br />

2G and 3G. Ntel should have factored<br />

that in, and built a network that could<br />

have captured all subscribers. Even<br />

if it was just 4G, it would have been<br />

better than 4G LTE because 4G has<br />

a much wider range of compatible<br />

handsets, so we get a lot of customers<br />

complaining that their handsets<br />

don’t work with Ntel SIM cards<br />

because 4G LTE is a different band.<br />

I personally felt that this strategy was<br />

fundamentally flawed and too ahead<br />

of its time. However, we now have a<br />

number of OEMs bringing out LTE<br />

compatible handsets, so the market<br />

will definitely catch up but it might<br />

take another two to three years. How<br />

is a business then going to survive on<br />

a very narrow range? When I came<br />

on board, I saw that we had a very<br />

low subscriber base and an even<br />

lower active base of those subscribers<br />

and what I have done since I<br />

have joined is that I have sat down<br />

with the team and strengthened<br />

it with a commercial preposition.<br />

Lack of funding in the company<br />

meant that Ntel could not expand<br />

nationally but we are in the three<br />

key areas of the market where we<br />

have 40 percent of spend, so we are<br />

where we have to be as a minimum.<br />

Ntel has seen a 45 percent growth<br />

in the last five months. Right now,<br />

we are just under 120,000 subscribers<br />

and when I joined we had only<br />

about 82, 000 subscribers.<br />

What strategy are you taking on<br />

to refocus Ntel as a business?<br />

My predecessor laid more emphasis<br />

on the network so the commercial<br />

set up of this organisation in October<br />

when I joined was almost<br />

non-existent. We had branding and<br />

sales but we did not have any marketing<br />

strategy that we needed to<br />

do to grow the base, so I re-focused<br />

sales and drew up a budget to run<br />

some cluster campaigns. Now, we<br />

are using the little money we are<br />

generating more effectively, to the<br />

point that since I have arrived, we<br />

have now grown our customer base<br />

by 45 percent in five months; that is<br />

what we have done differently. It is<br />

the same team but with focus this<br />

time. I live on one mantra – what<br />

gets measured is what gets done.<br />

We measure sales every single day,<br />

and as we speak, we did the highest<br />

sales number in a day just yesterday,<br />

in the history of this business.<br />

Every month since October, we<br />

have been growing. In September<br />

2017, we grew about 10 percent,<br />

by November we grew 15 percent,<br />

as challenging as December was<br />

for us, we grew seven percent and<br />

in January <strong>2018</strong> we saw 52 percent<br />

growth in customer acquisitions. In<br />

February which has only 28 days,<br />

we grew 47 percent and this is fact.<br />

What would you say is the major<br />

contributory factor to growth recorded<br />

in the last few months?<br />

We focused sales and split them into<br />

their right structure – indirect sales<br />

channel and direct sales channel<br />

and the online sales channel which<br />

is coming up. We then launched<br />

propositions like the new ‘Wawu’<br />

offer. In addition, you can now buy<br />

our SIMS from anywhere, do a pre-<br />

KYC and then be directed through<br />

our below the line campaign management<br />

which didn’t exist before,<br />

to then go to your nearest store. By<br />

focusing every single team on their<br />

lanes and driving them with targets<br />

every single day, there is bound to<br />

be constant growth. The ideas are<br />

all from the team and I just enable<br />

them. If I had said in October that<br />

I needed the staff to give me a 300<br />

percent increase in their daily acquisitions,<br />

people would have just<br />

left, but now, we are almost on 400<br />

percent increase on daily acquisitions<br />

and we are still going for more.<br />

Last year, you announced a national<br />

roaming agreement with<br />

9mobile. Please give details of<br />

this deal and when is it expected<br />

to kick off?<br />

At the time when Etisalat, now<br />

9mobile encountered its debt crisis<br />

and management was taken over<br />

by the owed banks, I went to see Boye<br />

Olusanya, the new CEO of 9mobile<br />

because we were also interested in acquiring<br />

the company after it lost about<br />

seven million subscribers. On paper,<br />

9mobile was down to about 13 million<br />

subscribers from 21 million subscribers<br />

and I thought if 9mobile have lost over<br />

seven million subscribers and they have<br />

a network built for 21-22 million subscribers<br />

then they have enough capacity.<br />

I told Boye that Ntel needs 2G and 3G to

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