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AIC moves into managed corporate websites for non-listed companies

I am pleased to announce that African Information Solutions for Companies Online Limited “African Is Cool” is now offering our online managed website services to businesses other than listed companies in Africa.

To request our marketing pamphlet click here.

Our decision to broaden our product outreach has been largely influenced by the feedback we have received by the companies we have dealt, the feedback received from the users of our websites, and our realisation of the significant size of the communities in Africa using the internet. Whilst our online investor relations solution should really be an “add on” to an existing corporate website we have designed and implemented new websites for the majority of our clients and then incorporated our online IR solution – and this has been another indicator of the demand for good interactive websites.

There IS critical mass in Internet use in African markets and we believe significant returns may be gained by companies that identify how to offer their services and products in this arena. The question is how?

A big weakness of the current corporate website is that it is managed by companies themselves. People are busy and they are not well informed. From our anecdotal evidence, we believe that website statistics of some really large organisations that manage their own poorly populated and outdated websites are less than 1/30th of the traffic that should be going through their websites had their sites been adequately populated and managed. Furthermore, and this is the critical bit, these websites lack the interactivity tools that are able to identify people wanting to do business with their companies. Lastly it’s not possible to grow sustainable relationships with people that companies cannot identify.

The dynamic nature of the web means that companies should outsource the whole aspect of online communications. To be sure, many businesses in Africa do not have the critical mass to employ someone full time in the online communications space. The corporate awareness levels of the issues involved are low. Few executives will realise that it is not “what” to do online but “how” to do it. They also don’t realise that they actually own the greatest strategic asset in an online communications policy: data. A simple example of the demand for online information is our portal of online African annual reports on www.africanfinancials.com – the growth in traffic to this website has been phenomenal as illustrated in the chart below:-

The question is: does your business generate information or data that is of use to a broad range of stakeholders or customers or agents etc. If it does you are sitting on a strategic asset and the internet is the tool you should be using. Who should you deal with?

AIC is well placed to deliver value added solutions in the general corporate space as we have been in the high-end interactive online communications space for some time. Yes, we have specialised in investor relations but we spend a lot of our time communicating with stakeholders rather than investors and this has reiterated the opportunity that the online presence provides. For the past year and a half we have managed the school websites of St John’s Educational Trust: St John’s College and St John’s Preparatory School. Our experience outside of the online IR space has been positive.

It’s not a generalisation to say that there is a high level of discontent with what existing corporate websites are delivering to their owners. It’s easy to do a review oneself to see that all is not well with the typical corporate website. Sites look outdated aesthetically, errors are quick to point themselves out and there is no assurance that any information on the website is actually complete and up to date. No alerts icons appear. Send an email and its not responded to.

In growing our African Is Cool business we have been privileged to have highly competent business partners and have had the time and capital to invest in keeping up to date. As relative newcomers to the Internet we have not been influenced by past structures, habits or technologies and have been able to adopt the latest technologies as they arrive. Our background in database programming has also been of huge benefit.

So who should consider using AIC as their strategic online communications partner? Here are a number of criteria:-

  1. Your business should be one that generates on-going data or information that is of interest to a broad range of users, stakeholders, agents or customers online. Examples would include banks, stock exchanges, agricultural associations, any association, insurance businesses, multi-nationals, commodity traders, agricultural organisations with outgrowers or agents etc.
  2. Your business should be one that has the ability to respond to online traffic / feedback efficiently and be a business whose senior management buy into the concept of online communications.
  3. Your business should be one that seeks to develop a secure, on-going relationship with stakeholders.
  4. Your business should be brand, service or data oriented.
  5. Your business should be one that realises that if “you pay peanuts you get monkeys”. Either you are going to take an online strategy seriously or not. Cheap services will be just that.
  6. Your business should be one that deals with a vendor that has a strong corporate reputation from existing clients.
  7. Your business should agree that it will not be involved in the update of data on an ongoing basis. AIC has a team doing this all day everyday and we know what we are doing.

(African is Cool) has been managing the online investor relations initiatives of 17 listed companies in 5 African markets. Our online investor relations portfolio continues to grow and we are currently rolling out 5 new online investor relations clients in Zimbabwe and Botswana. There is significant scope for listed companies to take their investor communications initiatives online and this potential is matched by the commercial potential in normal commercial activities. Its from this background that we now enter managed corporate websites.

To request our marketing pamphlet click here.

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Africanfinancials.com is looking for sponsors

Over 63,000 annual reports were viewed by over 24,000 individual website users on www.africanfinancials.com in the past three months. Traffic to Africanfinancials.com has grown exponentially since 2007 when the portal was launched:-

Africanfinancials.com was established in 2007 by African Is Cool, to enable online viewing of annual reports by sector, year or country, as a free service to the users of financial information / annual reports in Africa. This is also a free service to listed companies who are able to send us their annual reports for scanning and publication online. This has now evolved into a useful tool for the many thousands of users of financial information on African markets and we want to take this to the next level.

Sponsorship funds raised will enable AIC to invest in procuring timely publication of more annual reports online for the benefit of African capital markets and investors alike.

Freely available information increases the investment message outreach of African companies, reduces systemic market risk and increases transparency. Noble objectives for corporate sponsors.

Recent traffic statistics for the past three months reveal the following:-

  • No of countries visiting the portal      140
  • Average time on site                                 4 minutes and 14 seconds
  • No of annual reports viewed                  67,154
  • No of individual visitors                          22,025
  • Top country visitors                                 Nigeria, Kenya, USA, UK, Ghana, India, Egypt

Africanfinancials.com displays African annual reports online by year, sector and country and a weekly alert is sent to over 800 contacts that have requested notification of new publications of annual reports online. The significant traffic visiting africanfinancials.com provides sponsors with a unique opportunity to target their brand and corporate message to specific users of African financial information.

African Is Cool seeks the following sponsors for the portal:-

  • “Master” sponsor: a single pan African corporate sponsor. The objective of this sponsorship is to increase transparency and promote informed investment into African markets.
  • “Sector” sponsors for the following categories:-
    • “African banking”: the sponsor’s logo and message will appear in annual reports, publications and banking sector reports in which any African banking organisation appears. Africanfinancials.com greatest country traffic comes from Nigeria so any sponsor here would ideally seek exposure to or be  dominant in Nigeria.
    • “African construction”: the sponsor’s logo and message will appear in annual reports, publications and construction sector reports in which any African construction organisation appears.
    • “African beer”:- the sponsor’s logo and message will appear in annual reports, publications and banking sector reports in which any African beer or beverage organisation appears. Africanfinancials.com greatest country traffic comes from Nigeria so any sponsor here would ideally seek exposure to, or be dominant in, Nigeria.
    • “African telecommunications”: – the sponsor’s logo and message will appear in annual reports, publications and banking sector reports in which any African banking organisation appears. Africanfinancials.com greatest country traffic comes from Nigeria so any sponsor here would ideally seek exposure to or be  dominant in Nigeria-
    • “Country” sponsors for the following countries are also sought:-
      • Nigeria – a country sponsor for all Nigerian annual reports viewed online
      • Ghana – a country sponsor for all Ghanaian annual reports viewed online
      • Kenya – a country sponsor for all Kenyan annual reports viewed online
      • Zimbabwe – a country sponsor for all Zimbabwean annual reports viewed online
      • South Africa – a country sponsor for all South African annual reports viewed online

Note that there are other “Sectors” and “Countries” to sponsor besides the sectors and countries indicated above.

The electronic format of the annual reports (ipaper) provide unique opportunities to embed sponsors’ brands and corporate messages online. The professional html email distribution service which, at the current level of registrants, provides sponsors with significant targeted exposure of their brand, is again an ideal marketing tool especially if this platform is used to provide specific sectoral or country alerts.

A key attribute of the sponsorship of africanfinancials.com is that sponsors know that they are targeting users of financial information in African capital markets. These users include investors (retail and institutional), analysts, data vendors, research professionals and research academics (a growing area of users using the ease of access to data for academic purposes).

If your organisation has pan-African outreach, has, or wishes to market its brand to users of Nigerian financial information (a significant area of online activity) and other African financial data then you should consider seriously the sponsorship opportunity provided by Africanfinancials.com. Call me on + 263 4 850735 or send me an email on ceo@africaniscool.com for more information.

Go to africanfinancials.com

Sign up to the africanfinancials.com alerts section

Go to Africanfinancials.com twitter account

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Africansens.com is launched

I have written about the inefficient information dissemination practices of African stock exchanges in the past.

The issue of stock exchanges not doing enough for its listed companies should be an agenda item for any listed company in most smaller African markets. The core of the problem as it relates to information dissemination relates to African stock exchange rules permitting hardcopy publication of corporate news / actions as the only dissemination medium.

In this modern day and age, hardcopy only dissemination is just not acceptable given the pervasiveness of the Internet as a communications tool. The absence of awareness at regulatory levels (and governance levels)  of the key issues surrounding information dissemination practices is also inexplicable.

There is some good news however. News that we expect to grow in significance.

I am pleased to announce the launch of www.africansens.com, a portal to promote the 100% online dissemination of corporate actions and news for listed companies in Africa. Initially our focus is on providing 100% coverage of listed companies’ corporate announcements in Zimbabwe and this will be extended to Zambia, Botswana, Kenya and Malawi.

Access to the portal is free and is RSS enabled. Users of the site can receive corporate action alerts in their email as soon as they are published online on www.africansens.com. We are currently unable to publish all the content we receive online because we are doing this for free. Users will notice however that African Is Cool clients’ corporate action material will appear online in Africansens in full or at least a link thereto will be available.

We expect www.africansens.com to grow into our largest portal and hope to offer sponsorship / advertising to organisations that want to present their brand to the investment communities interested in African listed equities. Sponsorship funds raised will be re-invested into providing information for free through www.africansens.com.

From an online investor relations perspective, this www.africansens.com initiative complements the many others that we have to get our clients’ message out to the broader investment community. We have two twitter accounts: www.Africanfinancials.com and www.africaniscool.com to complement this and our portal www.africanfinancials.com has over 22,000 annual reports viewed online every month.

We look forward to your feedback.

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From the ashes a thing called the…..”mailing list” arises

In Kenya new legislation deems that once something is published on the website of a listed company it is deemed to have been delivered to the shareholder. Beem-me-up-scotty-Star-trek-type-thing. To listed companies this avoids the hassle of dealing with the ignorant masses of retail shareholders. The SEC in Kenya and the Nairobi Stock Exchange have endorsed this.

To every listed company though, there are those shareholders that are important. The ones that will have something to say when they ask why their shareholder proxy materials were not delivered to their door. For example, the institutional shareholders that actively monitor the creation of shareholder value. Companies that adopt the deemed-Dr Spock communications method only will alienate professional investors. So these investors will need looking after. You will have a trend developing in Kenya where the mailing list will come back from the dead and start to grow and this will create an uneven playing field, or the perception of an un-even playing field in the communication platform. The more priveleged “more important” shareholders will receive their shareholder proxy material by courier or by hand delivery or by post. The ignorant peasant shareholder will not. The rich and influential will get richer and influential and the ignorant and poor will stay like that. This will be supported by the law.

Some institutions and funds are required to vote their shares and in the USA the existence of nominees or share held in “street name” has been seen to have disenfranchised shareholder suffrage. The Dodd Frank act in the USA and other initiatives are actively trying to put the vote back into the hands of the retail shareholder. In Kenya regulators are taking it away.

In the absence of progressive initiatives to provide shareholder choice the new mailing list will grow only after a shareholder has been aggrieved i.e. they don’t receive their proxy material and then they complain and then they do receive it. You will have a situation where shareholders will attend meetings under very different circumstances but in the eyes of the law they will have been treated the same. For the listed company, the man in the middle, issues of corporate reputation will arise and the African conspiracy theory attitudes may start shareholder activism. In shareholder votes, where contentious issues need shareholders’ votes, it will be very easy for someone to stand up and accuse a listed company of purposely or negligently not distributing shareholder information. The law will be irrelevant. Perception will be relevant. Once negative shareholder emotion kicks in then a different side to corporate sustainability, or lack thereof, will be seen.

For between US$10,000 and US$30,000 a year a listed company can take and make all reasonable efforts to ensure that shareholder proxy material availability is communicated to shareholders or delivered to shareholders. This is effectively an insurance policy against the sort of shareholder actions that may arise from not communicating at all or “beeming” shareholder material via Dr Spock’s Star Trek Enterprise. Its about corporate reputation. Oh and its good corporate governance. Actually delivering shareholder proxy materials to the owners of a company is good corporate governance.

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Influencing perception – levelling the playing field with the media

The power of the press in influencing your community on issues pertinent to your industry can be negative. And listed companies can feel powerless. Unless they get out their cheque book and pay for content to be published in the hard copy press to counter the negative press or at least correct it.

Actively building an online community of online media enables you to distribute your message at any time as often as you want at no additional cost.

For example when a bank is accused of fraud in the hardcopy press, they may feel obliged to respond in the hardcopy press at a cost. The press then has the luxury of continuing publication of whatever material that they want without having to get out their cheque books. On the other hand the listed company and its cheque book is forever beholden to the hardcopy press. It eventually ends up where there is no communication from the listed company and people are left with their perceptions. Which are typically negative. Everyone thinks the fraud is larger than it actually is.

Having a targeted online community of online stakeholders levels the playing field for you. Being able to send out whatever information you need to respond to the market at any time, as often as you want, for no additional cost is a powerful tool especially where listed companies have a wide base of stakeholders, a politically important profile and a pan African presence.

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Governance without leadership:leadership without Governance

“Governance and leadership are the yin and the yang of successful organisations. If you have leadership without governance you risk tyranny, fraud and personal fiefdoms. If you have governance without leadership you risk atrophy, bureaucracy and indifference.”

Mark Goyder (Director of Tomorrow’s Company)

The Nigerian Stock Exchange is a good example of the absence of leadership and governance and the absence of governance and leadership. Who pays the price? The man in the street. They guy that can’t do anything about it.

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The most powerful enforcement body…….

King 2 emphasizes that the most powerful enforcement body in the corporate system is the shareholder body. Via pension funds, provident funds, insurance products and other group investments, the public makes up the largest owner of many publicly listed companies.”

(King Report)

If the public is ignorant of their rights and the role they play in maintaining checks and balances in economic competitiveness who checks the checkers? Whose responsibility is it?

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What the Nigerian Stock Exchange does not know

There is a culture of mistrust in Nigeria that has been entrenched over many years and the current disaster over the Nigerian Stock Exchange is a logical conclusion to the absence of transparency and integrity in the market. Here are some interesting statistics on the number of shareholders in Nigeria – or estimates of statistics of the number of shareholders in Nigeria. Its ball park stuff.

The figures exclude duplicates and are compared with the number of mobile phone users and the number of Internet users. These statistics could be wrong by 20% but my message would not change. What is my message?

My message is that the Internet as a communications tool has to be the core information and data dissemination platform for market data in Nigeria. The Nigerian Stock exchange should stop rent seeking market data make it readily available for free to the market. The Nigerian Stock Exchange should immediately come up with an enforce minimum standards of online disclosure AFTER consulting with listed companies. To me the simplest non-disclosure of information sends a strong message.

What evidence do I have that my message might, just might, have some substance?

There are probably around 10 million shareholders in Nigeria. There are 33 million + internet users and + 68 million mobile users

It does not take a rocket scientist to realise that it is highly likely that a significant proportion of shareholders are able to use modern means of communication to receive news, data and market data on listed companies. You may argue that there are already millions of internet users accessing investment data online. If they are they are not getting information from listed companies’ websites – and they should be. Listed companies should realise there is a huge community out there that if treated right could just be a really valuable resource to which to communicate to and from which they can receive feedback. The objective to grow the bottom line and improve corporate reputation. Its this last point that is especially pertinent in Nigeria at the moment because Nigerian investor relations is in a terrible shape.

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Well balanced insight into IR strategy
The article below is taken from www.iralert.com. I like it because it gives a good insight into the use of social media as well as provides some insights into the core basics of any IR programme. Interesting reading for an executive that is considering stepping up IR activities in their African company. Yes we do not have the same critical mass of investors as they do in Canada but its the basics that I am referring to and the approach to an IR programme.

Is Web Video an IR Silver Bullet? Streaming Video Could Be Stellar Conduit for Reaching Retail, Analysts and Others Says MOSAID IRO

Brian Pittman’s exclusive interview this week: Michael Salter, Director of Investor Relations and Corporate Communications, MOSAID Technologies

Still having trouble separating fact from fuss when it comes to social media and IR? Leery of falling victim to “Shiny Object Syndrome”? Seeking more model best practices for integrating social media into traditional IR programs?

Then consider the case of MOSAID, which has successfully incorporated Web video into the company’s recently launched IR Channel. Specifically, “Web video has become an indispensible tool here for reaching retail investors,” says MOSAID communications and IR director, Michael Salter. “I think we are going to see a dramatic increase in the use of video for IR in the coming years.”

It just makes sense, he explains: “People are consuming more and more information via video, and eventually it’s going to seem very natural to be able to view a video of the management of the company you are investing in. Using video is inherently democratic. At present, meeting top management is a privilege that’s largely reserved for institutional investors,” says Salter, who works with Web video platform and provider Investor Candy to deliver no-nonsense, high quality online IR focused video.

With video, “IR professionals can essentially extend that offer to everyone,” he continues. “And that’s a key reason we implemented a dedicated investor channel, because it creates a new kind of experience for investors.” Salter adds that the videos on the company’s IR channel can be viewed on an iPhone, Blackberry and other smart phone with Wi-Fi capability.

But the MOSAID Investor Channel is about far more than video, Salter stresses. “We see it as a powerful communication platform that is going to allow us to work with the sell-side to extend our message into new communities of investors.” In addition, the Investor Channel includes administration software that allows Salter to track video viewing, downloads, account set up and so on. “The response has been very good,” he says.

Read on for details behind MOSAID’s forward looking IR channel—and Salter’s tips, caveats and roadblocks other IROs can expect to encounter when incorporating social media:

You’ve had a great year, what with earnings up 40 percent. And yet you’re undervalued, according to a recent Business News Network interview I saw posted on your IR channel. How do you deal with that and better educate the market about what you do?

When we say we’re undervalued, we’re looking at it on a price earnings basis in comparison to some U.S. peers and those that do patent licensing. I’m thinking of companies like InterDigital, Tessera and Acacia (Technologies) and Rambus. What we’re looking at is that on an operations metric standpoint, we score highly, and on the valuation metrics side, we score lower. On a P/E basis, etc., we score less than our peers—even though we basically restructured the company back in 2007.

Can you give a quick background on the restructuring and the proxy contest that drove it—and then tie that into your value story to investors?

MOSAID was founded in 1975 and was doing semiconductor design focusing on memory chips. We had a memory chip tester business. Around 1999, we our signed first patent license agreement. And then in the fall of 2006, we had a proxy contest that resulted in a hedge fund called Loeb Partners getting three seats on the board. Then in the following year, we decided to focus on patent licensing only. We sold the chip design and memory test business—and started to bulk up on patents.

So really, you look at our fiscal ’07 revenues and they ticked down as we restructured. In ’09, they grew by 14% and the same in ’10. We’ve been profitable for five years in a row over six years at a 22% compounded annual growth rate. We report Canadian GAAP and use pro forma net income, and have a 35% compounded growth rate in earnings.

Another important thing is that we are one of the few Canadian small-cap technology companies to pay a dividend; it’s about a 4.5% yield and we’ve been paying that for five years. The next important piece to mention is that we continued to grow during the downturn. We delivered that dividend in the worst of downturn and continued to post revenue growth.

So, we have a fairly stable growth story—it’s not hockey stick, but it’s high profit and there’s a real degree of consistency in the patent business.

Getting back to the standpoint of being undervalued, then: We are delivering on results three years into the restructuring, but are still undervalued in our eyes, yes. As a result, we wanted to do something different to tell our stories to investors.

How are you doing that—where did you start?

Well, we started with all the usual things. We started marketing aggressively in ’08 and late ’09 because our results stood up. When you show that in a downturn, people are more interested in the story. There’s no question that when the stock hit a low of $7 Canadian in late ’08 and throughout ’09, we then had a good run peaking at $25 in early ’10. We’ve since given some of that back as of late. The main point here is we think from a valuation perspective, there’s a lot of room to grow.

So, one of the things that IR people normally do in a situation like that is they take the story out and get it in front of more people. We’ve done that by:

1. Increasing analyst coverage. At the lull, we had four and now we have five. I think another two will start to cover us, soon, as well. We took the route of doing more aggressive marketing to get more coverage.

2. Increasing road shows. Twice a year, we just go down and visit analysts for a day, in addition to visiting with investors. We dedicated two days a year to this—and we just got more rigorous in terms of asking covering brokers taking us out to include 25% new names on every trip. We were more insistent around that. We also increased the schedule of events—we basically asked for briefings of the sales desk at brokerages, including retail sales lunches. In 2006, by contrast, we did a road show and just visited buy side clients. But now, a typical day will include briefing the sales desk and a retail broker lunch.

3. Increasing outreach beyond Toronto. Canadian IR tends to be Toronto-centric, so we wanted to break out of that and our geographic trips increased as a result. We made sure we visit Vancouver, Calgary and Montréal on a more regular basis.

4. Increasing financial media relations. Another point tangential to IR is that we have a dedicated business channel in Canada called the Business News Network. In ’06-’07, we weren’t on that at all. I developed our relationship with BNN so we are now on four to six times a year. We can use those interviews as links on our website, which you saw, and then send those to our lists, and so on.

5. Increasing IR database contacts. We also re-focused on building our IR database of names more proactively using blast emails to update contacts on of all our financial information. Related to this is that we’ve increased our regular communication to our holders.

Good ideas all—what about non-traditional efforts. When did those start?

Beyond putting in place an IR strategic plan, getting more aggressive about marketing and our media outreach, we also started our MOSAID Investor Channel, which went online January, 2010. That’s the big new initiative.

What have the results and feedback been like?

They’ve been excellent. This is not necessarily about reaching a mass audience—it’s the about quality over quantity. So the feedback is more qualitative. That said, the reactions I’m getting are, for example, other IR professionals at a bank saying MOSAID is differentiating itself, a retail broker out in Vancouver saying it’s great because she can now send the videos to her client lists, and that those clients actually get to “meet management” via those videos.

Our chairman Carl Schlachte—a former CEO, and also past president of ARC International, which does configurable processor technology—got it right away. His reaction was, “I wish my guys had this for me. It would have saved me all kinds of time.” What he meant was: How do you do retail outreach?

Reaching retail shareholders has always been a huge issue for IR. That’s because it’s not cost-effective for management to do a lot of retail broker meetings, let alone meet small retail shareholders. So, with our investor channel, it’s not just about video—it’s a communications platform that gives the retail broker an ability to set up a private account that has nothing to do with us and then send video to his client list.

There is software in the Investor Candy platform that lets him see who viewed the video.

So why did you go this route—considering all the trends and tools in social media?

In the context of social media, we looked at Twitter, LinkedIn, YouTube, blogs and so on. Essentially, we centered on the use of video as being best suited for our company and IR. I think it hooks into social trends—it meets IR challenges and it’s fundamentally about creating a different kind of investor experience. It’s founded in the idea that a privileged few investors meet management. From a trends standpoint where securities regulators talk about access to management—video suits the bill.

What about triggering decisions to consider your stock—how does video help with that?
It’s not just a simple matter of video. Really, you have to get more people consuming your message. Clearly, video is one way of doing that. Once they’ve consumed your message, that becomes the precursor to considering your stock as an investment. That consideration is a precursor of demand.

Where does this initiative stand now, since you launched in January?

Stage two of this project for us is about working with the broker community and covering analysts to get them to use the Investor Channel as a way to begin engaging their clients. Now that we have it up and running, our goal is to actively educate people about the Investor Channel and engage with retail brokers to see if they’re interested in using it and get feedback as to how we can evolve that tool.

For example, BMO Capital Markets has been covering MOSAID for many years. They are a schedule one Montreal bank with a cross-Canada retail bank network. They have hundreds of retail brokers and have offices in the U.S. They’ve been doing equity research with us for years, and we’ve been a top pick of theirs many times. They’ve seen this channel and like it. We will be asking them how to introduce the channel to their retail brokers. They are reading research reports on us, and now they have video and other tools to help them with their sales kit.

People are using video all over the place online—so what’s the real innovation here? And what lessons for IROs come out of that?

Well, the video you’re referencing is typically advertising or marketing-communications driven. There are sales videos, videos from the trade floor and lots of corporate videos out there. But people haven’t created a dedicated investor channel with a commitment to content over the long term. That’s the innovation.

Our strategy will be to generate a video accompanying every press release MOSAID does. Frequency should be about 12-15 new videos per year. So you would have an earnings video every quarter. If you have a major customer win or contract announcement, there would be a video, as well. In our case, we are involved in litigations on patent licensings, so we’d also do a litigation update video, for example.

Beyond the regular flow of new videos, we also have “strategy videos” about our vision and strategy. These include the CFO talking about how and why we give guidance, for example.

Have you ever seen a video by a CFO on the practice of giving guidance? Probably not. So we have a library of videos talking about the strategy and operations of the company—and those are updated on average about once a year. Then, there’s the regular stream of new content. So, among the challenges is that it can’t be a one-off effort. Video must be a key component of a sustainable IR strategy.

What other challenges are there for IROs considering Web video?

In terms of IR people doing this—there is a learning curve involved. We worked on this a solid eight months before launching it. We had to be sure our key execs were comfortable with video, that the board signed on, and that we were willing to dedicate the time to it. I must emphasize that the time component is more critical than the costs. It’s a reasonable cost—we’re not talking here about $150,000 corporate videos featuring things like cakes and corporate HQ scenes and airplanes. We shoot this onsite against a white backdrop. It’s extremely low-cost compared to traditional corporate video.

It’s not advertising or marcom style video, either. It’s IR/corporate communications video—and that’s a very different style. More important, though, is the management of time and commitment.

So how did you determine the tone and look?

We did a lot of preliminary research determining the look and feel that would work for investors. We did a series of interviews with covering analysts and existing shareholders talking about how management communicates and how we’re perceived. We were aiming for authenticity. We came up with a catch phrase … that people knew us for our “quiet confidence.” We wanted a look and feel that reflected that.

One of the biggest reactions since we launched has been people saying, “These are not commercials.” That’s key—you can’t have anything in it that seems promotional. Also, these aren’t two-minute short videos. They run five to seven minutes. People may say that’s too long—but not for IR. Would you spend five minutes reading an annual report or 10K…yes. So, we’re not trying to be entertaining. It’s information.

What about disclosure issues—how do you address that?

We put the script and the finished video through the same disclosure process as we do for any other publicly released document. In the same way we review MDNA, financial statements, press releases, annual reports and so on—we use a disclosure committee here. We put the video script through the committee and then we review the final video with them. We look at everything from the script to titles to graphics, etc.

Video is a different medium and securities regulators are putting out guidelines for the use of electronic communications. So, we also have the entire channel reviewed by our securities lawyers. For instance, we tweaked the forward-looking statements that run in front of each video.

Any caveats or lessons for others based on your learning curve?

One thing we learned was this: Prior to launch, we were shooting videos and using promotional language such as, “We know you have made an investment in MOSAID or are considering one…” or, “We welcome you as a new shareholder in MOSAID.” Our securities lawyer said if we used promotional language like that, the entire video could be seen as a secondary offering. So we had to go back and scrub all that language. That took us a week of editing to remove that—so that’s a big tip here for readers. Do that review first.

We don’t say, “Here are the top ten reasons for buying MOSAID stock,” and we don’t talk about our thinking of why it’s undervalued. We just talk about our business strategy, our revenue growth strategy, our guidance—just the facts. So we had to learn what’s acceptable and not acceptable in video.

Another example is this: We announced a share offering in late January of 2010, then we closed in February. Our lawyers advised us to shut the channel down during the period that shares were on offer, until the shares had been distributed, because there was a concern that the channel might be viewed promoting the new offering, even though we had it vetted. So we did that to be on the safe side. We had a three-week period where we took it down. Lots of people noticed that and asked for it back.

So, you have to take the time to have it legally vetted and planned out. Take the time to figure out your review and disclosure process.

Can you elaborate on your choice of Investor Candy as your platform?

We are the first client for Investor Candy. We are also the first in Canada to start a dedicated investor based channel, so we’re breaking new ground with them. What I liked about Investor Candy is that Curtis Hollister, the founder, is an entrepreneur. He started and sold a few companies. He is not a traditional IR person or IR service provider. They class themselves as an innovation or ideas company. They are extremely bright and just bring a very different perspective. I didn’t feel I was working with a traditional investor relations supplier. They were bringing me something different.

This wasn’t intended to replace any of the traditional work we do. I wouldn’t stop doing any of the traditional IR efforts. This was about engaging with shareholders differently and creating a different investor experience—that’s what they brought to us.

IR communications tends to be conservative and should be. I don’t think IR should be leading the charge on communications practices. I report to a CFO. Company finances are supposed to be conservatively managed. Yet, there’s no doubt we’re a television culture now. YouTube is popular for a reason. This is about how to use video as a communications platform within investor relations, and how to do it in a planned, strategic way.

So, they’re an innovative company, and we love their platform. But beyond that, the innovation here, again, is the dedicated nature of the channel and the commitment to produce videos on a regular basis—not having this mistaken as marketing communications. This is video for investors. If you think about an investor meeting where you’re talking about growth rates, expenses, margins, total available markets, ratios of all kinds and so on—a lot of people will look at these videos and say they’re boring. That’s fine. Our model is to create an investor relations video genre—and then to work with the investment industry to learn how to extend the reach of these videos via their networks. That’s where we are now. That is the big job for the next six months or year. Internally, we made a two-year commitment to this to fund it. You can’t start it and let it run out of steam.

What other social media tools are you looking at?

These days, analysts and investors are using these tools, so you should be there, too. On that note, using Twitter may be fine for a company with a lot of PR activity—that’s right for them. But you have to figure out what social media tool is right for you and your particular needs. Previous to this, I worked for a company that did a press release a week. Here, I do half that. So de facto, there is less to “Tweet” about. It’s the same with blogging. There is frankly just less for MOSAID to blog about. We’re a patent licensing company, and we are prevented from discussing or disclosing those contracts or details.

So when we were doing our analysis of how to respond to social media—we realized we don’t have a lot to blog about. Another thing I’ve noted from IR people and others is they run out of stuff to talk about. There just isn’t that much they can talk about—so they end up talking about trends in the industry, etc. But every single video here is about our business. A core principle about corporate communications and IR is to approach everything by asking, “How does this help my business?” A CEO blog on some business trend isn’t really about his or her business. But these videos are about our business, our strategy, our operations and our investor story. Other tools didn’t fit us and our circumstances at MOSAID.

In IR, the question is, “How does this help you get people interested in your shares?” That’s it. Video answers that for us.

Is it easier to incorporate this stuff from an IR perspective when you hold a dual IR/PR role?

I would think so. At a company with 50 employees, I’m responsible for IR, corporate communications, media relations and the Web. I can see overlapping roles potentially creating issues at larger companies concerning who would have responsibility for implementing an investor channel.

What’s your advice to other IROs in terms of being strategic about integrating social media in general?

It starts with an analysis of your company’s communications challenges and which tool you think furthers your objectives. There is a feeling that if you say no, you’re not “with it.” So counter that by rigorously analyzing this, conducting a communications analysis of your own situation—frequency, what you can say and not say—and your industry sector’s business model.

For us, video fit our situation and strategic needs. We knew we were coming out of meetings with buy-side clients and they were saying that patent licensing is hard to understand—but when our execs speak, it’s credible, strong and clear. We were having success when people met management. So, this is an extension of that, because management had a lot of credibility coming away from face-to-face meetings. This became a great way to introduce management to shareholders and talk about a business model that few public companies are engaged in.

Video leverage is one of your best assets if management is a strength for you as an IRO. You can have tens of thousands of people meeting management this way, whereas in an average year, you as an IRO might be doing up to eight trips. There are only so many people who can meet management via traditional road shows. This takes it all to the next level.

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Constructive suggestions for Safaricom’s investor relations website section

Safaricom is a big, big company but it has a mediocre investor relations website. I have provided a few constructive suggestions on how to improve the website and shareholder communications below:-

SMS. Have an SMS registration module online and undertake to SMS the availability of material information being posted on your website as soon as it is released. This, critically, would be used to tell shareholders that their shareholder voting material is available online. Mobile penetration rates are high enough to ensure that the immediate, broad and nonexclusionary news of Safaricom’s corporate actions are made.

Focus on delivery of shareholder proxy material. Shareholders in any organisation should not have to actively seek out their shareholder proxy material. More importantly Safaricom should make use of all available media to keep its shareholders informed.

Optimise the Safaricom IR section for mobile. Mobile penetration is significant in Kenya and the ability to take the alert above to the website is significant.

Publish the annual reports in Scribd. It’s free! Plus investors don’t have to download the annual reports in order to read them. Plus the content is searcheable.

Publish investor presentations in slideshare. It’s free!! Plus the content is viewable immediately instead of having to download the file.

Use “push technology” to send out corporate news and information. Dealing with hundreds of thousands of shareholders is an opportunity to showcase the Safaricom brand

Use online charting. Use the sample here as a guideline and put major corporate actions on the chart. The software to do this is free.

RSS enable the website. RSS means real simple syndication. Its real simple and its effective.

Don’t put a direct link to viewing the presentation online in PDF. The full year 2010 presentation is 29 megabytes. Accessing this is obstructive as it downloads the presentation first before you view it. Enable investor choice to view the document online in scribd or similar software or to download it.

Optimise PDF downloads. A presentation that takes up 29 megabytes can be reduced to less than 2 megabytes by using the Adobe Acrobat optimise function.

Make PDFs word searcheable. Dont save PDFs in images when they contain narrative text. Ensure that they are word searcheable for the convenience of investors.

Use push technology to offer investors a menu of alerts. Automated solutions can be found so management’s valuable time need not be disturbed.

View Safaricoms annual report here in iPaper

Go to the iPaper website here

View African Telcos annual reports here

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Zimbabwe economic insights:highly recommended reading

Imara Holdings, a pan African investment banking organisation with an asset management division managing funds across Africa, and with offices in Harare, provide some really insightful research into African markets. Especially for Zimbabwe. This is some of their best stuff.

Investment Notes – July/August 2010 – “Lies, Damned Lies and Statistics!”

    In recent weeks we have read reports from the IMF and heard the Mid-term review from Finance Minister Biti. In recent months we have also heard from companies operating on the ground in terms of their current sales and future intentions. We therefore find it hard to understand why both the IMF and Government are being as cautious as they are. That said we are pleased that they are not being overly optimistic as past Governments have tended to do. Nonetheless their views give a rather sobering view of the economy rather than an upbeat and exciting outlook for a country barely in its second year of reform that we would rather take.


    The IMF believes that the Zim economy is just over $5 billion. We are not sure as to where they got their figures from but we assume it is based on CSO data and their own estimates. They do however point out that “Data have serious shortcomings that significantly hamper surveillance due to capacity constraints”. In past Investment Notes we have been skeptical about such a number. Zimbabwe’s $5 billion economy compares with $14 billion for Zambia, a country with a similar sized population. In the past, and before the “lost decade”, Zimbabwe’s economy was always around 50% larger than Zambia’s as our agriculture, tourism and manufacturing sectors were always much larger whilst Zambia’s copper mining industry was still recovering from years of neglect. Indeed, had Zimbabwe continued on its growth path that it began from the mid 1990s, its economy today could well be a $25 to $30 billion economy. But it didn’t and it’s not!


    In this month’s Notes we will be looking at what is happening on the ground to assess whether the $5billion is reasonable or not. We start by looking at Zambia. Taking both major breweries in Zambia (owned also by SAB), in the year ending March 2010, they sold a combined $230 million worth of beverages (at higher prices than in Zim). This compares with Delta that sold $324 million in a year when they could not meet demand. That could imply that the Zambian breweries may not have such a tight control of their distribution thereby allowing in competition from imported product. Or it could mean that Zimbabweans simply drink more…or importantly can afford to drink more! At the same time, Zimbabweans are due to spend around $500 million using Econet’s mobile phone network in 2010. Zambians are spending only around $280m on their major network provider Zain (who no doubt charge less than Econet!). Innscor will soon be reporting their June 2010 numbers. We would not be surprised if  the amount of spend that Innscor is receiving domestically from fast foods, Colcom, National Foods and Spar will take the combined spend for just these three companies alone to well over $1.1 billion in 2010. Whilst the latter company is also selling imported product, it does give an indication of the current spending power in Zimbabwe just one year after dollarization. According to the IMF and Government Zimbabwe’s GNP per capita (ie economy per head) is US$450 which compares with Zambia at US$1,200 per head. The spending patterns in both countries alluded to above would suggest the opposite!

If we look at Zimbabwe’s major exports being generated by the mining, tobacco and cotton sectors in 2010, we also see an upbeat picture. Gold production is estimated by the Chamber of Mines to be around 7.5 tonnes in 2010 compared with 5 tonnes in 2009 and 3.5 tonnes in 2008. That’s a 50% increase over the year when gold prices have reached new highs. The value of those exports should be roughly US$250m. Zimplats this year will produce around 180 million ounces of platinum plus 160 million ounces of rhodium and palladium. The value of those combined is roughly $500million. Then Anglo’s Unki mine starts to sell its concentrate in the last quarter of 2010 adding to these numbers whilst Mimosa should add around $200million. In addition Zimbabwe is exporting chrome and coal and may even see ‘official’ sales of diamonds from Marange in the second half of 2010, adding to the diamond exports from Rio’s Murowa mine and River Ranch. Murowa is due to sell $30m in 2010. In the first half of 2010, the Mid-term review suggests, the value of shipments from platinum, ferrochrome and gold alone was $550 million. For 2010 as a whole a number nearer $1.2billion could be achievable for these minerals although we would expect more.


    In agriculture, the tobacco crop has been revised up on a number of occasions whilst the global price for our Virginia tobacco has been high due to global demand, especially Chinese. The export value of semi and processed tobacco could reach $500million in 2010, twice the amount of 2009. The cotton crop is up 18% whilst the cotton price is also higher than in 2009. The value of lint should be $200million in 2010, an increase of 60% on 2009. Thanks to the investment by Tongaat Hullet in Hippo Valley and Triangle over the past year, sugar output should jump by 24% in 2010 to 350,000 tonnes. Maize production in Zimbabwe has also increased in 2010 whilst the price has fallen sharply on World markets. The cost of importing maize should therefore be less than $100 million although the donors often fund a part of this and the cost to Zimbabwe could be lower still. Overall agricultural exports in 2010 could surpass $1 billion.

    So excluding manufacturing and tourism, exports from agriculture and mining might top $2.3 billion or higher in 2010. That’s a bigger number than the IMF forecast that includes manufacturing exports. We have not analysed Zimbabwe’s manufacturing exports for these Notes but believe that longer term, Zimbabwe’s export growth will come from mining and agriculture rather than manufacturing production. That said there will always be a place for Zimbabwean manufacturers who produce niche products that can compete regionally and globally. Sadly, long gone have the days when we can or should try to compete with large scale production from China and India in mass market products.


    In the construction sector, PPC Cement has capacity to produce 700,000 tonnes of cement, a level that can be increased with clinker imports from SA. Lafarge Zim produces 450,000 tonnes, plus 350,000 tonnes of clinker. Meanwhile Lafarge Zambia’s new plant produces 1.23 million tonnes a level that easily meets Zambian demand. Zimbabwe’s cement demand is set to rise strongly as demand for housing and infrastructure increases. Investment projects announced so far by the mining companies include those for Zimplats ($445m) and Rio Tinto for Murowa ($300m). AngloPlats are also investing heavily in Unki. Recent tenders published in the newspapers highlight the amount of works about to go into housing and infrastructure for such projects.


    Meanwhile the financial sector has seen deposits rise from $700 million a year ago to $1.9 billion today, a growth of 167%. Year to date the growth is 40%. As a result liquidity and lending is slowly picking up. Just as we are seeing globally post the credit crunch, credit and bank loans are hard to come by. The banks themselves will admit that the cash in circulation and held by individuals could be substantial relative to the deposits in the banking system such is the mistrust in the banking system on the one hand and the size of the informal economy on the other. In some African countries the informal economy can be the same size as the recorded formal economy. Looking at Zambia again, bank deposits at the end of March totaled $1.6 billion in kwacha deposits plus another $1 billion of forex deposits, little higher than Zimbabwe today!


    The Mid-term review also gave some upbeat data. Tax revenues in the first six months of the year were 12% above target with Vat receipts 9% above budget. PAYE was 22% above budget and 290% above that raised twelve months before. This also explains in part why consumption is strong year on year. Corporation tax is also 54% above target. Overall revenue earned was $931million whilst expenditure was $813million thereby following the Government’s cash targeting. Overall budgeted expenditure for 2010 is being held at around $2.25 billion which we believe might be nearly 50% above 2009. (the year of transition makes this comparison difficult). It would appear though that most of this revenue will be generated from local sources rather than by the “vote of credit” assumed in December’s budget.


    Our sources are primarily those on the ground ie the operating companies, rather than the Government or the individual Ministries. We share both the Finance Minister’s views and that of the IMF that the data is poor hence the revamp for the Central Statistical Office that is soon to be implemented. We wonder for example whether the mobile phone industry that barely existed ten years ago is even recorded in the statistics, or for that matter platinum! An economist who relies on Government statistics will find analysis tough. The Mid-term review reduced Government’s economic growth forecast from 7% to 5.4%. The IMF revised it’s down to 2.2% as they are concerned about Zimbabwe’s exports falling far short of imports. Surely not! We remain totally unconvinced and further don’t believe that the underlying number used for the economy, being $5 billion, is correct. As we saw in last year’s December budget, the Government revised up the size of the economy from $3.5 billion to $5.1 billion but with barely a corresponding uplift in the growth rate! We would not be at all surprised to see a similar ‘re-rating’ occur in the future. Last year we suggested that the economy is more likely an $8billion to $10 billion one. We stand by this and suggest that it might in fact be much bigger once the informal economy is included. That makes the current stock market capitalization of $3.5 billion look very cheap especially given the broad sector coverage of the economy that the Zimbabwe Stock Exchange provides investors. The Zim economy is pumping !

John R Legat | Chief Executive

Imara Asset Management Zimbabwe (Pvt) Limited

Block 2, Tendeseka Office Park, Eastlea

Tel : +263 4 790090, 790280, 790304

Fax: +263 4 791875

Website : www.imaraholdings.com

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Afribank plc Nigeria manipulated their 2007 IPO

I had a brief look on the Afribank website to see if they had any public statements on their commitment to good corporate governance. They did not. Another article from the www.BusinessDayonline.com, a media firm in Nigeria sets out the details. Good stuff.

The Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) yesterday accused Afribank and its senior executives of manipulating the bank’s December 2007 public offer in an elaborate scheme that was deliberately designed to buy back its shares deceive the market.

In doing this, SEC said Afribank contravened the Investment and Securities Act 2007. It also alleged that Afribank also perpetrated a fraud in connection with the purchases and sales of Afribank shares. A statement issued by the SEC last night said : “Afribank made a Public Offer (“Public Offer”) that closed in December 2007. After the Public Offer, Union Bank advanced credit facilities to three stock broking firms, Fidelity Finance Limited, Spring Capital Limited and Falcon Securities Limited, and three subsidiaries of Union Bank Union Trustees, Union Assurance, and USL Nominees.

“These entities bought Afribank shares in the names of 1,258 subscribers, which accounted for 66.4% of the public offer. Subsequently, all six (6) entities repaid their loans to Union Bank, using funds made available to them through four (4) Afribank related entities and subsidiaries. Then on the instruction of the Afribank MD, the Afribank shares held by the 1,258 subscribers were consolidated to reflect beneficial ownership of nine (9) companies owned by the Bank and its directors in a total of fourteen (14) accounts.

“These actions are alleged by the SEC to constitute false trading. False trading is prohibited by the ISA in provisions that prohibit activities that may create a false or misleading appearance of active trading by engaging in the purchase or sale of a security that does not involve a change in the beneficial ownership of the security. Also allegedly violated is the general fraud provisions that prohibit the employment of a device, scheme or artifice to defraud that would operate as a fraud or deceit on any person in connection with the purchase or sale of a security”.

The below listed seventy-one entities have been sued in court for their varying roles and responsibilities in the above alleged schemes.

Falcon Securities Limited

•Peter Ololo

•O.j.a. Idudu

•T.g. Ogisi

•S.a. Otegbola

•Matthew Udueho

•J.t. Ogbeha

•F. Nesiama

•Eric Nwobi

•Lucky Oghene-omoru

•Fidelity Finance Company Limited

•Osa Osunde

•Philip Emioma

•Queen Esther Erediauwa

•Jimmy Evbuomwan

Afribank Nigeria Plc

Afribank Capital Markets Limited

Afribank Registrars Limited

•Ail Securities Limited

Afribank Trustees & Investments Limited

•Asset Management Nominees Limited

•Union Bank Plc

•Sebastian Adigwe

•Osa Osunde

•Ashim Adebowale Oyekan

•Bala Zakariya’u

•Chukwuemeka Okwosa

•Anthony Adaba

•Jibrin Isah

•Chinedu Onyia

•AIsa Mohammed Zailani

•Henry O. Arogundade

•Roberts Orya

•Ben Nwoji

•J.d. Lawuyi

•Usman Zarma

•B.m. Wali

•Ndubuisi Osakwe

•Adewale Adeniji

•Chester Ukandu

•John Maha

•Bidi Umeh

•Jooji Tor

•Adetayo Ogunbajo

•Ola Ifezulike

•Henry Agunbiade

•Dayo Afolabi

•Umar Suleiman

•Oladapo Malomo

•Nathaniel Ottio

•Abubakr Rajab

•Shehu Usman

•Abubakr

•Ahonsi

•Lawrence Idowu

•Pac Capital Markets Limited (formely known Asspring Capital Markets Limited)

•Chris Oshiafi

•Anthony Adeniyi

•Mike Chukwu

•Tolu Fadahunsi

•O. Unebu •Tony Ezenna

•Cosmas Maduka•Union Capital Markets Limited

•Niyi Opeodu

•Ibrahim Gobir

•Tunde Yamah

•Salihu Ehimeakhe

•Ebenezer Emeruem

•Mohammed Adburaham

•Olatunji Olutola

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