Tag: Coca-Cola

  • Coca-Cola Nigeria launches “Share a Coke”

    Coca-Cola Nigeria has launched the popular “Share a coke” campaign in the country. For the first time in Nigeria, Coca-Cola is replacing its iconic logo with popular Nigerian names on all its packaging – the returnable glass bottle, cans and PET bottles.

    “Share a coke transforms the global Coca-Cola brand into a special, personal experience for our consumers,” said Patricia Jemibewon, Marketing Director, Coca-Cola Nigeria Limited. “By swapping our iconic Coca-Cola logo with personal names, we give all our consumers a unique opportunity to connect and share their personalised coke with the people who matter the most to them – friends, family and loved ones,” she said.

    Giving more details about “Share a coke”, Jemibewon further disclosed that the campaign recognises Nigeria’s culture and diversity as 600 popular names have been selected from the rich array of names across the various regions of Nigeria.”Share a coke does not only reinforce our ongoing commitment to refresh the world but also to inspire shared moments of optimism and happiness,” Jemibewon concluded.

    From this weekend, consumers will be able to buy personalised coke in glass, can and PET from retail outlets across the country. Consumers who are unable to find their names in-store will have the chance to create their own personalised coke during the nationwide activation which commences on 2nd February, 2015.

    The ‘Share a coke’ campaign was first introduced in Australia in 2011. Since then, the company has launched the  ‘Share a coke’ campaign  in over 50 countries around the world, including New Zealand, Argentina, Brazil, South Africa, Great Britain, Turkey, Germany, Spain and Chile.

  • Making the consumer king

    Making the consumer king

    Consumer Protection Council’s rift with Coca-Cola as litmus test

    After a three-week vacation, and one in which I deliberately decided to rest my column, one should return pregnant with issues to deliver, especially given the flurry of political developments within the period. True, I was tempted not to suspend the column during my vacation in view of the (then) pending primaries of the major political parties, the most talked-about being those of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) and the All Progressives Congress (APC), which threw up the incumbent President Goodluck Jonathan and General Muhammadu Buhari, respectively, as contenders for the presidency.

    Gen. Buhari’s emergence has no doubt altered the political calculations, especially in the PDP which had probably hoped that the result of the APC primaries would be different. Anyway, this is not a matter for today. The issue is still evolving and I intend to leave it for now. Next year is going to be loaded politically and one needs to reserve one’s energy so as not to dissipate it on rehearsal when the real dance is yet to come.

    I want to devote this piece to an issue that I had kept postponing since it began early in the year to attend to what appeared to me to be the real burning issues, national or international. But, I have to break that jinx today because the matter is also a burning issue in its own right; first because of the lives of the millions involved and also because of its wider implication for protecting public watchdogs in the country.

    It is the issue between the Consumer Protection Council (CPC) and two big players in Nigeria’s food and beverage sector, Coca-Cola Nigeria Limited (CCNL) and its franchise bottler, Nigeria Bottling Company (NBC) Ltd. The CPC had, following a complaint by a consumer that he bought two half-filled cans of Sprite, one of the products produced by the companies, issued an order on the companies in February, 2014, with specific timelines for compliance. This was sequel to an investigation which spanned over five months and entailed factory inspections, written and oral representations and analysis of evidence, pursuant to the consumer complaint. Eventually, the council fined the companies N100m, which they are contesting in court. For me, the fact that this has been challenged in court is a good development.

    It is true that Nigeria needs investors, but I detest this impression that these foreign companies are doing Nigerians a favour by operating here. It is true that our operating environment is not that business friendly but this should not be an excuse for people to give us subhuman treatment. Some people even wonder about the big deal in having half-filled cans of a beverage. It is difficult to blame such people given where we are coming from. The point is, we have been so dehumanised that we do not even know that we have rights as human beings. How many people here, for instance, know that there is something called ‘consumer product recall’ in which millions of defective products are withdrawn from the market in order to protect the consumer? In civilised climes where this occurs, the overriding consideration is not the loss to the companies but the health and safety of the citizens and consumers. These big companies know all these and more; they know how they are forced to shell out huge sums in compensation over some of the things we consider non-issues here.

    In the specific Sprite case, key findings of the investigation revealed that the cans of the soft drink were defective, that the companies neither had a written shelf-life policy for their products nor an implementation plan outlining practical steps for the implementation of the companies’ first in first out (FIFO) rule.  The investigation also revealed that the companies’ grievance resolution policy does not properly address compensation for injury or compensation in instances where replacement will be inadequate.

    It is only if we want to deceive ourselves that we would pretend that these defects are not there, not only with Coca-Cola products but with many other producers’ as well. We have had cases of people who saw cockroaches in bottles of their soft drinks. We have had cases of people reporting other particles in the drinks. Some of these are easily detectable if the drinks are not coloured; but detection is difficult in instances where they are, as one might even have started to consume the content before seeing the strange objects.  This could be the handiwork of some competitors in situations of unhealthy rivalries in which producers of similar product try to outdo one another. It could also be the result of laxity in quality control from the manufacturers. Whichever it is, it is not good for the consumers. And this is why governments all over the world create agencies to monitor manufacturers to ensure that they produce products to standard.

    On a personal, Coca-Cola is my favourite soft drink and it is likely to remain so until I find a better alternative. But I have also had cause to complain to the woman selling it on our premises on not less than two occasions that the taste of the product was different from the usual one. As a matter of fact, the usual gas released when the bottles are opened was conspicuously missing on all occasions that I experienced such. She would always ask me to come for replacement but I never did.

    I know that ignorance is no excuse in law; but I must confess that much as I am usually particular about the expiry dates of most other items I buy, including milk, butter and margarine, it never occurred to me that soft drinks have a shelf life-span. And if at my level I do not know, I wonder the millions of Nigerians who suffer such ignorance. But then, it is hard to blame anyone for this as not much emphasis is placed on the producers inscribing the expiry dates conspicuously on their bottles as do the manufacturers of drugs, cosmetics, etc. I think they are just beginning to do that. I guess too that I am part of the problem because I had always kept the defects in the product to myself and the retailer. But again, there is a limit to how far you can push such a case once the drink has been opened. You need all the angels in heaven swearing in order to prove that you are not trying to play a fast one on the company so as to make some quick money.

    The point is that the CPC needs the support of all in its bid to ensure that sanity is brought to bear on the beverage sector and in other sectors where it has jurisdiction. It is good that the Federal Government has waded into the matter by dragging the soft drinks companies and their chief executives to court for alleged criminal breach of Consumer Protection Council (CPC) Act. Early in the year, the council ordered the management of Aero Contractors Company of Nigeria Limited to compensate 39 passengers on its flight AJ132 of November 8, 2013 who were abandoned at the Abuja International Airport and left stranded overnight. Aero Contractor Airlines was ordered to pay N41, 000 each to the passengers, bringing the total fine to N1.599million. Such an agency is not likely to be popular with the corporate players it is supposed to regulate their activities in our kind of environment where many other public watchdogs are compromised.

    Although the practice of not wanting to abide by global standards is common even among many Nigerian companies, it is particularly worrisome that multinationals that should know better are in the forefront of this. What is particularly perplexing is that some of them even have different standards for the Nigerian market and do all kinds of things which they dare not in their home countries or even in some other African countries here apparently because no one cares about anything in Nigeria, or at least so they think. That is why they would have the temerity to threaten to have removed any chief executive of a supervisory agency who is not prepared to play ball with them. There is no way the  consumer will ever wear his crown as king if we continue to tolerate such nonsense.

    Thank you all

    I was away for just three weeks but some of my readers made it look like I had been off duty for far longer the way they kept asking what happened. I guess that was because I proceeded on the vacation unannounced in the first week. Thank God I am back. I am particularly grateful to Simon Oladapo, a regular reader of this column who got married on December13. He was the first person who called to find out what the matter was.

    I thank you all and wish you a happy New Year in advance.

  • Coca-Cola partners others  on HIV/AIDS

    Coca-Cola partners others on HIV/AIDS

    Coca-Cola Nigeria Limited, in partnership with Friends Africa (Friends of the Global Fund Africa), has organised a week-long HIV/AIDS outreach in Lagos.

    The outreach, which enabled about 4,000 persons to take the HIV test, was in commemoration of the World AIDS Day.

    The programme was implemented in collaboration with Access Bank, First City Monument Bank, Lagos State Agency for the Control of AIDS (LASACA), Society for Family Health (SFH), Network of People Living with HIV/AIDS, among other partners.

    It was aimed at creating more awareness about HIV/AIDS; promoting acceptance and inclusion rather than stigmatisation and discrimination of people living with the virus; and providing opportunity for Lagosians to access free HIV counselling and testing (HCT).

    Nearly 4,000 persons, mostly women and youths, took the test to ascertain their HIV status at the mobile HCT centres activated in four locations: Campos Square, Sangrose Market and Oluwole Market on Lagos Island and University of Lagos, Akoka.

    About 70% of those tested did so for the first time. A few persons who tested positive for the virus were counselled and referred to the Lagos General Hospital for enrolment on follow up counselling and treatment programme.

    Another highpoint was the celebrity-studded novelty match played at the Campos Square sports centre.

    Speaking at a dinner event also sponsored by Coca-Cola at The Wheatbaker Hotel to round up the week-long programme, Public Affairs and Communications Director of Coca-Cola Nigeria, Clem Ugorji, said: “The World AIDS Day is a reminder to every one of the grave threat that HIV/AIDS continues to pose to families and communities, particularly in Africa.”

  • Court adjourns ruling in Coca-Cola’s suit against CPC

    Court adjourns ruling in Coca-Cola’s suit against CPC

    Federal High Court in Abuja has adjourned to February 3, 2015 for ruling on fiat issued by the Attorney General of the Federation Mohammed Adoke to Chief Bayo Ojo, SAN, to prosecute Coca-Cola Nigeria Limited, its managing director, Mr. Adeola Adetunji, and the Chief Executive of Nigerian Bottling Company, Ben Langat.

    The fiat is for alleged breach of the Consumers Protection Council Act.  Adetunji was in court yesterday in line with the directive of the court.

    However, despite the presence of the executive, the matter did not take place because the trial judge’s ruling on the legality of the fiat was not ready.

    Justice Elvis Chukwu had fixed yesterday for ruling to decide the competence and authority of Ojo to prosecute the case.

    Yesterday, a registrar of the court informed counsel and parties in the matter that the ruling was not ready.

    The court then fixed February 3, for the ruling.

    The office of the AGF had instituted two separate criminal suits against Coca-Cola, NBC alongside their chief executives over alleged violation of CPC Act.

    The defendants are challenging the mandate given to Ojo by the attorney general to prosecute them for alleged violation of the CPC Act. They are also challenging the competence of the charge and the jurisdiction of the court to entertain the charge.

    At the last adjourned date, counsel to the accused persons, Gbolahan Elias (SAN) for Coca-Cola and its chief executive and Oluseyi Ope Santa (SAN) – for NBC and its chief executive – were about to move their application objecting to the suit when the prosecution counsel informed the court that the accused persons were not present in court. Counsel to the accused persons contended that the accused persons needed not to be in court since they were challenging the mandate to prosecute the case and the competence of the charge.

    But the prosecution counsel told the court that criminal trial could not begin without the presence of the accused persons.

    He also reminded the court that the order to paste the charges on the front wall of the accused offices had been complied with and that the accused ought to be in court.

    The trial judge, however, insisted that the accused persons must appear in court before he would hear the objections.

    Moving their applications, both Elias and Opesanya prayed the court to disqualify Ojo from prosecuting the matter on ground that he is the counsel to CPC in a matter pending before a Lagos High Court, where NBC is seeking judicial review of CPC’s decision on the subject matter.

  • Coca-Cola ends deal with American Idol

    As global beverage brand, Coca-Cola revamps its commitment to entertainment in Nigeria, with the Coke Studio campus deal; it is ending its 13-year partnership with popular music reality show, American Idol.

    Reports say that Coca-Cola and Fox, producers of the show, have mutually decided to call it quits, without either partner stating the reason for the separation.

    Therefore, when the show resumes for its 14th season on January 7, 2015, those giant Coke cups at the American Idol judges’ table would have disappeared.

    “We look forward to working together on new collaborations in the future,” a Coca-Cola rep confirmed to The Hollywood Reporter.

    Sources closes to the negotiations have also disclosed that the show is already negotiating with other potential sponsors who could come on before the beginning of the season.

    This news comes on the heels of word that the longtime Fox singing show will be cutting back to one night a week when the shows reach the top 10 finalists.

    Show host, Ryan Seacrest, confirmed the news at theZ100 Jingle Ball in New York City, telling reporters that the performance show and results show will be combined in one night.

    Another longtime sponsor, AT&T, ended its sponsorship last season. However, Fox has confirmed that Ford will return as a sponsor this season.

  • Coca-Cola ends deal with American Idol

    Coca-Cola ends deal with American Idol

    As global beverage brand, Coca-Cola revamps its commitment to entertainment in Nigeria, with the Coke Studio campus deal; it is ending its 13-year partnership with popular music reality show, American Idol.

    Reports say that Coca-Cola and Fox, producers of the show, have mutually decided to call it quit, without either partner stating the reason for separation.

    Therefore, when the show resumes for its 14th season on January 7, 2015, those giant Coke cups at the American Idol judges’ table will dissapear.

    “We look forward to working together on new collaborations in the future,” a Coca-Cola rep confirmed to The Hollywood Reporter.

    Sources close to the negotiations have also disclosed that the show is already negotiating with other potential sponsors who could come on before the beginning of the season.

    This news comes on the heels of word that the longtime Fox singing show will be cutting back to one night a week when the shows reach the top 10 finalists.

    Show host, Ryan Seacrest, confirmed the news at the Z100 Jingle Ball in New York City, telling reporters that the performance show and results show will be combined in one night.

    Another longtime sponsor, AT&T, ended its sponsorship last season. However, Fox has confirmed that Ford will return as a sponsor this season.

     

  • CPC, Coca-Cola and limits of reason

    I have a strong fascination for Nigerian proverbs, and it increases every time I have had cause to explore the deeper meaning and the life lessons encoded in each one of those wise, witty sayings. But, as the full weight of a proverb is better felt in its native language, much of the impact of these proverbs often get lost in translation.

    Have you heard this one: “You have pulled the trigger, why chase after the bullet?” I heard it long ago from an elderly manwho was admonishing a younger groom. The latter, obviously a conceited bully, was adamant on sending his wife packing for allegedly challenging his authority in public, even after the poor lady and his own parents had tired of explaining her action and begging for forgiveness.

    That proverb is a subtle admonition usually to an aggrieved person who has begun to react beyond the limits of reason or is unwilling to let go, even after his point is made. In other words, it says “You’ve made your point, don’t insist on a needless or foolish course to assuage your ego”.

    This wise counsel comes to my mind each time I read another of the unending twist in the unnecessary and unfortunate media blitz on the court case involving the Consumer Protection Council (CPC) and Coca-Cola and its bottling partner, NBC over “two short-filled cans of Sprite”. I normally do not like soap operas or anything resembling them. However, I have followed these obviously orchestrated media reports on CPC and Coca-Cola/NBCbecause it involves big business and a regulator.

    It seems to me that on this particular issue, someone pulled the trigger and has been chasing after the bullet to guide it aright.I do not wish to be a bore by rehashing the background details; there is already enough online.  Just in case you are late to the party, here is a summary: CPC investigated a consumer complaint in late 2013 involving two short-filled cans of Sprite during which it claimed to have found that Coca-Cola and its bottling partner, NBC did not have processes for quality assurance, product traceability and consumer complaints resolution.

    Consequently, the council directed the two companies to, among other measures, subject their production processes to its inspection for 12 months and to pay within seven days a sum of N100,050,000 broken down as follows: N40 million as civil penalties, N60 million as cost of CPC’s investigations and N50,000 as compensation to the consumer/complainant. The two companies disagreed with the CPC’s investigation report and the attendant orders and therefore applied to the courts for judicial review of the orders. But CPC reported the matter to the Attorney General of the Federation, who slammed criminal charges on the two companies and their CEOs, alleging failure to comply with the CPC orders.

    So, which party pulled the trigger and is nowchasing after the bullet? Every right thinking person in our society ought to be glad that the CPC is standing up for our orphaned consumers and is taking big business to task in defense of the consumer. If, indeed, Coca-Cola and NBC have a poorer quality standard in our country and are deliberately short-changing consumers through “short-filling” their packages as the CPC seems to have alleged, then the full weight of the law must be brought to bear on both companies. But, more importantly, the processes for arriving at this very weighty conclusion and its consequence management must be such that would in the end portray CPC and the Nigerian government as acting within both the law and the limits of reason.

    In my view, this does not seem to be the case and the CPC is unwittingly pulling the rug from its own feet through its ill-advised chase of the bullet, as its actions in almost every angle of this case appears excessive, if not precipitate. In the first instance, I hope that the agency has adequate technical capacity to investigate a food production facility and, if not, that it collaborated with sister agencies like NAFDAC and Standards Organization of Nigeria (SON) to arrive at the conclusion that Coca-Cola’s production processes lacked effective quality assurance, as this is not a mean indictment for a company of Coca-Cola’s pedigree.

    No less a commentator than Simon Kolawole in his back page piece in the November 31, 2014 edition of Thisday on Sunday described the whopping sum of N100,050,000 that CPC imposed on Coca-Cola and NBC as “daylight robbery”. It cannot be better said. Also interesting is that CPC apportioned the lion’s share of N60million to itself as cost of the investigation and another N40 million as civil penalties, whereas the poor consumer/complainant whose cause CPC is supposed to be fighting gets a paltry N50,000 or 0.05% of the booty. Truly a “daylight robbery”!

    CPC also appears to have been less tactful with the profuse manner it has used the media on the issue. From the press conference it hurried convened in Lagos in February where it showcased its investigation report hot from the press, to the clearly orchestrated same-day media blitz in October across print and online channels advertising the criminal charges and, of course, the sustained and sensational media coverage of subsequent court hearings in the matter.

    This approach is tactless and the agency should rather be focusing its mind and resources on winning the case in court, so that it can hopefully gain a judicial precedent that will establish the expansive scope to which it seems to have stretched its powers in the Coca-Cola/NBC matter. What if, after all of this media blitz, the court decides that CPC had acted out of order?

    The agency’s media goal in this case seems to be to amplify the nuisance factor, and this may be anchored on the perception that multinational corporations become vulnerable whenever their reputation is threatened. The ultimate aim is possibly to weaken the companies’ resolve to press on with the judicial review and thereby force them to pay the outrageous sum or to some form of settlement arrangement in order to have peace.

    How else does one explain the criminalization of the companies’ decision to seek judicial review of the orders, the orchestrated media blitz on the criminal case and the latest twist, i.e. the unleashing of activist NGOs and lawyers, all of whom are accusing the companies of impunity?

    It is noteworthy that impunity or reverse impunity is more grievous when it is committed by a government or its agency, as there is no further recourse for the victim and such act encourages everyone else to follow suit and it sends wrong signals about our country.

    My piece of honest advice to the Director-General of CPC is four-fold: first, the media is an unpredictable and often dangerous wave to ride to fame. Secondly, regulation is serious business and cannot be effectively and sustainably carried out with melodramatic approach. Thirdly, the fixation onthe Coca-Cola/NBC case seems to have blinded the agency to the entrenched abuses that consumers suffer in many sectors across our land. Finally, you have pulled the trigger, do not chase after the bullet. Let the courts finish the job!

    • Oluwo, an analyst, writes from Lagos.
  • Coca-Cola, NBC query prosecutor’s mandate

    Coca-Cola, NBC query prosecutor’s mandate

    • Judge insists on presence firms’ chiefs in court

    Coca-Cola Nigeria Limited, the Nigerian Bottling Company Limited  and their Managing Directors,  Adeola Adetunji and Ben Laganty, have queried the authority given to former President of the Nigerian Bar Association (NBA), Bayo Ojo (SAN), to prosecute them for alleged violation of the Consumers Protection Council (CPC) Act.

    Ojo had told a Federal High Court in Abuja that he was issued a fiat by the Attorney- General of the Federation (AGF) to prosecute the charges filed against Coca Cola, NBL and their bosses by the CPC for allegedly breaching the CPC Act.

    The firms and their chief executives have filed notices of preliminary objection, challenging the competence of the charge and the jurisdiction of the court to try them.

    Yesterday, the trial judge, Justice Elvis Chukwu, insisted that the accused persons must appear in court before he would hear the objections. The judge stood his ground despite efforts by Gbolahan Elias (SAN) and Oluseye Opasanya (SAN) – lawyers to the accused persons – to make the judge hear their objections in the absence of their clients.

    Elias and Opasanya had argued that their clients needed not be in court since they were challenging the prosecutor’s mandate, the court’s jurisdiction and the competence of the charge.

  • Coca-Cola Nigeria Limited launches new Fanta Apple flavor

    According to the company’s Marketing Director, Patricia Jemibewon, the new apple flavoured drink has been specifically formulated for the youthful consumer segment with a great fruity apple taste that Nigerians would love.

    “The apple-flavoured drink is targeted particularly at the youth and has been developed for Nigerian taste buds.We have had an excellent response on our other variants and with the national launch of Fanta Apple, we are extending our market leadership in the fruit-flavoured sparkling drink segment,” Jemibewon said.

    She disclosed that the new Fanta Apple flavor is the result of extensive market research in the beverage sector which confirms that current offerings in that segment did not completely meet expectations of discerning young consumers who constantly desire unique refreshment.”

  • Coca-Cola reviews PR account, appoints new agency

    After a recent review of its Public Relations account, Coca-Cola Nigeria Limited has appointed The Quadrant Company, a local affiliate of the Fleishman Hillard network, its new public relations consultants to handle its corporate and beverage brands. The appointment took effect last month.

    Its Public Affairs & Communications Director, Clem Ugorji, said The Quadrant Company was selected through a keenly-contested pitch involving six PR agencies in the country, including the former agency, C&F Porter Novelli.

    ‘The recent pitch for the Coca-Cola PR account was informed by our policy to periodically evaluate and refresh our capabilities in order to effectively drive our growth plans.”

    He noted that the agencies all demonstrated remarkable competencies and that The Quadrant Company was adjudged to be well positioned to sustainably deliver on the expectations in the fast- evolving PR landscape,” said Ugorji.

    The Managing Director of The Quadrant Company, Bolaji Okusaga, was delighted his company netted the accountr.

    “We are pleased to emerge winners in the keenly competed pitch to render PR consultancy services to Coca-Cola Nigeria Limited on its corporate and beverage brands. We feel honoured to win a contest that also involved other eminently qualified and professionally competent agencies. The Quadrant Company shall bring requisite professional competences to bear  on sustaining the brands on the stable of Coca-Cola Nigeria Limited as well as the corporate brand,” said Okusaga.