Brands/Products
The Role of Evangelism and Education in Fostering Healthy PR Measurement Culture
By Philip Odiakose
As the pioneer of public relations measurement in Nigeria, with over 15 years of professional experience, I have had the privilege of witnessing the evolution of PR measurement from a mere afterthought to an indispensable component of strategic communication. In this article, I delve deep into the pivotal role of evangelism and education in nurturing a healthy PR measurement culture within organizations.
The Evolution of PR Measurement
Gone are the days when PR success was solely measured by the number of press clippings or the reach of a media mention. Today, in the age of digitalization and data abundance, PR professionals have access to an array of sophisticated tools and metrics that enable them to quantify the impact of their efforts accurately. However, harnessing the full potential of PR measurement requires more than just technological prowess—it demands a cultural shift within organizations.
Evangelism: Championing the Cause of PR Measurement
At the heart of any successful PR measurement culture lies evangelism—the fervent advocacy for the adoption and integration of measurement practices into the fabric of an organization. As a Chief Media Analyst, I have learned that evangelism begins with instilling a deep-seated belief in the transformative power of data-driven decision-making.
Building Awareness and Understanding
One of the primary challenges in fostering a culture of PR measurement is dispelling the notion that PR is an intangible art form immune to quantification. Evangelism involves educating stakeholders at all levels about the tangible benefits of measurement, from informing strategic planning to demonstrating return on objectives (ROO) and investment (ROI), when applicable. By building awareness and understanding, evangelists lay the foundation for a receptive environment where PR measurement is valued and embraced.
Cultivating Advocates Across Departments
Evangelism extends beyond mere rhetoric—it entails cultivating advocates for PR measurement across marketing and communications departments and hierarchies. These advocates serve as catalysts for change, championing measurement initiatives within their respective teams and spearheading collaborative efforts to integrate measurement into everyday PR practices. By fostering a grassroots movement, evangelists ensure that the commitment to measurement is not imposed top-down but cultivated organically from within.
Aligning Objectives with Organizational Goals
A crucial aspect of evangelism is aligning individual and departmental objectives with overarching organizational goals. PR professionals must understand how their efforts contribute to broader business outcomes, whether it is enhancing brand reputation, driving lead generation, or supporting crisis management efforts. By emphasizing the direct correlation between PR activities and organizational success, evangelists inspire alignment and commitment towards measurement objectives.
Education: Empowering PR Professionals for Excellence
While evangelism ignites the spark of change, education fuels the flames of progress. As a Chief Media Analyst, I have recognized that education is paramount in equipping PR professionals with the knowledge and skills necessary to execute effective measurement strategies.
Continuous Learning and Professional Development
In a rapidly evolving landscape, stagnant skills are a recipe for obsolescence. Continuous learning initiatives, including workshops, seminars, and online courses, play a pivotal role in keeping PR professionals abreast of emerging trends, methodologies, and technologies in PR measurement. By investing in professional development, organizations empower their teams to adapt to changing demands and leverage cutting-edge measurement practices effectively. One key learning hub for PR professionals is https://www.mateplus.com.ng/ the platform also delivers reliable PR measurement and evaluation resources, educational content, and learning solutions specially designed for the Nigerian communications and public relations industry to prove value, ROO (return on objective), and make better communication and PR decisions.
Mastery of Measurement Tools and Techniques
Effective PR measurement requires proficiency in a diverse array of tools and techniques, from media monitoring platforms to sentiment analysis algorithms. Education initiatives should prioritize hands-on training and skill development, enabling PR professionals to navigate these tools with confidence and extract meaningful insights from complex media data sets. By mastering measurement tools and techniques, PR professionals enhance the accuracy and reliability of their analyses, ultimately driving informed decision-making and actionable insights.
Cultivating a Data-Driven Mindset
Education transcends technical proficiency—it cultivates a fundamental mindset shift towards data-driven decision-making. PR professionals must learn to embrace data as a strategic asset, leveraging insights to optimize campaigns, mitigate risks, and capitalize on emerging opportunities. By instilling a culture of curiosity, experimentation, and evidence-based decision-making, education empowers PR professionals to unlock the full potential of PR measurement and drive measurable impact across the organization.
The Symbiotic Relationship: Evangelism and Education
In the quest to cultivate a healthy PR measurement culture, evangelism and education are not disparate endeavours but symbiotic forces working in tandem towards a common goal. Evangelism ignites the passion for change, fostering a shared belief in the value of PR measurement, while education equips PR professionals with the knowledge and skills necessary to realize that vision.
Amplifying Impact Through Collaboration
When evangelism and education converge, the impact is amplified exponentially. By fostering a collaborative ecosystem where PR measurement consultants and PR professionals work hand-in-hand, organizations can accelerate the adoption of PR measurement practices and maximize their impact on business outcomes. Whether through cross-functional workshops, knowledge-sharing sessions, or collaborative projects, synergistic efforts enable organizations to harness the full potential of PR measurement and drive sustainable growth.
Nurturing a Culture of Excellence
Ultimately, the goal of evangelism and education is to nurture a culture of excellence—a culture where PR measurement isn’t just a task but a mindset ingrained in the DNA of the organization. By fostering a shared commitment to measurement excellence, organizations empower their teams to transcend mediocrity and achieve greatness, driving continuous innovation, improvement, and value creation.
Conclusion: Embracing the Future of PR Measurement
As the PR landscape continues to evolve, organizations must adapt to the changing realities of the digital age. The era of guesswork and intuition is giving way to a new paradigm of data-driven decision-making, where insights reign supreme and outcomes are quantifiable. In this landscape, the importance of evangelism and education for nurturing a healthy PR measurement culture cannot be overstated. By championing the cause of PR measurement and equipping PR professionals with the knowledge and skills necessary to excel, organizations can navigate the complexities of the modern PR landscape with confidence, agility, and foresight. As a pioneer of PR measurement in Nigeria, I remain steadfast in my commitment to advancing the principles of evangelism and education, driving transformational change, and shaping the future of PR measurement for generations to come.
Philip Odiakose is the Chief Media Analyst and Managing Consultant at P+ Measurement Services and TMKG Consulting, members of the Media Monitoring and Audit Group (MMAG). Both agencies are members of AMEC and PAMRO.
Brands/Products
ALTON Supports NCC Call for Made-in-Nigeria Smartphones
By Adedapo Adesanya
The Association of Licensed Telecommunications Operators of Nigeria (ALTON) has backed the call by the Nigerian Communications Commission (NCC) for local smartphone manufacturing to accelerate digital inclusion.
The ALTON Chairman, Mr Gbenga Adebayo, described the proposal as a practical measure capable of accelerating broadband adoption and expanding digital inclusion across the country.
He said Nigeria must deliberately transition from being predominantly a technology consumer to becoming an innovator, designer and manufacturer of digital technologies.
According to him, Nigeria’s large telecommunications market and youthful population provide the scale and human capital needed for world-class technology manufacturing.
The ALTON chairman said the country’s ambition should extend beyond assembling smartphones to developing complete technology capabilities across the value chain.
“Our ambition should extend beyond assembling devices. We must pursue genuine knowledge transfer, research and development, product engineering, software development, semiconductor capabilities and large-scale manufacturing,” he stressed.
He said the objective should be producing devices and digital technologies for Nigeria, Africa and the global market.
Mr Adebayo said the emergence of Artificial Intelligence had further strengthened Nigeria’s opportunity to become a competitive technology manufacturing hub.
He said Artificial Intelligence was transforming product design, manufacturing, quality assurance, supply chain management, customer experience and software innovation.
According to him, investing in AI-enabled manufacturing will improve productivity, create high-value jobs and strengthen Nigeria’s competitiveness across Africa.
NCC’s Board Chairman, Mr Idris Olorunnimben, at a Digital Africa Summit Roundtable in Shanghai, called for local smartphone production and innovative financing to tackle the proliferation of counterfeit and non-type-approved devices through stronger market integrity.
The ALTON boos described the grey market as a major challenge affecting consumers, Original Equipment Manufacturers (OEMs) and the wider telecommunications ecosystem.
According to him, robust local manufacturing supported by strong quality standards will provide credible alternatives to grey-market imports.
He said effective type approval, competitive pricing and consumer confidence would encourage wider acceptance of locally manufactured smartphones.
“This will strengthen consumer protection, improve network performance, retain greater value within our economy, and stimulate industrial growth,” he said.
Mr Adebayo also endorsed innovative smartphone financing, stronger device management systems and identity-enabled credit frameworks.
He added that the initiatives would enable more Nigerians to acquire quality smartphones through affordable payment models.
According to him, telecom operators remain ready to partner with the government, manufacturers, financiers, academia, investors and development partners to build sustainable local manufacturing.
The ALTON boss described the initiative as a national economic transformation agenda capable of creating jobs and strengthening Nigeria’s position in the global digital economy.
Brands/Products
PRovoke Media Crowns Woodrow Africa Agency of the Year
By Adedapo Adesanya
Woodrow has been named Africa Agency of the Year 2026 by PRovoke Media, one of the world’s leading authorities on the communications industry.
The award recognises Woodrow’s rapid growth across the continent and its work supporting clients navigating some of Africa’s most complex communication, policy, reputation and stakeholder challenges.
In announcing the award, PRovoke Media described Woodrow as “a different kind of communications firm for Africa. Built locally, but operating across borders, with a focus on high-stakes, high-complexity mandates that reflect the realities of the continent’s political and economic landscape.”
Founded five years ago by Mr Charlie Tarr, who has spent more than two decades working across African markets advising various organisations, Woodrow has grown from its Nairobi headquarters into a multi-market African consultancy. It now has teams and partners across Kenya, Nigeria, Ghana, Zambia, Senegal and South Africa, delivering work across 13 countries.
Since 2024, Woodrow has more than doubled revenue, expanded delivery across more African markets and supported assignments that have generated global audiences exceeding 70 million people in multiple markets.
Speaking on the recognition, Mr Charlie Tarr, Founder and CEO of Woodrow Communications, said, “When we started Woodrow, we believed Africa deserved communications advice built for Africa’s realities, not imported templates. This recognition is a testament to our people, our clients and our belief that world-class strategic communications can be built from the continent and compete with the very best anywhere in the world. This feels more like a beginning than an arrival.”
Adding his input, Mr David Karega, Head of East and Southern Africa, added, “This award belongs to the team and the clients who have trusted us with some of their most important moments. From major launches and investment announcements to reputation management, policy engagement and crisis situations, we have had the privilege of helping them achieve influence. It shows that globally recognised PR excellence can be built from Nairobi and delivered across Africa.”
Woodrow’s growth has been driven by its local-first operating model, combining deep in-market expertise with regional coordination and strategic advisory support. It supports organisations such as AGRA, Bupa Global, BIC and a range of international foundations, investors and development institutions working across Africa.
Looking ahead, Woodrow is investing in new capabilities around digital influence, audience intelligence and integrated stakeholder engagement to help clients navigate the media landscape in Africa.
“Africa has never been a side conversation for us,” Mr Tarr added, “It sits at the centre of our work and future. The continent is producing some of the world’s most important opportunities in technology, investment, food systems, climate and economic transformation. We are excited to continue helping clients shape those conversations, build influence and contribute to Africa’s growth.”
Brands/Products
SportyTV Joins DStv and GOtv Line-Up Across Africa
SportyTV has been added to select DStv and GOtv packages in Nigeria, expanding the sports content available to subscribers. The 24-hour sports channel offers a range of live sporting events alongside news, analyses, highlights and is available to DStv Yanga and GOtv Jolli customers. The channel is also available on GOtv in Kenya and Ghana.
The addition of SportyTV complements the existing sports offering on DStv and GOtv, providing subscribers with access to additional football, basketball and combat sports content.
“SportyTV is a valuable addition to the DStv Access and GOtv Value content offering across Africa,” said David Mignot, CEO of CANAL+ Africa. “It expands the range of sporting events available to customers at an accessible price point and reflects our commitment to making quality sports content available to audiences across the continent.”
Sudeep Ramnani, Founder and CEO of Sporty Group, said: “Our ambition has always been to provide African audiences with broad access to sports content and storytelling. Through this partnership with CANAL+, we are extending that offering to more households across the continent.”
“The SportyTV channel gives DStv and GOtv subscribers additional viewing options that complement SuperSport’s existing range of sports programming,” said Rendani Ramovha, Director of Sport Content for English and Portuguese-speaking Africa at CANAL+. “It broadens the overall sports proposition with additional live events and supporting content.”
SportyTV’s football schedule includes competitions such as the English Premier League, Carabao Cup, EFL Championship, Women’s FA Cup, La Liga, Bundesliga, Serie A and the Spanish Super Cup. The channel also carries South American competitions including the Copa Libertadores, Argentina League and Brazil Serie A, as well as select basketball and other international sports content.
Elias Gallego, Vice President of Business Development, Marketing and Media at Sporty Group, said: “Launching SportyTV on DStv and GOtv allows us to extend our reach and bring a broader range of sports content to viewers across Africa.”
SportyTV will also carry dedicated club channels including Real Madrid TV, Arsenal TV, Chelsea TV and Manchester City TV. Additional content includes coverage from leagues in Greece and Saudi Arabia, alongside basketball programming featuring the NBA.
The channel launched on 10 June 2026 and is available in HD on DStv channel 236 and GOtv channel 58 in Nigeria.
-
Feature/OPED6 years agoDavos was Different this year
-
Travel/Tourism10 years ago
Lagos Seals Western Lodge Hotel In Ikorodu
-
Showbiz3 years agoEstranged Lover Releases Videos of Empress Njamah Bathing
-
Banking8 years agoSort Codes of GTBank Branches in Nigeria
-
Economy3 years agoSubsidy Removal: CNG at N130 Per Litre Cheaper Than Petrol—IPMAN
-
Banking3 years agoSort Codes of UBA Branches in Nigeria
-
Banking3 years agoFirst Bank Announces Planned Downtime
-
Sports3 years agoHighest Paid Nigerian Footballer – How Much Do Nigerian Footballers Earn


