Top 5 Business Strategies for a Telecom Company

These business strategies will also help you in any business you venture into, but they are adapted from the telecommunication sector.

Top business strategies for telecommunication business
Business growth; iStockphotos

If you are interested in investing in a telecommunication business or any other related business, these strategies will be invaluable. The good thing about most business strategies is that the same principles apply to most other industries.

Emphasis will be placed on telecommunication companies in Nigeria because these have witnessed significant strides in recent years. Also, Nigeria is among the first African countries to receive telecommunication services in Africa.

With the teeming rise of telecommunication or telecom-related companies, there is a need for an effective business strategy to break through. The better your knowledge about these strategies, the stronger you can compete in the telecommunication space.

The best business strategies for the telecommunication industry demands that communication is enhanced between users to users and users to service provider. Once this is in place, other business promotions become an added advantage.

Other factors like capital may affect a company’s capacity to succeed in telecommunication but this article will show you some of the top business strategies adopted by some of the biggest telecommunication companies in Nigeria, Africa, and the world at large.

Enjoy your read!

Brief History of Telecommunication in Nigeria

Early days

Nigeria’s telecommunication history traces back to the colonial era in 1886, when a British firm, Cable and Wireless Ltd, laid telegraphic submarine cable lines connecting Lagos to London. This was followed by the installation of telephone lines connecting Jebba, Ilorin, Calabar, Ibadan, and other parts of the country, to London.

Shortly after that, in 1985, Nigeria Telecommunications Limited (NITEL) was established. NITEL was owned by the then federal government of Nigeria and it enjoyed monopoly status before the establishment of present-day private telecommunication companies like MTN, Globacom, 9mobile, and Airtel.

NITEL was a product of the telecom arm of the Post and Telecommunications (P&T) department of the Ministry of Communication, and the Nigeria External Communications (NET). P&T dealt with internal communication services in Nigeria through telegraph and manual telephone exchange services with a magneto switchboard of 100 lines, the latter of which was introduced in Lagos in 1908.

Transition into Modern-Day Telecommunication

Several other telecommunication interventions were experienced in the country which led up to what it has become today. The company which established NET, African Direct Telegraph Company, later became part of the Imperial & International Communications Ltd., on its formation in 1929.

By 1914, this company had already serviced communication in several African including Accra, Sierra Leone, Gambia, Freetown, Cameroun, and Nigeria.

In 1929, Imperial & International Communications Ltd was rebranded into Cable and Wireless in Lagos, Nigeria by the parent company, African Direct Telegraph Company. It was after this period that Nigeria acquired a partnership with the Nigerian arm of Cable and Wireless, and renamed the company Nigerian External Telecommunications (NET).

Until 2001 when ECONET was established, NET continued to serve major Nigerian cities like Ibadan, Enugu, Kaduna, and Port-Harcourt, and was also credited with the introduction of the International Direct Dialing Services. These were the days when present-day wireless telecommunication was emerging.

Development of wireless telecommunication

ECONET Wireless, the first wireless telecommunication company in Nigeria was established by Strive Masiyiwa, the Zimbabwean businessman, philanthropist, and youth mentor. After a series of events that Strive has sometimes described as political rifts against his company, he left the country and sold his company to Zain Mobile. This company has evolved through different administrations and developments to become the present-day Airtel NG.

ECONET was able to thrive as a true wireless network in Nigeria through the introduction of the Global System of Communications (GSM) in Nigeria by the then President of the Federal Republic of Nigeria, Chief Olusegun Obasanjo; GSM replaced NITEL and its subsidiaries, and MTN displaced ECONET in August 2001 through a facilitated partnership with Chief Obasanjo.

MTN, which is currently the largest mobile network in Africa, was significantly facilitated in Nigeria through Obasanjo’s interventions, not just the political support he rendered, but also through the instalment of the most extensive digital microwave transmission infrastructure in Africa in 2003, the Y’elloBahn.

In 2002, NITEL tried to resurface into the mobile telecommunication scene as MTEL. MTEL effectively competed with private-owned telecommunication companies in Nigeria then, and together with MTN, and ECONET Wireless was one of the three telecommunication networks licensed by the Nigerian government.

These companies served under the 900 and 1800 MHZ frequency band spectrum and charged users 50 Naira per minute of talk time. In 2003, Mike Adenuga established the first indigenous mobile telecommunication network, Globacom, which introduced the per-second billing system.

Today, mobile connectivity in Nigeria, like in most other parts of Africa and the World, has stayed all-time high. Internet connectivity has advanced very significantly, with the dominant mobile networks including MTN, Globacom, Airtel, and 9mobile (formerly Etisalat).

Top Business Strategies in Telecommunication

Here are the top business strategies I have been able to highlight from observational and peer-interviewer studies of the major mobile telecommunication companies in Nigeria. As mentioned severally, these business strategies can be applied to other business areas and industries, as they directly relate to customer satisfaction.

1. Quick and easy customer care service channels

What happens when your customers need some help with a product or service offered by you, or if they run into some problems along the way? Mobile communication was primarily established to bridge communication gaps and to do so as timely as possible. Therefore, it is extremely important that your agents are easily reached and available round as round-the-clock as possible.

Most of the telecommunication companies, including MTN, were established in Nigeria to facilitate trade and business activities within the country. This means any problem encountered by your customers will have a serious effect on their business dependent on your telecommunication services. Hence, prompt attention through customer service channels must be prioritized and strengthened.

2. A widespread coverage of network connectivity

In the telecommunication industry, customer confidence and satisfaction are directly linked to the company’s network coverage across the country. It is difficult to achieve 100 per cent coverage across all 36 states of Nigeria in all the villages but as a fact, the companies with the widest coverage have the largest user base.

Also in terms of network coverage, you want to minimize downtimes when users move from one location to another. Once people see that you are reliable, widespread, and almost always available, they will be motivated to choose your business brand instead.

3. Maximal internet speed and call quality

Nigeria is not left out of the information revolution. The internet has taken over all other sources of information, business, and entertainment. Social media platforms keep sprouting and evolving, and speed is prioritized over anything else.

Young people, in the order of Gen-Z, dominate social media and internet-based information platforms, and speed is the information language of this generation. Whatever is slow is appalling by default and this can result in an unsatisfactory user experience. Thus, if you want to get the majority of the population as your users, including the dominant Gen-Zs, you might need to prioritize your connectivity speed.

How this relates to other non-telecommunication businesses is straightforward. Rendering services and products at a convincing speed will always be a competitive advantage to any business enterprise.

4. Promotional offers and gifts

Special incentives and indirect business services have been shown to be effective in driving customer engagement with a business brand. These special incentives and indirect business services come as promotional offers, gift plans, and special discounts.

Since the outset of modern telecommunication in Nigeria, telecommunications have harnessed this opportunity to win over customers to their brand, and this has continued till the present day.

In any business venture, you are currently pursuing, including those outside the telecommunication sector, regular promotional offers are one easy way you can draw a large multitude of customers to your business.

5. Get customers’ feedback

Times and seasons are changing. What was strictly required a few years ago may no longer apply today, even though some old strategies may continue to be relevant. This is where customer feedback comes into play.

Customers’ feedback makes you understand the immediate needs of your customers. By showing that you care about your customers’ insights, you make them feel like a part of the business and thus, increase their positive engagement with your brand.

Conclusion

The list is not exhaustive, but for the purpose of this post, I have highlighted five important tips to achieve business success in the telecommunication industry.

While these tips seem to play a big role in achieving business success in the telecommunication industry, they largely apply to other businesses as well.

Adopting the customer-is-king ideology is important to foster customer engagement and secure a bigger customer base on a regular basis.

These business strategies were adapted from the ideologies of the most successful telecommunication companies in Nigeria. Your business brand can become more successful as you adopt these business strategies.

If you have any comments, questions, or contributions, don’t forget to drop it in the comment box below.

I am a medical doctor, a seasoned writer and passionate blogger. Thanks to many years of trials, failure, and near successes. I am the founder of Knowseeker and our content are geared towards enlightening and making you a better and happier audience.

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