Monday, April 4, 2016

COMING UP!>>Episode #69 (Season 4; Ep.4):East Africa Rising(4): Remembering & Reflecting on Rwanda@22

Episode #69
(Season 4; Ep.4):  



East Africa Rising(4): Remembering & Reflecting on Rwanda@22


We continue Season 4 STILL on the theme of “making money for Africa”.

We started the Season with the Creative Economy, and concluded that Film, more than any other cog in the Creative Economy wheel, was probably the most dominant within that Economy. In episode 2, we appreciated how, if managed properly, Sports could become the biggest employer in Ghana, the sub region, and the Continent.

Last week, we started to unpack customer service, concluding that, Ghana can achieve an “insanely customer-centric culture” as seen in the West, but it takes exposure and training of frontline staff to do that.

Today, we revisit East Africa, which we commenced back in Season 1.

On 17 June, 2014, we initiated a discussion on East Africa.

Still as part of this show’s “East Africa rising” programme, we are reprising the focus of East Africa on the Show, with a view to reminding listeners about the urgency of catalyzing and capitalizing on synergy with East Africa.

The Southern African country of Namibia recently celebrated the one-year anniversary of the opening of its High Commission in Ghana, but, really, how many East African countries have diplomatic representations here? If not, why not? (Kenya has none in Ghana yet, though there is talk that after Kenyatta reciprocates a visit to Ghana sometime this year, there may be one; Rwanda has a diplomatic representation, now based at Weija, here in Accra; Uganda has none at all – never mind, Burundi or Tanzania). 

In February 2015, Ethiopia tested light rail. Rwanda has bought new planes to fly to Europe. Can it give is lessons on sanitizing our sanitation day? In November 2013, Kenya unveiled a US$13.8bn high-speed train. Is this something we can learn from them? What about Ghanaian businessmen and their ability to take advantage of doing business in Ghana at a time Ghana Tourism Authority are talking about learning from Kenya?

While these are important questions to be asked, one would have hoped we would not be asking them in 2016, when ECOWAS turns 41 and President Mahama invited Kenya’s President Kenyatta to the country’s independence celebrations in March.

Today’s edition is special for the specific reason that it comes at a time when 2 April was exactly a year since the Garissa attack in Kenya that claimed some 148 lives at the university.

But it is especially significant because Thursday 7 April will be the sixth commemoration of the official International Day of Remembrance of the Victims of the Rwanda Genocide since the day was mooted by the UN in 2010. The day commemorates the deaths of 800,000 people murdered during the 1994 genocide in that country.

Today, however, is not a celebration on a somber note, but one that is excited by all that is East African and Rwandan – for which reason I will be speaking to Martin Ankrah of Global Media Alliance, with whom the host of “Africa in Focus” was priviledged to join in being part of a Media Familiarization tour back in July 2014.

In the fourth episode of Season 4, we will move from the general appreciation of East Africa by a Nigerian lawyer living and working in Kenya to the specific case of an AU Official from Rwanda, living in Addis, speaking about his country to the studio, where we will discuss synergies and the future of East & West Africa.

AIF started in 2014 with a recognition that East Africa is rising. Is Ghana listening?

Join us if you can at 2.05pm on 6 April, 2016.

Call us on the following numbers
+233(0)289.000.931

Guests in the studio:
Ø Martin Ankrah, Global Media Alliance

v  Guests on PODCAST:
Ø  Osai Ojigho, Lawyer & Coordinator of State of the Union(SOTU), Nairobi, Kenya
Ø  Prudence Sebahizi, Economist & Advisor, Continental Free Trade Area Negotiations, African Union, Addis Ababa
   

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*more details will be available soon on www.africainfocusradioshow.org ; africainfocusshow.blogspot.com.

*Follow the conversations on #AfricainFocus on twitter: http://www.twitter.com/africainfocus14.
Tweet Emmanuel ahead of time on www.twitter.com/ekbensah, using #africainfocus.
Call Radio XYZ93.1FM on 0289.000.931 / 0289.931.000.





Saturday, April 2, 2016

ARTICLE:>>Episode #68 Season 4, Ep.3:>“Frontline Staff cannot deliver what they do not know” – National Customer Service Advocate

Episode #68
Season 4, Ep.3:

Dr. Benonia Aryee(L) flanked by Edem Senanu(R)


“Frontline Staff cannot deliver what they do not know” – National Customer Service Advocate

(soundcloud/PODCAST available below article)

AFRICA IN FOCUS SHOW 

ACCRA, Ghana – National Customer Service Advocate Dr.Benonia Aryee believes delivering what world-class corporates believe to be an “insanely customer-centric culture” in Ghana may sound “fluffy and far-fetched”, but it should be possible.  

Speaking to E.K.Bensah Jr on the “Africa in Focus Show”, which commenced a series of discussions on delivering world-class customer service in Africa, in Season 4, she said that, “it is very easy when you make it you aim that everything within you as an organization is to find out the needs of your customers.” She continued “if I know what you want, I should be able to meet those needs, satisfy those needs and make you happy. If for any reason, there are processes within that delivery, and I am not able to communicate that to you”, you, the customer-service provider, should be able to say.

Dr. Aryee, founder of Omansi – a business and training consultancy that seeks to improve customer care service delivery within the Ghanaian service industry – believes that, the fact that a customer service provider has been able to serve a client and explained how far they can deliver that service will normally put the customer “in a very happy place”, because the customer will believe that “you care for me, and you are mindful of my needs. You are there to assist me.”

In Aryee’s view, “once you have that, then you start looking at the processes involved in being able to deliver this service or the needs of the customer.” This might involve a number of processes, and one might find that one or two processes overshadow each other -- possibly there is no synergy – but one can seek to improve it as one goes along.

For his part, Management & Development Consultant Edem Senanu believes that as we are tightening our belts in the economy, customer care becomes “an important keg to ensure you keep your business going”, for which reason it remains important to pay a great deal more attention to it than we do in Ghana.

Ghana’s policy on customer care
Speaking briefly to the policy side of customer care, Senanu started the discussion explaining that, if policy is articulated by institutions of the government and private sector, then in Ghana, customer care delivery “does not pervade” the entire sector of the private sector. For Senanu, while there have been public sector reforms – exemplified by client service Charters and Units – customer care remains at a “fledgling level”. Despite UNDP’s sponsored work in this sector, there are challenges.

As part of his development consultancy work, Senanu is concerned with public participation policy. His specific area of concern revolves around how Ghanaians are comfortable complaining, but not translating their anguish into engaging institutions. For him, customer care includes the recognition that the supply-side is responding to demands, all of which “is enshrined in the Constitution”, he adds. He continues “once we have services and facilities, accountability...is only guaranteed when citizens know they must be eternal vigilantes to the extent they demand a certain quality of standards.” This is where “the customer-care nexus with the supply-side of what public sector or private sector has to do.” For Senanu, this is key as “citizens must know that we must actively demand good services.”

Omansi as a response to customer-care delivery
One of the reasons why Omansi exists is to respond to the dearth of the demands for quality and world-class customer-care service.

Although Aryee started off as an academic, her passion for excellent customer care delivery is one of the reasons why Omansi was born. Beyond the organisation serving the primary response of offering the “wow” experience in customer-care service, there is a secondary motivation for its raison d’être, which resides in equally-responding to the challenges of frontline staff.

For the national customer service advocate, there is a general challenge with the make-up of employees in that they are generally not knowledgeable about the services of the company, or work, they do. Consequently, Omansi offers an alternative pool of frontline staff by training undergraduates to deliver world-class service.

This is done against what is arguably a challenging working environment characterised, in Aryee’s view, by three kinds of services.

First, there is the basic service that is generally disappointing, and results in fights between clients and customers. The second kind of service is the expected one that is “general” or average. Third is the “desired” service that one hopes for or prefers. For Aryee, this is the three that one generally finds in the sub-region – even as they exist concurrently with two other kinds of service – namely: the “world-class” and the “trademark”, which she describes as “beyond one’s wildest dreams.”

Omansi’s training is done in local communities, and offered to students who would then act as either interns or temps in different industries, such as banking or telecoms. Simply put: they are “teachable and business-focused.” For Omansi, this is the pre-condition that works well.

Defining customer care service
According to Aryee, customer service is essentially about “serving the customer” or “taking care of the needs of the customer” that is supposed to be professional and of high quality.

That said, she believes the idea of serving eludes Ghanaians as a culture. For example, there is a culture characterised by one where younger generation is always serving the older ones. For her, “public service is very public, but no service.” She avers one answer to customer service can probably be found in the homes, or at church, where it translates into serving people.

For Senanu, the core of customer care is about satisfaction. In his view, some skills cannot be learnt from the home (eye contact; smiling etiquette). Once people learn how these soft skills can positively-impact businesses, they begin taking customer service a bit more seriously. For him, it is not the fact that there is either a manual, Charter or framework on customer care that people will have it delivered – for which reason institutions, such as the UNDP, come in to encourage us to go a step further.

Senanu believes “to a very large extent, we have not understood the value-added of customer service” He continues “if we understood how important to the bottom line it [were]”, it would not be about a specialized course for some people: “we would pay more attention to how we treat people in general”. 

For the Management & Development Consultant, in Ghana, we need more examples and case-studies. This is “not even magic”, as “it is about making sure you deliver on what you have said you are going to give.” According to Senanu, Ghanaians “seem to have an attitude I’m doing you a favour. It cuts across everything – whether public or private.”  

In his view, therefore, “that reorientation and exposure” – as exemplified by Omansi – remains critical. Ghanaians like to talk about the country being the gateway to West Africa. If that were the case, we should have been ahead. Instead “East Africa is miles ahead of us”, Senanu adds. There are a lot of things Ghanaians can begin to do, including exposure; education; and building of skills starting in the classroom.

Importance of Education in Customer-service
For the Founder of Omansi, we expect frontline staff – waiters and waitresses – to give us the “wow experience.” The bottom line is that those kinds of staffs cannot give what they do not have. It’s the “nemo dat {quod habet}” rule, which states that people cannot give what they do not have. If one is expecting a person to give me a service, at best, they should have experienced it from somewhere. She continues that, if the educational system were infused with experiential and non-conventional learning, they would have picked up this stuff. The universities adds these skills, hence the targeting of under-graduates as an alternative pool.

Omansi’s training has set the objective of making them better providers. All this said, tourism and hospitality industries, in her view, are spending a fortune on training, which only begs the question of why there continues to be a gap on delivering that world-class customer service that has, to date, proved elusive in Ghana.

Pressed to explain their take-home messages, this is what the two had to say.

According to Senanu, leaders should give staff the opportunity for exposure to world-class customer care. They should be allowed to spend two or three weeks on the field that would help them appreciate world-class customer care service delivery.

For her part, Dr. Aryee offered three points that were super-imposed on the point that “what I do is exactly what I’d do if nobody paid me.”

First, there is the issue of buy-in, which “really makes the difference between this side of the world and East and South Africa.” In those regions, frontline staff have bought into the views, missions; and vision. Though not pervasive, generally, she conceded “we need to come to that place of increasing buy-in among employees.”  Secondly, clients must pay attention to their own etiquette. Sometimes, she avers, they need to be patient; and remember the principle of reciprocity: kindness begets kindness, so it is important for clients to be mindful of how they treat their service-providers. Finally, there is a centrality of processes, and standardization of processes. Simply put, it is important to identify, then standardize, processes that will offer world-class customer care service, so one can deliver same processes to a customer over time.

ENDs
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The “Africa in Focus” Show is hosted by Emmanuel.K.Bensah Jr from 14h05 to 15h00 every Wednesday. It offers compelling, cutting-edge content that seeks to demystify, educate, and unpack ECOWAS, AU, & South-South Cooperation around Africa’s integration. You can download all podcasts from www.africainfocusradioshow.org. Follow the conversation on twitter on @africainfocus14, using #africainfocus. Contact Emmanuel on 0243.111.789/0268.687.653



Tuesday, March 29, 2016

COMING UP!>>Ep#68 (Season 4; Ep.3):Delivering an excellent Customer Service Culture in Ghana & across Africa (1)

Episode #68
(Season 4; Ep.3):  
Delivering an excellent Customer Service Culture in Ghana & across Africa (1)







We continue Season 4 STILL on the theme of “making money for Africa”.

We started the Season with the Creative Economy, and concluded that Film, more than any other cog in the Creative Economy wheel, was probably the most dominant within the Creative Economy that has an ancillary value-chain that includes caterers; fashion-designers; etc.

Last week, we concluded the show appreciating how if managed properly, Sports could become the biggest employer in Ghana, the sub region, and the Continent.

In episode 3 of the Show, we are talking customer service – without which it remains difficult to add value to your organisation, and make money. Buried inside that conversation is a cultural relativism that seeks to suggest Africans simply are averse to customer service. This begs the question of whether there is such as thing as “African customer service.”?

Even more importantly, we want to unpack the experience of customer service in Ghana, and explore ways in which we can begin to have a proper conversation about its role in the so-called Africa Rising narrative.

That East Africa has an East African Customer Service Charter, plus the fact that in 2015, a number of customer service jobs were going to the region arguably speaks to a comparative advantage by the East that West African countries, like Ghana, can tap into.

Back in March 2010, the Economist magazine reported how the arrival of three international fibre-optic cables in Kenya had “sparked hopes of an information-technology boom.” According to the magazine, the Kenyan government believed that business-process outsourcing (BPO) could provide work for the country’s numerous unemployed graduates. Other African countries were listed, including Ghana.

Ghana had apparently-identified BPO as a pillar of future development, and had expressed an interest in creating 40,000 jobs by 2015, with a longer-term goal of earning $1billion a year from the industry. Ghana had equally waxed lyrical about the establishment of technology parks across the country.

The reality, six years down the line, is evidently very different: Ghana has not seemed to pay sufficient attention to either BPO or seen the value of enhancing the customer service value chain.

Significantly over-taken by East Africa to the extent that the region has incorporated it into their equivalent of ECOWAS (in the East African Community), Ghana is left with lofty conversations around technology parks. In 2012, Ghana announced it would establish the first technology park in Tema; the sod was cut for Hope City by President Mahama in 2013; and, in 2015, Ghana announced a partnership with Mauritius to renew the 2012 promise of a Park in Tema.

As we know, it has yet to materialize; and some may argue that the country’s dedication to customer service remains abortive.

So, we ask: how serious in Ghana about customer service?

Join us if you can at 2.05pm on 30 March, 2016.
Call us on the following numbers
+233(0)289.000.931
Guiding questions
  • Is there such a thing as an African Customer Service Culture?
  • Has consistent messaging of staff about a company failed in Ghana?
  • How important is customer service to enhanced revenue?
  • How central is technology to enhancing customer service?


Guests in the studio:
Ø Dr.Benonia Aryee-Manu, Founder & CEO –Omansi Business Advisory & Training Services/national customer service advocate

v  Guest on the line:
Ø  Edem Senanu, Management Consultant
   

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*more details will be available soon on www.africainfocusradioshow.org ; africainfocusshow.blogspot.com.
*Follow the conversations on #AfricainFocus on twitter: http://www.twitter.com/africainfocus14.
Tweet Emmanuel ahead of time on www.twitter.com/ekbensah, using #africainfocus.
Call Radio XYZ93.1FM on 0289.000.931 / 0289.931.000.




Friday, March 25, 2016

ARTICLE>>Episode #67 Season 4, Ep.2: “If managed properly, Sports can be the largest employer in Africa” – Football Expert

Episode #67
Season 4, Ep.2:

“If managed properly, Sports can be the largest employer in Africa” – Football Expert



AFRICA IN FOCUS SHOW

ACCRA, Ghana – Football Expert Nana Agyemang believes Ghana must start taking sports seriously. He believes a Sports Bill would empower all the different sporting institutions. That would in turn encourage corporate Ghana to provide sponsorship to ensure “there is proper infrastructure development.”

Speaking to E.K.Bensah Jr on the “Africa in Focus Show”, which commenced a series of Africa in Sports in Season 4, the UEFA-licensed coach, Nana Agyeman, explained how sports is “probably one of the largest employers on the African continent”. He says “Africa is over-laden with talent...and in Ghana, if we really knew how to manage sport, it would be the largest employer in this country.” He referred to the different sporting disciplines that exist: “we are even taking part in fencing and taken part in intercontinental competitions and received medals.” This includes swimming; tennis; basketball and even cricket. He says many of them are team-based, “so when you look at that and try to professionalise the various disciplines, once you are a professional, you get paid.” The discipline of sport involves a whole value-chain that includes a coach; a dietician; a nutritionist; a physiotherapist; a psychologist; and a cook. He says “it’s massive!”

We may not be able to compete with mining, but the sporting sector, in Nana Agyemang’s view, would outnumber civil servants by three to one. He believes the African is “more akin and in tune to sporting developments than we are in tune with anything else.” Agyeman is categorical that, the prowess and strength that the African possesses in all the different fields “is something that cannot be matched by the rest of the world.” He continues that, the only challenge “is our inability to... professionalise the whole sector and to ensure that the infrastructure required for our sporting professionals to practice in safe and secured places each and every day does not exist; the investment that is required for the professionals does not exist.” Because of that, he laments, “Where are we?”

What makes sport a unifier is the way in which we come together for the World Cup; the African Cup of Nations; the Confederations Cup. It unifies us because we come together to participate, knowing that the winners from there will go to the Club championships – as well as knowing that when we qualify for the World Cup, we meet the likes of Germany and the USA.  

For Nana Agyemang, the 2006 World Cup was an example of what he has never seen before in his lifetime: the whole of Africa coming behind Ghana. He continues that, “we are so fragmented with our politics and our tribalism and the lines that were drawn between us by the Europeans when they colonized us in the Scramble for Africa...that it was wonderful to see the whole of Africa united” in seeing Ghana go forward.

He laments it’s a shame how we cannot transfer moments like this into the way our countries are governed and the way our economies are managed: “If we could, we would be trading among each other!” Perhaps, I have the ability to make cane juice, which could be coming from Zambia, and I am trading something else with Zambia, and making the continent self-sufficient.

Pressed to explain which region is worthy of emulation, Nana Agyemang points to North Africa. He says “they are dominated by desert, but have green grass growing all around the place. Their fields are green, watered very well. They have structures that mirror those in Europe.” They have academies, where children as young as five attend those academies. They have the structure to ensure that the capacity of the coaches they have there are developed, and constantly reinforced with new ideas and trends so they know what they are teaching.

Still on the efficiency of North Africa, he explains that if we ensured commensurate infrastructure, investment; capacity-building, the whole nation would rally behind them.

On the Olympics four years ago, Nana Agyemang recalls that there were just nine participants and around twenty-six officials – as compared to the US’s six hundred! Nana avers “that cannot engender unification back home because we are sitting here and we are embarrassed to say that we only have nine participants to one of the greatest shows on Earth.” He continues “and the reason for that is that we are not investing in the development of sports men and women...in the development of sports boys and girls. Where’s the unity in that? We remain fragmented,” he lamented.

As far as reconciling education and the pursuit of sports, Nana spoke to the priviledge of his experience of growing up in the UK, where he actually combined both the rigorous participation of sporting disciplines – which included cross-country running; rugby; swimming; tennis; table-tennis; volleyball; basketball – alongside his academic studies. Same can be said with the US where you excel in your sporting discipline and still come out with your degree.

Conversely in Ghana, because of lack of facilities and infrastructure, African countries tend to go for a scholarship, which ends up dis-incentivizing them from keeping their allegiance to their Mother country in favour of the country that offered the scholarship. That is also one of the key things that discourage unity in the sports in Africa.

In his take-home message, he explained that, “If we are really serious, we will turn the spotlight off the senior national team and share that light across the board with all our other sporting disciplines. We will have proper sporting budgets – every year the sporting budget gets slashed by a third...it’s now GHS22 million.” He continues that, “we need to have a meaningful budget that when spread across various sporting disciplines, will ensure we have proper infrastructural development, will ensure that we build the capacity of those who will nurture and edify all the young talent that we have, and produce real champions. And stop pretending that we want to produce champions, and produce champions!” We cannot do any of these without a Sports Bill, he insists.

ENDs
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The “Africa in Focus” Show is hosted by Emmanuel.K.Bensah Jr from 14h05 to 15h00 every Wednesday. You can download all podcasts from www.africainfocusradioshow.org . Follow the conversation on twitter on @africainfocus14 , using #africainfocus




Tuesday, March 22, 2016

COMING UP!>>Ep.67(S04, Ep.2)>Africa & Sport (1): Lessons for African Unity?

Episode #67
(Season 4; Ep.2):  
Africa & Sport (1):
Lessons for African Unity?




We continue Season 4 STILL with a bang – by jumping into the conversation on Sports. Since it debuted on 6 May, 2014, this is actually the first time we are discussing Sport. This is ironic, considering the capacity of Sports to foster African unity.

When we look at football alone, the World Cup and AFCON together generate a sense of African’s potential over the “Beautiful game” and, by extension, the potential “dominion” they could hold in sectors non-sport.

At a recent press conference at UN headquarters in February, the UN Secretary-General spoke to the significance of “The Value of Hosting Mega Sport Events as a Social, Economic and Environmental Sustainable Development Tool.”

In it, he reminded the world about the importance of mega-sports events leaving “durable legacies by developing equitable, inclusive and accessible facilities and infrastructure that will benefit societies long after the games and competition are over.” The message behind this was to emphasize how so-called mega sport events, like the World Cup and the upcoming Olympics, have taken the sustainable and inclusive developmental path by implementing “outstanding legacy initiatives at the local, national, regional and global levels.”

As the world heads down August to witness the 2016 Summer Olympics in Rio, we want to ask some important questions about the role of sports and its potential to help unite Africa.

Over the past decade, AFCONs have offered a sense of pride to West Africa as Cote d’Ivoire; Togo; Ghana; -- to name but three – have dominated the games. Some may say the magical aura of regional solidarity that surrounds games like these remind us how united we are more as a region than we think.

It is arguable that football reminds us how more-closely we identify with the regional space than the continental. Even if this is the case, what lessons are there within football, specifically, to help us learn about facilitating African unity?

Join us if you can at 2.05pm on 23 March, 2016.

Call us on the following numbers
+233(0)289.000.931

Guiding questions
  • Does football rally more African together than any other sport?
  • How do we use sport to foster African unity?
  • What other sports can Africa point to for lessons on solidarity?


Guests in the studio:
Ø  Nana Agyeman , Media Consultant; Sports Analyst & UEFA-licensed coach  

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*more details will be available soon on www.africainfocusradioshow.org ; africainfocusshow.blogspot.com

*Follow the conversations on #AfricainFocus on twitter: http://www.twitter.com/africainfocus14

Tweet Emmanuel ahead of time on www.twitter.com/ekbensah, using #africainfocus. 

*Call Radio XYZ93.1FM on 0289.000.931 / 0289.931.000.




Sunday, March 13, 2016

COMING UP!>>Ep.66 (S04, Ep,1):Africa’s Creative Economy (1): Ghana vs. Nigeria Film: Lessons Learnt?

Episode #66
(Season 4; Ep.1):  
Africa’s Creative Economy (1):
Ghana vs. Nigeria Film: Lessons Learnt?



We start off Season 4 with a bang – by jumping into the conversation on the Creative Economy, which we started in an earlier incarnation on 24 February 2015, and this year as “Towards an African Personality”. We will still reprise a conversation on this theme each 24 February, but want to use Season 4 to help unpack more concretely elements of Africa’s Creative Economy.

Although definitions of the Creative Economy continue to evolve, it is attributed to one John Howkins who developed the concept in 2001 “to describe economic systems where value is based on novel, imaginative qualities rather than traditional resources of land; labor and capital.”

Put simply: the term was applied to the arts; cultural goods and services; toys and games; research and development.

It is arguable that Africa has this in abundance, but has not necessarily been defined as such in the strictest sense of the term. We want to provoke our listeners to consider whether the continent’s Creative Economy can help African economies make money to complement the traditional responses to generating revenue.

Along the value chain of Africa’s Creative Economy is, arguably, the Film industry. Even if not all countries possess a Film industry – but pockets of different people doing their own thing, as stated by JOT Agyemang – it remains one of the most popular elements of the Creative Economy.

The borrowed nomenclature of “-wood” to both the Nigerian and Ghanaian ones are insufficient to mask the differences of style and substance of the two countries’.

The rich history alone of these two countries’ film needs to be unpacked – if even for the sake of nostalgia and for the aspiration that even as Africa struggles with the traditional ways of revenue-generation, if it just got its act together on the Creative Economy – especially film – it would serve as a significant boost to member countries.

Join us if you can at 2.05pm on 16 March, 2016.
Call us on the following numbers
+233(0)289.000.931

Guiding questions
  • How critical was Nigerian collaboration to the development of Ghanaian film?
  • Can an enhanced Nigeria-Ghana collaboration foster mutual efficiency of their respective industries?
  • What needs to quickly-happen to make this a reality?
  • What lessons can the Ghanaian film industry draw from Nigeria’s evolution of its film industry in making epic movies?


Guests in the studio:
Ø  Elijah Iposu , former Programmes Manager, Homebase TV
Ø  J.O.T Agyeman, Communications Consultant & General Manager, Productions, Global Media Alliance Broadcasting Company 

***********************
*more details will be available soon on www.africainfocusradioshow.org ; africainfocusshow.blogspot.com.
*Follow the conversations on #AfricainFocus on twitter: http://www.twitter.com/africainfocus14.
Tweet Emmanuel ahead of time on www.twitter.com/ekbensah, using #africainfocus.
Call Radio XYZ93.1FM on 0289.000.931 / 0289.931.000.




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