PETER CHRISTOPHER
Local business owners and entrepreneurs are being urged to re-evaluate the rules by which they gauge their markets.
This was one of several suggestions made by Vusi Thembekwayo during his feature presentation at the Edge Leadership series on Thursday.
The event, which was held in collaboration with the Trinidad and Tobago Manufacturers Association (TTMA) as an event tied to the Trade and Invesment Convention (TIC), was geared towards empowering up-and-coming business owners to improve exports in the country.
Thembekwayo noted that many businesses within Africa and the African diaspora usually looked at North American and European markets to structure plans for the enterprises, without making proper assessments of the regions they fall within.
"A lot of the things that we learn about how we build businesses, scale business and invest in businesses tends to come from somewhere in the Northern hemisphere, typically Europe and all the Americas. The Europeans, because they colonised a lot of us. The Americans because they had innovated over the past century or so? They have been writing the rules about how we do business and what we often do in my region—and I know this is the case for yours as well—is we take those rules and plug them into our markets without asking the question are these rules fit for purpose," he said, noting that many of those markets have been built around corporations that have been in place for over 100 years, whereas the markets in Africa and the Caribbean are still developing and growing.
He also noted that several businesses from outside of these regions are often discouraged because they are yet to achieve the level of success seen by these established international franchises, while also facing questions of credibility both in and out of their local markets.
Thembekwayo said however it was not that the diaspora was unable to address international markets either, as he stated, "It's been a fascination for me, and I think it was a uniquely black South African experience, then I started traveling the continent and I realized not so then I started traveling the world and here's what I found everywhere in the world where I find a people of colour, black or brown—we are fantastic at scaling culture but not so great at scaling enterprise. It's our unique challenge."
He, however, said in the face of these challenges, local business owners would have to adjust their mindsets.
"It's not just scaling the product or scaling the brand, it's scaling belief," he said, pointing out that the US had built confidence in its market by loudly proclaiming and pushing the idea that they are the world's greatest nation.
Following the presentation, the South African coach took a question from local business owner Kerwin Quash who expressed his frustration that while many would readily utilise digital innovations overseas, they was reluctance to adapt local variations in T&T.
He responded, " I don't like a question like the one you're asking. I'll tell you why, because it presupposes that the challenge you're talking about is uniquely Trinidadian. It isn't even in the market I operate in, in South Africa. People don't necessarily buy from South Africans; every nation state, except maybe the Americans, is like this."
Thembekwayo continued, "The reality is that your market is not going to believe you to be a top innovator because, and I say this with love and respect, there aren't any top innovations that are uniquely global, that come from Trinidad, so the people of the market don't believe you. Because there is no test in the market that somebody like you exists."
The South African entrepreneur also noted there were five levels of entrepreneurship: professional, self-employed, business owner, entrepreneur and founders. In most cases, Thembekwayo explained many people don't reach the level of entrepreneur or founder.
'The first level business formation is where the entrepreneur or the business is a professional. This is where you are the person doing the work. You're skilled at this thing," he explained, "you have worked in it, you have technically qualified in it and what we learned from these experiences is that the focus tends to be on acquiring customers and simply making sure that income is high."
He added, " A self-employed typically will have a trusted, a small circle, so for any of you in the room who operate in digital marketing, or are content creators, we are actually self-employed. So that requires your face, your skill and your ability to do the work, particularly what you might have is an editor or somebody like this doing some of the work for you, you might even have an accountant doing some of your finances and you have a small system that requires a small circle of people to execute on the work. Self-employed. Not an entrepreneur. Why? Because if I remove the self there, the income is gone."
As for business owners, he said, "They want to understand the rules of their business and they write those rules down. If you've ever had a consultant coming to your business too long, if you don't want these people have standard, operating procedures."
Ascending to entrepreneur is filled with a unique challenge where many business owners get stuck, he explained.
"You're going to be testing, trying, implementing, failing and testing and trying, implementing with a little bit of success. Then test, try, influence and fail. That happens so much even the most versed and the most seasoned of the us will tell you that what I'm about to say is true: You get a thing called implementation fatigue."
Thembekwayo said that most business advisers on social media exclude this part of the journey, but he assured that every single successful entrepreneur has experienced this step. He said however, after moving past this, "Whereas the business owner is making the rule, the entrepreneur is scaling the rules. What does that even mean? It means that they are focusing not only on automating how they run their business but scaling the automation along which they run their businesses."
The final step, he stated, was founder.
'What do founders do? They plant and communicate a vision. They develop a clear vision long term for the growth of their business and where they want to take it, and then the management execution," he said, "they begin to build for things like legacy protection."
Thembekwayo also noted that it was important for business owners to know if their business fell into one of four specific categories; desire, trend, culture or image noting that this would inform the necessary adjustments or projections for the business.