03 Jun 2015 Africa: Beer’s final frontier
Across the continent, brewers face underdeveloped infrastructure and low profit margins as a consequence of consumers’ generally low purchasing power. However, they should not dismiss Africa’s growth in beer volume sales and potentially future higher profit margins, driven by macro economic progress and demographic growth.
Brewers themselves will bring about development in this market in the short to medium term, by implementing strategies such as the beer affordability ladder and investing in future markets to take advantage of low-base growth. Brewers will thus significantly grow their footprint in the region and boost their volume sales globally.
Considering that African markets are so dissimilar from each other there are some advantages that new entrants can exploit, such as the significance of regionality or provinciality in beer brands. For example, SABMiller’s entry in Nigeria’s southern state of Onitsha allows it to manoeuvre around Heineken’s dominance in Lagos and the Delta.
Other strategies that brewers have or can look to include finding new beer platforms, especially in alcoholic beer alternatives, commercialising homebrews, and establishing or developing a cider/perry portfolio.
Beer affordability ladder as key strategy
Beer affordability for low-income consumers is important in volume sales growth in emerging beer markets. Logistical cost-cutting and sourcing can help increase margins and maintain a degree of affordability, in line with low-income consumers’ purchasing power.
Brewers in Africa can seek to capture the attention of these consumers by developing an affordable range of beers. However, most of the biggest African beer markets have a relatively small economy lager market. This is partly explained by the presence of non-lager brews, such as sorghum and tella beers, and the significance of other home-made brews.
Using locally-sourced fermentable starches cuts down on the costs of transport and processing, while local sourcing will also remove the excise duties factor and potentially attract other tax redemptions or subsidies from governments.
This falls in line with the commercialisation of local home-made brews that adhere to the tastes of low-income consumers, and especially their income threshold. Such initiatives have been implemented by Heineken and SABMiller in various African markets.
As global brewers face stagnant volume sales in developed beer markets they will seek growth in vast expanding markets, such as Angola and Ethiopia, although this will be from a low-base for the latter.
The benefit here is that Africa’s dynamic growth is derived from a number of markets. However, many of the markets have underdeveloped infrastructure that increases distribution and production costs, so they are largely long-term targets.
Significance of regionality and provinciality in Africa
Regional expansion for incumbents and new entrants in Africa is supported by the varied tastes and brand allegiances within African markets. Identification of consumption habits on a regional or provincial level provides global brewers, such as SABMiller in Nigeria, with points of entry or expansion in major African beer markets.
Emphasis on national or local brands is vital in winning localised market monopolies so to challenge a competitor’s nation-wide supremacy.
In Nigeria, SABMiller’s Hero beer plays off the Igbo language, as used by its drinkers in the south of the country, in marketing the brand, and taps into Biafra nationalism. In Mozambique, SABMiller established production facilities in the north and south of the country to reduce transportation costs for raw materials and the distribution of its finished products.
A varied strategy to tackling infrastructure underdevelopment in African markets will help expand brewers’ footprint in Africa.
Source: Euromonitor, see more on the report here
Africa: Beer’s Final Frontier
Africa is the final frontier for beer, according to Euromonitor International’s latest global briefingAfrica: The Final Frontier for Beer.It is a relatively untapped territory, despite the noteworthy presence of SABMiller Plc and Heineken NV in key African markets and in upcoming dynamic ones. Across the continent, brewers face underdeveloped infrastructure and low profit margins as a consequence of consumers’ generally low purchasing power. However, they should not dismiss its growth in beer volume sales and potentially future higher profit margins, driven by macroeconomic progress and demographic growth. Brewers themselves will bring about development in this market in the short to medium term, by implementing strategies such as the beer affordability ladder and investing in future markets to take advantage of low-base growth. Brewers will thus significantly grow their footprint in the region and boost their volume sales globally.