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  • Friday, 20 September 2024
Jumia Turns to Brands Advertising in a Bid to Increase Revenue

Jumia Turns to Brands Advertising in a Bid to Increase Revenue

Jumia Advertising in Kenya.

Jumia, the renowned e-commerce company which has suffered great losses in the past will now offer its platform for advertising. With over 3 million users, the platform has resolved to push advertisements to likely-interested customers. They have named it ‘Jumia Advertising in Kenya.’

With this amount of traffic, Jumia looks to monetise by pushing advertisements on the site. According to the company’s CEO Sam Chappatte, Jumia will be using the customer data it has to direct advertisements to those who are likely to be interested.

Although some of the data collected by Jumia might be considered personal, the platform does not share the data with the advertisers but rather uses it to channel the adverts to the relevant targeted audience.

With the data it collects, Jumia observes the customer’s behaviour on their site and try and predict where the customer’s interests lie. The e-commerce platform also possesses the demographic data of all its customers.

“We know what they put in the cart, where they live, what they have looked at online,” Chappatte explained the kind of data Jumia takes from its customers.

“We do not give this data to our (advertising) clients because there is strict confidentiality between us and the customer. We only allow the clients to give us their targets then we make sure the adverts get to the targets,” he added.

Chappatte further emphasized that their messages will reach highly targeted segments, right at the moment of purchase. For instance, DSTV ads will be presented to people who are buying new TVs, or when selling beer, key messages can be shown to customers who are looking at a competitor’s product.

“We are launching advertising in response to significant demand from agencies and brands. For effective digital marketing campaigns, you need data. This is what is special about our solution – and why leading brands that have been piloting with us over the last months are coming back for more,” the Jumia boss concluded.

With its entrance to advertising, Jumia will be competing with the struggling digital media sector which gets much of its revenue from advertising. Digital media is still growing in Kenya with some companies having hacked into it completely while others are still lagging.

Some digital media houses are still struggling to attract advertisers. Recently, Hivisasa was forced to close owing to the fact that it was not getting as much revenue from advertising as other players in the market.

Jumia advertising in Kenya has one major advantage; the high traffic that the platform already attracts will likely attract business people to advertise with them. Although the competition can never lack, signs show that this new strategy will favour the company a great deal.

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