Post on 17-Oct-2014
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Global Snapshot Series:NIGERIA
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NigeriaBasic Information
SapientNitro | NIGERIA| 01.16.14
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NIGERIA
Nigeria is Africa’s most populous nation and has the continent’s third-largest economy (after South Africa and Egypt). Financial analysts believe that in 2014, despite political instability, crime, and violence in the country that the economy could surpass that of South Africa and become the continent’s largest.
Along with its large population, Nigeria is composed of more than 250 ethnic groups; the following are the most populous and politically influential: Hausa and Fulani 29%, Yoruba 21%, Igbo (Ibo) 18%, Ijaw 10%, Kanuri 4%, Ibibio 3.5%, Tiv 2.5%.
POPULATION174,507,539Largest in Africa
POPULATIONBELOW POVERTY LINE 70%
Basic Information
URBAN POPULATION49%
SapientNitro | NIGERIA| 1.16.14
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NIGERIABasic Information
Nigeria has one of the largest telecom markets in the Africa and Middle East region, yet local consumers are almost entirely reliant on mobile telephony for their communications needs. Broadband Internet penetration is extremely low, while fixed infrastructure is lacking across the country. Nonetheless, this emerging market holds superb potential due to undersaturation across all segments and a massive and youthful population, which will drive surging uptake as telecom infrastructure improves.
Lagos
Religion
50%
Muslim
40%
Christian
10%
Indigenous
Major Cities (Pop. in Millions)
Kano
Ibadan
Abuja (Capital)
Kaduna
10.23.3
2.7 1.51.8
SapientNitro | NIGERIA| 1.16.14
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NigeriaInternet
SapientNitro | NIGERIA| 01.16.14
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NIGERIAInternet
Lack of fixed high-speed access, due to poor telecom infrastructure, increases Nigerians use of mobile to access the Internet.
33% 32.9% of population are internet users, equaling approximately 57 million internet users.
.01% of households have a fixed broadband connection.
Most Nigerians are beyond the reach of broadband. Only .01% of households had fixed
broadband in 2012 placing it in joint last place out of 85 countries globally, which illustrates the extremely poor form of the domestic fixed
broadband market and the strong opportunities in mobile broadband.
Due to this lack of service to most homes in Nigeria, accessing the Internet from a desktop is low – total internet penetration (which includes those accessing from mobile devices) was just under 33% of the population in 2012.
SapientNitro | NIGERIA| 1.16.14
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NIGERIAInternet
Mobile is the preferred way of accessing the Internet in Nigeria with 73% of mobiles users accessing Mostly or Only from a mobile phone along with visiting Internet cafés and growing availability of WiMAX and Wi-Fi hotspots in urban areas.
Nigeria’s internet population is relatively young – Terragon Insights reports that in 2013 78% of the internet population was between the ages of 19 and 35.
SapientNitro | NIGERIA| 1.16.14
PC
Mobile Only
PC/Mobile
2014
4%
23%
30%
43%
73% internet users (who own a mobile device) say they access the Internet almost exclusively (either Mobile only or Mobile Mostly) from their mobile device.
Mostly Mobile 33% 67%
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NigeriaSocial
SapientNitro | NIGERIA| 01.16.14
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NIGERIASocial
15%It’s estimated that there are at least 9 million social network users in Nigeria equating to 15.7% of the internet population.
Eskimi
2go
42%
46%
57%
77%
83%
Social media has huge potential in Nigeria considering the massive size of the market, yet its penetration remains relatively low for international brands such as Facebook, which registered only 5.4 million users and a penetration of 3.9% of the population in August 2013, according to Socialbakers. Nonetheless, the site was the third most visited in August 2013, according to Alexa, while micro-blogging platform Twitter is also relatively popular as the eighth most popular site. Social networking is significantly more popular in cities, while most users utilize local platforms and forums. Nonetheless, mainstream sites such as Facebook offer the strongest potential for marketing and business usage.
83% of social network users in Nigeria have a Facebook account placing it as the favored social network followed by 2go and Twitter.
SapientNitro | NIGERIA| 1.16.14
28% 69%
Facebook Users
Social Network Sites and Share
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NigeriaMobile
SapientNitro | NIGERIA| 01.16.14
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Key Mobile Activities (2010-2011)
45% search/browse
26% accessed a Social Network
10% sent or read email
3% stream/download music
2% online gaming
NIGERIAMobile
25% of mobile phone users are smartphone owners, about 29.4 million owners.
41%
Series 40
17%
Android
10%
SymbianOS
2%
BlackBerry
Nigeria has one of the world’s largest mobile sectors as consumers rely on their mobile phones for most telecommunication services. This dominance of mobile telephony offers strong potential for m-commerce services, especially in banking and social media.
Mobile penetration has increased to reach 67.7% of households, which is relatively low by global standards but in line with Sub-Saharan nations. The Nigerian mobile market, which ranks in the top 10 countries for mobile market growth, remains under saturated and opportunities for mobile phone uptake will continue.
Mobile Operating System Share (Dec 2013)
67.7% of the population are mobile phone users, about 117.7 million users.
SapientNitro | NIGERIA| 1.16.14
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NIGERIAMobile
Mobile phone subscriptions are projected to expand by 38.8% over the period 2013-2020 to reach a total of 153 million. The impressive number of mobile subscribers in the country, despite the fact that many consumers have several SIMs, means that Nigeria is among the world’s biggest mobile segments, with m-commerce opportunities set to expand as more consumers purchase smartphones and sign up to mobile internet service.
SapientNitro | NIGERIA| 1.16.14
Often
Rarely
Always
Never
Sometimes
9.8%
13.1%
14.3%
30%
32.8%
M-Commerce Frequency in Nigeria
70%
70% of Mobile Phone Users in Nigeria purchase products online
with their device.
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NigeriaEcommerce
SapientNitro | NIGERIA| 01.16.14
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NIGERIAEcommerce
To say Nigerian e-commerce has a bad reputation would be something of an understatement – PayPal, the world's biggest online payment processor, refuses to operate in Nigeria, while Apple does not accept Nigerian-issued credit cards due to the pervasiveness of online fraud in this country. Some of the biggest obstacles to online commerce is lack of secure payments and long delivery times –companies such as Konga.com are beginning to implement cash on delivery options where once the order is placed online an employee is sent to collect the payment.
1. Google2. Jumia3. eBay4. Konga5. Amazon
Top Internet Commerce Sites
Nigerian’s spent $25.7 million dollars shopping online in 2013.
Mobile Commerce accounted for over 50% at 14.1 million.
SapientNitro | NIGERIA| 1.16.14
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