Cross-border business decisions rarely begin with formal due diligence. They begin with a search. Before proposals are exchanged or documents requested, executives and compliance teams perform an informal credibility check. They look for independent signals that a company exists beyond its own marketing. They search for the business name, scan media references, and assess whether the company has appeared in credible news coverage.
Blog
From Access to Funding: How Media Credibility Shapes NGO Operations in Fragile States
In fragile and conflict-affected environments, non-governmental organizations often operate under conditions that combine humanitarian urgency, political sensitivity, and intense scrutiny. Access is negotiated carefully, trust is fragile, and legitimacy can determine whether an organization is allowed to operate at all. In these settings, media credibility is not a communications preference. It is an operational necessity.
Why Public Relations Is No Longer Optional for African SMEs
Public Relations (PR) is often misunderstood by small and medium enterprises (SMEs). It is commonly viewed as a cosmetic activity, something to consider only after a company has grown significantly. Under AfCFTA and global competition, this perception no longer reflects reality.
Why Reputation Determines Whether African SMEs Secure Distributors and Partners
As African markets become more integrated, small and medium enterprises (SMEs) across the continent are increasingly looking beyond their home countries for distributors, agents, and strategic partners.
Why Visibility Is First Barrier African Businesses Face in Regional, Global Markets
Across Africa, many businesses believe growth is primarily a function of product quality, pricing, or operational efficiency.