May 20, 2013 by Temitayo Famutimi Leave a Comment
Twitter personality and political blogger, Japheth Omojuwa, in this interview tells TEMITAYO FAMUTIMI how he succeeded in monetising his handle, @omojuwa
Many people know you as a prominent person on the Nigerian Twitter space. What do you really do for a living?
I have monetised social media. I have
also featured on speaking platforms across five continents over the last
12 months and this has been rewarding. I consult for a couple of civil
society organisations – including the West African Civil Society
Organisation in Ghana and the German Heinrich Boell Foundation.
You are also known to be a political blogger. Was it by accident?
I blog about many things but the political side of me came to the fore during the OccupyNigeria
movement. Nothing led me into the foray of political blogging. What
leads Nigerians into talking about Nigeria and its politics? The
difference in the reason is not in what leads us into talking about our
country but the platform we choose to make our voices heard. I am not
angrier, not more intelligent nor more passionate than the average
Nigerian. I may be privileged to have popular platforms for which to be
heard more than the average person.
When did you sign up for Twitter and how did you come about growing a huge following on the social network?
February 2009. I joined under a
different name but I started my current handle @omojuwa February of
2009. It has been organic. I started like everyone else. I had moments
where I was the focus of Twitter’s attention like most people but unlike
most people I have been consistent. I have also been at the right place
at the right time with certain events too.
What handle were you using before @omojuwa and is it still functional?
It is @alphareach. Still functional but I’m not tweeting from it anymore. I can’t remember when I created it.
What tweet brought you into limelight on the Nigerian Twitter space?
I don’t know. It is easy to forget a
popular tweet and the popularity of the person who tweets it eventually
fades in a day or two. Twitter is not about that one powerful tweet,
it’s about a consistent pull of several powerful, witty wits. In the
“outside world” no one is renowned for being a one-off, you are renowned
for being consistent with excellence. It is the same with Twitter.
What strategies have you devised to drive discussions around issues on Twitter?
No special strategies. Being myself
works for me. Being myself is enough. I say what I want to say, how I
want to say it and how I choose to say it. In a place where following
the crowd is the norm, those who choose to do things their way will
definitely find people following them. I care about people. I want them
to be aware, I want them to know, I want them to be better and I want
them to want to wake up, looking forward to possibilities beyond the
usual and the boring. An individual does not need the so-called
strategies to stand out on social media but organisations certainly do.
“Social” must be at the core for organisations.
Is it possible for one to generate/make money through one’s Twitter handle?
It is possible but your loyalty and
allegiance must always be to your followers. The how is in the art of
brand communications. People don’t want to be sold to but they want to
buy. Subtlety is the way! You can adopt brands and simply become their
social media ambassador. You can share information about events and
products. Mind that numbers are everything and you must have a sizable
number of followers for anyone to bank his/her money on you to reach
consumers.
Have you been making money through your Twitter handle?
I make money from my Twitter account.
My football tweets have been branded since January 2013. I don’t tweet
football just for fun anymore, I earn real cash for sending my virtual
football opinions. I also share my experience about my favourite brands.
Where the said brand wants my shared experience sustained, we then
begin to talk about what’s in it for the trinity; the brand, my
followers and myself. As long as we get something in it for my followers
then we will be very close to doing business. Where my followers have
nothing to gain, no business.
How much do you charge per tweet?
How much I charge per tweet is not
something I want to put a figure to in a public place. I charge enough
to make many brands look another way. Twitter makes money for having us
on its platform. We spend a lot of time on these platforms. Millions of
people are on these platforms. It is an opportunity to create value for
even more people outside our physical sphere of influence. Money is one
of the reactions of an action called value creation.
How many brands are you an ambassador for on Twitter?
Two permanent ones at the moment. Others are period specific.
What are the names of these brands?
It is in my best interest not to share.
How has your foray into political blogging and your Twitter profile opened doors for you?
My social media profile has opened more
than doors. It has opened cities, countries and continents. I am beyond
political blogging. I am Omojuwa, a total package. There are people who
follow me for reasons that are outside of the politics I talk about.
There are people who follow me just because I am just as ordinary as
they are. They follow me because they now know that being ordinary is
not the same thing as being limited. I am ordinary but that I can do
extraordinary things means that I can also inspire ordinary people like
myself to aspire, be better, go upward, forward and conquer the world.
I am a just another Nigerian who cares
about the country, who thinks about the continent and who thinks that
within each African country lies a little seed that when planted in
belief, competence and passion and watered with synergy, can make change
happen.
How was your background like?
I was at King’s College, Lagos. I
studied Agricultural Economics at the Federal University of Agriculture,
Abeokuta, Ogun State, I did a bit of Brand Communications at Orange
Academy, Lagos. Now I have been attending policy and governance
sessions across the continents. I have always been about understanding
phenomena and the world around me. I have always been a fan of what the
teacher and lecturer cannot teach. I have always been in search of the
esoteric. I was born and bred in Lagos, now I enjoy seeing the world one
city at a time.
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