Nigerian Breweries is facing more challenges than it is willing to accept. Its products are expiring in trade, and that is something an FMCG shouldn’t face in a tanking market where margins are – well – extremely marginal.
Rather than confront its problems squarely, the minders are determined to hide their wounds by covering them with sand. Life beer, the fighter brand that became mainstream, is in real death throes. For a brand that beat AB Inbev’s Hero hands down in the southeast, Life Beer’s pathetic situation in that segment should worry anyone who witnessed what it took to make Life cut a space for itself in that regional segment and how that goodwill has eroded to the extent that bottles are not moving off the fridges to bar tables.
Key distributors are worried about how extremely slowly stock has been moving. Retailers and bars are demanding fewer and fewer crates of many Nigerian Breweries brands to the point where many of the brands, including the Chairman of all beers in Nigeria, are feared to be expiring in trade. In many places, the beers produced between September and December 2025 are still being sold. The average beer bottle is produced to last no longer than nine months from the factory to the consumer. Before now, it did not linger for more than three months before the empties were returned to the plants.
When Hero began to eat Life anew in the southeast, it was felt that the packaging was not bold enough in making some of the DNA statements. Recall that Hero deepened its roots in the southeast by identifying with the Biafra nostalgia. Even the name Hero was easily connectible to the heroic Biafran warlord, the late Dim Emeka Odumegwu-Ojukwu. On the label of the brand were representations that looked like straight adaptations from the Biafran flag and logo – the rising sun.
It looked like somebody started thinking that, to bury the Hero brand finally, it was time to splash the sun rays on the Life bottle. The brand called it a bold new look. Portfolio Manager of Nigerian Breweries, Olaoluwa Babalola, said on the day of the relaunch, 12 March 2025: ‘We are here to reaffirm Life Beer’s deep cultural connection to the Igbo people. Life Beer has always stood for resilience, ambition, and progress. These are values that define both our consumers and our brand’.
In a news story in The PUNCH newspaper following the relaunch, the brand admitted that it put the rising sun, the Niger Bridge and the traditional Igbo attire, the Isi Agu, on the new Life beer bottle. As the Portfolio Manager was quoted as saying in the news report, ‘We are here to reaffirm Life Beer’s deep cultural connection to the Igbo people. Life Beer has always stood for resilience, ambition, and progress. These are values that define both our consumers and our brand’.
The PUNCH story explained that Life beer’s new identity features a bold new look, including the rising sun, the Niger Bridge, and the Isi-Agu (lion head), symbolising hope, progress, and strength – values that are central to Igbo heritage.
What was not said here was that Life was attempting to usurp the identity of Hero beer. The sun rays were original to Hero and Life copied this without attempting to pretend. Observers could well assume the present tanking of sales was the result of consumers protesting against the usurpation of the identity of the brand, Hero.
During the relaunch, Corporate Affairs Manager (East) of Nigerian Breweries, Joy Egolum, assured that the brand was going to be sold at an affordable cost to consumers because the company sources raw material locally and therefore can afford to produce at comparatively lower costs than the competition. “The current economic trend has made us very innovative, and our focus is on the consumer. We are looking inward, and one of the ways we are doing this is through our localisation programme,” Egolum said, emphasising the connection between the local sourcing of raw material and building local trust that translates to sales.
‘We are focusing on making sure that people know us better, like us, and trust us. We are refreshing people, making a social impact, and ensuring that when they have disposable income, our products are top of mind’, she continued.
The problem is that Nigerian Breweries’ brands have become the costliest in the market. The recently announced regime of an increase in price points is a pointer. If the Brewery was producing at such an advertised cost advantage, there should have been no need for a price adjustment.
Another amazing observation is that the “chop life” mentality of the trade marketing handlers, who should be seen as complementing the ATL efforts towards reimagining the trade infrastructures to reflect that of Life beer, is basically making themselves happy in Lagos at the expense of the huge trade point of sales deficit.
Justice for the Life of 33
Nigerian Breweries recently took its 33 beer down from a national brand to the regional village square, where it is going to be squaring off against Champion Breweries, which hitherto rarely circulated anywhere outside Akwa Ibom State. On 27 March 2026, a big party was scheduled to take place in Uyo, the capital of Akwa Ibom State, to herald the journey of 33 beers down the ladder.
Inyanya, the musical export from the state, was the star artist, hired at a steep cost to sing 33 into the hearts of Uyo people. The party was scheduled to be held at the Tropicana Mall in Uyo. Feedback from the Uyo event says the party was so poorly attended the organisers were terribly disappointed. Inyanya could not attract more than 500 people to the venue, and this is something the party organisers should have foreseen, considering how much Ibom Air, the state-owned airline have squeezed out of Inyanya – he has been so squeezed he couldn’t spare any extra juice for another brand, and in Uyo, for that matter. The marketing Director, who attended the party, was so embarrassed by the poor attendance that she couldn’t wait to get out of Uyo and back to Lagos. This was a party that was orchestrated to give 33 a strong start in the task ahead – make life difficult for Champion in that state and the region by extension.
To achieve this, Life Beer is going to be sharing its body with 33. The bottle, complete with the bridge insignia of Life on the bottle, is going to wear the 33 beer label going forward. The wisdom is that the original 33-bottle breaks quite easily when compared to the Life Bottle.
The overarching reason for this rebranding is to fight off the onslaught of Champion beer, which is making inroads in the south-south and some southeast states already.
The 33 label received the sun rays, which is the signature of the Champion beer brand. From a circular logo, 33 Beer has also been dressed in a rectangular label, a clear attempt to copy Champion.
Things went south quite quickly, and it presented an opportunity for a re-evaluation. But it doesn’t look like the team has anything on their minds beyond their individual selves. The party in Uyo was a colossal flop. With the benefit of hindsight, someone could have whispered that stretching the sun rays clone, from the Life-Hero battle to the being set up between 33 and Champion, which looks like it had backfired in the southeast, might also trigger similar or worse problems when stretched to the south-south.
Perhaps because brand relaunches attract huge spending excuses through media events, experiential parties and production works, attention is far less on the economics.
There is no way the identity embedded on the shoulder of the Life beer bottle can be masked with the 33 label. Every 33 bottle will henceforth leave the production line, looking like a mistake. Anyone who thinks consumers will not notice this is living in a fool’s paradise.
In the days of yore, when the tops of the trees were grounds for the squirrel, a Nigerian Breweries lining up experiential party organisers and allocating marketing acreages to fight a competition as small as Champion beer would have been unheard of. But in these days of poor performance of nearly all brands, every fish is worth the tool to get it out of the river.
The problem is that this might lead to a bigger drainpipe that will consume more than it generates. The minders might not care so long as they are in comfort. They might even argue that Goldberg also wears the same body (bottle) as Life and it would not be a problem extending the same container for 33. But Goldberg is not doing quite well against Trophy in the southwest, so why burden the bottle to deliver more when it hasn’t been able to carry the load placed on its shoulders already?
A brand like Champion beer is entrenched in culture and might be expensive to fend off. Many people who consume the brand do so, driven mostly by nostalgia and other cultural lures and splashing the sun rays on the 33 lager bottles will be insufficient motivation for the sort of radical switch that will trigger growth in market share for a 33 that was always a moderate performer. Dressing it in a Life vest is not going to change anything if that is what the minders are aiming at.
Okuhu is a journalist, a Public Relations professional, brand strategist and teacher
