Since the beginning of this year, the Nigerian banking – commercial and digital – and insurance sector has experienced an increase in media interactions, campaigns and awareness. These were boosted even further by the fantastic numbers it reported to the media in the third quarter of the year. The analysis includes over 1.2 million online publications from blogs, news sites, broadcasts, forums, and digital media in the local and international media space, as well as approximately 4,776 print publications (including daily, weekly, and monthly publications), which are being monitored to extract various metadata such as sentiments of reporters, editors, publishers, and opinion writers from various online and print publications, spokespersons analysis, CEOs performance, and other topics.
In the third quarter of 2022, P+ Measurement Services, Nigeria’s top media intelligence organisation, examined the media mood around commercial banks, big insurance providers, and prominent digital banks in Nigeria. This analysis shows editors’, publishers’, journalists’, and opinion leaders’ perceptions of insurance and banking – commercial and digital – brands in the print and online media.
A cursory review of the commercial banks’ media reputation shows that three tier-1 and two tier-2 banks made the top five with the highest positive and negative sentiments in Q3 2022. The top five banks by positive reputation include First Bank with 24 percent emerging top of the grid, closely followed by Access Bank with 23 percent, with Stanbic IBTC Bank, United Bank for Africa (UBA) and Fidelity Bank having 21 percent, 17 percent, and 15 percent respectively; while the top five banks by negative media reputation include GTCO with 37 percent, First City Monument Bank with 28 percent, Zenith Bank with 15 percent, UBA with 11 percent and Fidelity Bank with nine percent.
Analysis of the insurance companies’ media sentiment revealed that AXA Mansard Insurance ranked top with 32 percent, trailed by Leadway Assurance with 30 percent, Coronation Insurance with 14 percent, Consolidated Hallmark Insurance with 13 percent, and AIICO Insurance completed the top five by positive reputation with 11 percent; while the negative reputation saw Coronation Insurance garnering 42 percent, with Leadway Assurance and Mutual Benefits Assurance having 17 percent each, NEM Insurance with 15 percent and AXA Mansard Insurance with nine percent in the third quarter.
According to an analysis of the top digital banks in Nigeria in Q3, Kuda Bank had a favorable reputation score of 37 percent, followed by Vbank (27 percent), ALAT by Wema Bank (18 percent), Eyowo (16 percent), and Mintyn (two percent), with Kuda Bank receiving a bad reputation score of 100 percent for the quarter in question in 2022.
Positive PR Drivers
The analysis below outlines the most important factors contributing to the positive reputation of the leading commercial banks, insurance providers, and digital banks in Nigeria in Q3 2022.
In the banking industry, First Bank’s leadership was reinforced when it praised its FirstMonie agents for completing more than 1 billion transactions and reaffirmed its leading position in promoting financial inclusion in Nigeria. Access Bank announced that it had rewarded its customers with millions in cash and prizes during its #AccessMore Mega Campaign, and Stanbic IBTC Bank echo that it had given out more cash prizes to Nigerians during monthly draws for its Reward4Savings promotion.
The insurance industry saw AXA Mansard emerge as the most innovative insurer of the year to solidify its position on the favorable reputation, Leadway Assurance signs a Memorandum of Understanding with FedCooP to cover 300,000 civil servants under its flagship, and Coronation Insurance declares that its premium income rose by 32.90 percent as its combined ratio also improved.
Leading the Digital Banks sector is Kuda Bank as it confirmed that it will charge its customers N50 for deposits of N10,000 and above, Vbank partnering with Autochek to guarantee the underwriting process for customers’ loan application process to deliver requisite financing to customers within 48hours of loan origination process and ALAT by Wema Bank stating that it introduced NQR to boost financial transactions in Nigeria.
Negative PR Drivers
Analysis of the negative reputational drivers in the banking sector revealed that GTCO which led in this segment was suspended by the Nigeria Customs from import duty collection, followed by FCMB which had one of its customers crying out as over N7 million disappeared from his account and also Zenith Bank which was silent as the sum of N221,000 mysteriously left its customer’s account.
Coronation Insurance and others paid the sum of N78.6 million to the NGX Regulation Limited as a penalty for default filing of financials, Leadway Assurance Company’s customer accused the brand of fraud over multi-million naira claims on damaged vehicle, and also Mutual Benefits Assurance declared that its loss rose to N5.425 billion in its 2021 financial result.
In the digital bank sector, Kuda Bank reportedly incurred a sum of N6 billion loss in 2021 which drove its negative reputation driver in Q3 2022.