Meet the leader behind innovations at telecoms company Telkom

Published Jan 16, 2022

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THERE was a time when Telkom was struggling, along with many of the country’s other state-owned enterprises (SOEs). At some point, however, those in charge applied their minds, faced reality and started looking at Telkom like a business.

Led by Lunga Siyo, who is innovating from within – and taking Telkom from the past to the future.

This was not always the case; there was a time when the company was struggling. The changes that followed included the leadership.

It was a difficult time for Telkom, which was dealing with rapidly evolving market forces; the telecommunications provider was in danger of being left behind.

A big part of Telkom’s business was once landline telephones in people’s homes. Nowadays, such devices are hard to find.

There was also a time when the transition to mobile phones could have meant the end for Telkom, yet the company is still here.

Recently, Telkom’s Consumer segment, including mobile, delivered a 10.1% increase in operating revenue, to R25.815 billion. This was stimulated by strong data demand in the mobile business, with service revenue increasing by 34.5%, to R16.938bn. This included applications services revenue of R528 million.

Fixed-line copper revenue continues to decline, due to migration to next generation technologies such as LTE and fibre; however, the rate of decline slowed as the demand for home connectivity increased.

To meet this, Telkom created compelling new value offers to enable working and learning from home.

A strong broadband demand – and a prudent cost containment strategy – led to an impressive improvement to R5.007bn, translating into an EBITDA (earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation and amortization, a measure of a company’s overall financial performance) margin of 19.4% for the

consumer segment. The small and medium business (SME) component under Telkom’s digital marketplace – Yep! – continues to improve operationally, with measures implemented to control churn, given the challenging economic landscape.

Although SMEs have been significantly impacted by lockdown measures, there are positive results, with new customer acquisitions growing.

Mobile service revenue to businesses and public sector entities increased by 31.1%, mainly due to work and learn from home.

An online marketplace platform was launched and digital services revenue grew by 20%. The platform attracts an average of 337 000 visitors

a month. Behind such impressive performance are capable leaders, intent on building Africa’s telecommunications company of the future.

One of them is Telkom’s Siyo, who hails from Mdantsane, a township about 15km outside East London in the Eastern Cape. Mdantsane is the largest township, by population, in the province.

It is well known for having turned out prominent personalities and leaders, among them politicians Nosiviwe Mapisa-Nqakula, Dali Mpofu, Mandla Makupula and Ntombazana Gertrude Botha, as well as several boxing legends, among them Happy-Boy Mgxaji, Mzimasi Mnguni, Welcome Ncita and lightweight WBC champion Luxolo Galada.

It was in this bustling township environment that Siyo was brought up by his grandmother. As a youngster, he was exposed to its business and consumer dynamics, which formed part of his early leadership education.

This he enhanced by studying cost accounting at the Cape Peninsula University of Technology. He then took this a step further with studies at the Oxford Brookes University in the UK, where he earned a Bachelor of Science (Hons) degree in applied accounting. To sharpen his business skills, he also acquired a Master in Business Administration (MBA) at Millpark Business School in Johannesburg.

The final polish to his education – in corporate business methods, at least – was obtained through working for and training with several leading international companies in South Africa and Europe.

All this shaped him into a business leader able to take on any challenge. One such challenge has been about keeping Telkom relevant to society; another has been the pandemic.

In this regard, Siyo has demonstrated exceptional leadership across the board.

The Consumer Business arm he leads is working on some of the most important elements within Telkom. Some of these are about taking care of current concerns, while some are about the future.

As a business that has relied on legacy, one of Siyo’s focus areas has been about building solutions for the future. An example of this is the Yellow Pages.

When he was recruited by Telkom, Siyo could not believe the amount of revenue generated by the company’s Yellow Pages business.

The Yellow Pages was originally conceived in 1883 by a printer living in Cheyenne, Wyoming, in the US. It was pure serendipity; the printer, who was working on a telephone book, had run out of white paper and was forced to use yellow paper instead. The look soon caught on.

In 1886, the first “official” Yellow Pages book was distributed. The phrase “Yellow Pages” is used in at least 75 countries across the globe for print telephone directories (usually published by phone companies for their local market).

Typically, Yellow Pages directories are published annually and distributed and delivered for free within the region in which any given phone company provides coverage. Profits are generated via advertising revenue; local and national businesses pay the telecommunications company and/or publisher to include in the directories ads of varying size and prominence for their goods and services.

In recent years, however, advertising revenue for Yellow Pages has fallen as the directories fell out of favour, with advertisers and the public turning towards online sources. Siyo was tasked with turning the Yellow Pages into a profitable business. He did just that by creating Yep!

The Yep! platform provides the SME segment with a diverse range of connectivity and digital marketing services, which helps customers thrive in an increasingly digital economy and market. The Yep! brand was successfully launched, together with a new Yep! app, on May 15 last year. This was the first phase of an e-marketplace strategy, crafted mainly by Siyo and his team.

The platform raked in 500 000 customers (service providers) in less than a month after going live. As at March 31 last year, there were more than 25 335 downloads across Google Play, Apple and Huawei stores, with the desktop version attracting an average of 337 827 users a month.

This is significant when one considers the future prospects of a tool such as Yep!

To build a product from its dying predecessor (Yellow Pages in print) is not an easy task. Siyo did so by laying the foundations for a strong online business at Telkom.

For more on this story and other similar stories get the latest issue of Fast Company (SA) magazine.

wesley.diphoko@inl.co.za

BUSINESS REPORT ONLINE

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