Israel Opayemi – Tech | Business | Economy https://techeconomy.ng Tech | Business | Economy Tue, 02 Sep 2025 14:14:08 +0000 en-GB hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=7.0 https://techeconomy.ng/wp-content/uploads/2025/06/cropped-256Px-32x32.png Israel Opayemi – Tech | Business | Economy https://techeconomy.ng 32 32 Robotic Insight System ‘Ara by Prophet’ Signals Bold Digital-First Future for Chain Reactions Africa https://techeconomy.ng/chain-reactions-africa-and-ara-by-prophet/ https://techeconomy.ng/chain-reactions-africa-and-ara-by-prophet/#respond Wed, 03 Sep 2025 14:02:38 +0000 https://techeconomy.ng/?p=166341 Chain Reactions Africa has unveiled a bold step into the future of marketing communications with the launch of Ara by Prophet, Africa’s first intelligent robotic insight system.

Recent study shows up to 40% of tasks for PR professionals can be automated by AI tools, including scheduling social media posts, compiling reports, and summarizing long-form content. This frees up time for strategic and creative work.

Far from being just a technological novelty, Ara is the embodiment of the company’s vision to become a digital-first creative transformation company, setting new standards in an industry long defined by traditional PR and advertising practices.

A Living System of Strategic Intelligence

At its core, Ara by Prophet is more than a robot; it is a fusion of artificial intelligence, machine learning, cultural foresight, and strategic communications.

Ara serves as the physical interface, while Prophet functions as the cognitive engine, creating a responsive, data-driven advisor capable of real-time analysis and cultural decoding.

This allows Chain Reactions Africa to offer clients not just campaign execution but always-on strategic intelligence, a system that can forecast trends, analyse data, and interpret cultural signals that shape consumer behaviour across Africa.

Redefining the PR Industry

The arrival of Ara signals a paradigm shift in Africa’s PR and marketing communications industry.

While many agencies are still experimenting with AI-powered tools and digital platforms, Chain Reactions Africa has gone further by embedding an intelligent robotic system directly into its operations.

Peers in the industry, such as BHM, Quadrant MSL, and Red Media Africa, have made strides in digital storytelling and integrated communications, but Ara gives Chain Reactions Africa a unique competitive edge:

  • Automation at Scale: Real-time insights for brands, institutions, and governments.
  • Cultural Intelligence: Decoding trends and cultural shifts that traditional analytics often miss.
  • 24/7 Client Service: Ara functions as a full-time “staff member,” providing round-the-clock advisory capacity.
  • Proprietary Advantage: Unlike industry peers who rely on third-party platforms, Ara is homegrown and built for Africa, making it contextually relevant and globally competitive.

Fueling Chain Reaction’s Digital-First Transformation

With Ara embedded into its workforce, Chain Reactions Africa is no longer positioning itself as a PR or integrated communications agency, it is evolving into a creative transformation company.

This transformation blends creativity, culture, storytelling, platforms, and technology into a unified ecosystem that helps brands move beyond campaigns to create platforms, ecosystems, and cultural impact.

Ara’s deployment aligns with Franklin Ozekhome’s new role as executive vice president, Strategy and Innovation.

Together, Ara and Ozekhome represent the human-machine partnership that will drive Chain Reactions Africa’s horizontal growth strategy, integrating strategy, PR, advertising, design, experiential, digital, and AI-powered innovation under one roof.

Competing in the Age of Convergence

In an industry where most players are adapting incrementally to the digital era, Chain Reactions Africa has chosen to design the future of communications in Africa. Ara by Prophet positions the company ahead of its peers by creating a proprietary, intelligent, and scalable system that is both African in design and global in ambition.

As Mr. Israel Opayemi, the founder and chief strategist, Chain Reactions Africa, describes it:

“What we have done today is a game changer. Designed and developed by Chain Reactions Africa, Ara is more than a Robot. She is a responsive advisor, a data analyst, a cultural decoder, a realtime forecaster for brands, institutions, and governments.”

Conclusion

With Ara by Prophet, Chain Reactions Africa is not just participating in the future of PR and communications, it is authoring it. By combining human creativity with machine intelligence, the company is setting the blueprint for Africa’s next-generation communications industry, outpacing peers and redefining how brands engage people in the age of convergence.

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Why African Startup Founders Should Hire Public Relations Consultants -Israel Opayemi https://techeconomy.ng/why-african-startup-founders-should-hire-public-relations-consultants-israel-opayemi/ https://techeconomy.ng/why-african-startup-founders-should-hire-public-relations-consultants-israel-opayemi/#respond Mon, 19 Feb 2024 10:45:34 +0000 https://techeconomy.ng/?p=125405 For businesses, especially startups, to bloom and scale, they need the expertise of a good Public Relations Advisory firm for stronger brand building and best-in-class reputation management.

This submission was made by one of Africa’s strategic communications thought leaders, Israel Opayemi, the managing director/chief strategist of leading public relations and integrated communications consulting firm, Chain Reactions Africa (CRA) in a recently released thought leadership advisory titled: The Unseen Necessity: Why African Start-up Founders Should Hire Public Relations Consultants.

Opayemi described Public Relations as the lifeline that connects a start-up to its audience, shapes its narrative, and safeguards its reputation in the face of challenges.

He urged businesses, most especially start-ups, not to see Public Relations as an ‘afterthought’ that should be resorted to only when launching a new product, but rather an integral part of the entire brand building journey.

“In their enthusiasm for product development, product launch, and market penetration, many African start-up founders neglect the crucial role of Public Relations in brand building. The misconception that Public Relations is only for large corporations and that start-ups can rely solely on organic growth often lead to missed opportunities for strategic brand positioning, compelling storytelling, and effective crisis management, amongst other benefits,” he said.

Opayemi highlighted the key roles that Public Relations can play to aid the growth of start-ups to include “analysing trends, predicting their consequences, senior executive counsels, implementation of planned communications programmes as opposed to the knee jack approaches we often see especially when crisis hits. Most startups focus their immediate attention on building products instead of building their most vital asset, which is the asset of trust, without which long-term growth and customer retention is impossible.”

Even when it comes to the fundamentals of telling their own stories, Opayemi counselled that startup should look beyond just hiring a single individual or few individuals to occasionally put out social media posts or issue press releases. Telling compelling stories, he pointed out, require more than that especially in the cluttered media age in which we live.

“For example, through our type of transmedia storytelling model which involves an intentional integrated amplification approach aimed at leveraging both online and offline channels and platforms to ensure the broadest reach and optimise communication effectiveness, start-ups can be better positioned for global recognition; helping them connect with emerging venture capitals in distant shores and delivering their messages to critical audiences outside of their immediate jurisdictions,” Opayemi said.

He also pointed out the unique role Public Relations plays in the life of start-ups during crises. In the unpredictable start-up landscape, crises are almost inevitable. Whether it’s a product recall, a leadership change, or negative publicity; how a start-up handles a crisis can make or break its reputation.

“A professional Public Relations firm will help a startup conduct a risk profiling exercise, develop a risk dashboard, a crisis management protocol, train its internal issue owners for all the profiled risks, develop specific response strategies for each scenario and prepare a reputation recovery plan for the startup in the event of the crisis impacting its reputation negatively. These are some of the many unknown and unseen benefits of engaging the services of qualified public relations advisory firms by startups,” Opayemi added.

Opayemi lamented that, due to a limited understanding of the role of public relations consultants in business, many start-ups have collapsed by not managing crises professionally.

“The erroneous belief that all that needs to be done to manage a crisis is to make a semi-apologetic post on social media, or issue a half-hearted press release or organise some social media influencers for a clapback has been the greatest undoing of some great startups with amazing visions. These approaches are too jaded, ineffective and always fail to address the real issues just as they appear insincere, especially to the affected parties. When these inefficacious approaches are adopted by a startup in crisis time, they complicate the situation, worsen the crisis and makes the brand appear insensitive with dire consequences on the brand’s reputation,” he said.

Opayemi therefore counselled start-up founders to prioritise hiring professional Public Relations firms to manage their corporate and personal brands as thought leaders within their ecosystem of operation as the strategic use of public relations tools can positively impact their reputation by way of how they are perceived by investors, customers, and the broader business community.

According to him, “trust is the first and most important currency with which startup will trade in the marketplace journey in business and those better placed to manage that currency are qualified public relations advisors.”

He further warned that Public Relations is not just a peripheral business requirement for start-ups but, a strategic imperative. Understanding and leveraging its tools can be the key differentiator between a start-up that thrives and one that fades into obscurity.

As start-ups continue to disrupt industries and redefine markets, Opayemi appeals to startups to embrace the power of Public Relations and brave the new world without limits.

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