91大神

  • #Hustleprint: How My Media Experience Prepared Me for a Tech Product Marketing Role

    Every week, 91大神 will share the hustle stories of Nigerians making it big in and out of the country. With each story, we鈥檒l ask one crucial question in several ways: 鈥淗ow you do am?鈥

    Written By:

    Before became a tech product marketer, he worked in the media industry for over six years. For #Hustleprint, he tells us how he completed his transition. 

    Hint: it was a mix of continuous learning and taking a leap of faith.

    Let鈥檚 start with the obvious question. Was working in tech always the goal?

    It wasn鈥檛. I didn鈥檛 even consider it for years, which is funny because I studied computer engineering and my closest friends work in tech. You鈥檇 think the peer pressure would have gotten to me sooner. But I was fine working in the media after graduating from uni.

    Now you have to tell me how you started working in the media industry

    While studying for my computer engineering degree, my best friend, and I discovered our love for writing. We wrote fiction and published the stories on a little blog we owned. 

    In 2015, reached out to us and pitched a media publication he was launching. He said the core audience was young people, and he thought we鈥檇 be a great fit because we were 鈥渇unny and smart.鈥 That publication was 91大神. 

    Heh. The name sounds familiar 

    Odun and I sat down and thought about what we wanted 91大神 to look like. I鈥檒l be honest 鈥 we didn鈥檛 have a clear idea of what we were doing, but we were obsessed with Buzzfeed and Youtube. That was a good start, so we experienced and threw things at the wall. It took about two months after we started before we created the first viral article that did hundreds of thousands of views. 

    What did the experimentation phase look like?

    The biggest part was content consumption. Part of being a creator is consuming a lot of content. Every time I saw something I liked, I鈥檇 try to figure out why I liked it. Then I鈥檇 borrow those elements and apply them to whatever I was working on.

    Also, I was doing a lot of listening. A tweet, a joke or a meme was an opportunity for fresh content. At the very least, they were signs of what people were interested in.

    This process taught me how to mould my voice to fit the audience 鈥 another thing content creators and marketers should optimise for. Creating content in a way your audience wants or likes, even if it doesn鈥檛 particularly appeal to you, is a great way of getting through to them. 

    I鈥檓 curious about how you balanced creating the content you wanted vs what the audience wanted

    The balance, for me, was making sure that I didn鈥檛 hate anything I wrote. It didn鈥檛 matter if it wasn鈥檛 something I鈥檇 have chosen to write, I pulled it off in a way that felt honest. 

    If I was writing about something I didn鈥檛 know much about, the trick was to research and reach out to people who could talk about their experiences. This was particularly useful for listicles because they had to be relatable to reach the audience. Ultimately, if the output felt solid to me, I was good. 

    The more I took these early learnings and applied them, the more comfortable I was with content creation and settling into it as a career.

    Lit. What was the next significant event?

    I spent a little over a year at 91大神 before I went to Konbini, another media company. It was another vital experience; I was there for about three years and became the Editor-in-Chief during that period. 

    But Konbini had to leave Nigeria, and I returned to 91大神 in 2019. The publication was doing a lot more interesting things, especially around long-form storytelling. This opportunity played a role in creating series like Sex Life and Love Life. Also, I became the Editor-in-Chief. 

    Was there anything you learned during this time that still proves particularly useful?

    Building processes. Working with the Managing Editor at the time, was a valuable lesson in the importance of reporting and documenting processes. 

    I didn鈥檛 realise it at the time, but we were writing for every series and project we launched. A good part of this was figuring out the audience, distribution, competitors and success metrics. 

    Building and documenting processes force creators to think about execution, which increases the chances of success. Although I left the media industry in 2021, this is still immensely useful to me. 

    A segue. After working in media for so long, why did you transition into another industry?

    It was a combination of different things. I found the tech industry interesting, thanks to the conversations I鈥榙 been having with my friends over the years. Whenever they talked about their companies, I always had ideas about how to make their products better. Naturally, I started thinking that it wouldn鈥檛 hurt if this became my day job. It also helped that I had easily-transferrable skills. 

    Besides, I thought I鈥檇 done my fair share of work in the media.

    Fair enough. What steps did you take when you decided to transition?

    First, I quit my job, although I didn鈥檛 have another one lined up 鈥 a career first.  Then I tweeted that I was looking for a marketing role in tech. I didn鈥檛 know what I thought the tweet was going to accomplish, but some cool founders reached out to me. I鈥檓 still amazed by the quality of people who wanted to work with me.

    In the end, I joined PiggyVest as Head of Content and Content Strategy. The conversation had been happening before my transition because I had friends there. When I joined the company, the job to be done was figuring out how to leverage content to convert potential customers into users. 

    What does everyone need to know about the difference between tech content marketing and content creation

    The major difference is that in media, the content itself is the product. However, content is an add-on to push a product in the tech industry. It doesn鈥檛 matter what I鈥檓 writing or producing these days, I鈥檓 thinking about how the content sells the brand and its products. I鈥檓 also asking questions about what sets of consumer behaviour I鈥檓 looking to influence or change. Whatever the answer is, every piece of content ends with a that directly promotes the product. The end goal is conversion 鈥 the number of people who take an action you want them to. 

    I should mention that my role at PiggyVest has evolved and isn鈥檛 just limited to content marketing anymore. In the past two years, I鈥檝e led projects around digital and product marketing. 

    Interesting. Tell me more about that

    Once the content marketing bit was sorted and our output was hitting its conversion goals, I felt like I needed to take on more projects. I started thinking about other ways to push the product,  so I offered to lead or partake in digital marketing campaigns. The scope wasn鈥檛 just content marketing anymore, but it also included product marketing.  When I figured this out, I did the next best thing. 

    What?

    I took some courses. My favourite was an intense 33-hour Product Marketing course on 鈥 it was incredibly rewarding, and I felt smarter at the end of it. The next thing was applying the learnings and experimenting with new and exciting ways to market the product. 

    Wait. What鈥檚 the difference between content marketing and product marketing?

    Content marketing is top-of-the-funnel 鈥 it鈥檚 your early interactions with prospective users. In practice, it means creating useful and relatable content to win them over. For example, if you鈥檙e selling a savings product, you create content around how people manage money or make smart money decisions. While at it, you鈥檙e also thinking of ways to position the product so it鈥檚 top of mind for the users.

    Product marketing is more focused on selling the product鈥檚 specific features. To do this effectively, you need to understand three things 鈥 the customer, the product, and the market. While working out a product marketing plan, you鈥檙e highlighting your competitors, product fit and what makes it stand out, and how to sell it to your customers. 

    Content marketing is a part of product marketing, it鈥檚 just a different part of the funnel.

    In your experience, what skills do you imagine one needs for both roles?

    Empathy. You can have a product that you don鈥檛 personally like, but it doesn鈥檛 mean the product isn鈥檛 valuable. You need to be an empathetic person to recognise how it鈥檒l be useful to other people. 

    Another thing is research, as it allows you to figure out your competitors, their competitive advantage, and the lesson you can learn from them so the next user doesn鈥檛 choose their product over yours. 

    This isn鈥檛 an exhaustive list, but I鈥檝e found that communication, creativity and advocacy are also useful skills to have.

    Got it. You鈥檝e been working in tech for about two years now, what鈥檚 been the best thing about the process?

    I鈥檝e enjoyed learning about new things, and this has presented itself in two ways 鈥 learning from experience and taking courses. Like, I want to lean into my experience over the years, but I also want a professional to tell me new things I haven鈥檛 considered. 

    Essentially, my focus in the past months is putting into practice all the things I鈥檝e known at the back of my mind and also taking in new information along the way. 

    Sounds fun. So what else have you been up to?

    In 2022, I co-founded a community for creators looking to transition into the tech industry. A little background: I acknowledge that I had a relatively easy landing in the industry, but I was also anxious about the process. I kept thinking about what I was doing wrong or if I was even taking the right courses. 

    Although it eventually worked out, it could have been a disaster. But if I had a community, it would have been a more seamless process.

    This thinking led me to start with Ope Adedeji. The aim is to help other people that might not have the connections I had to find great jobs or even just figure out how to transition. 

    Over 300 people applied to join the community during launch week, which validated our reasons for creating it. At the moment, the community has over 1,500 registered members, and we鈥檝e given out about 90 scholarships and funded about 30 CV revamps. 

    As you continue to build the community, what set of goals are you looking to hit?

    The primary goal is to create a talent pipeline for no-code professionals and link community members to the right jobs. Thankfully, it鈥檚 already starting to happen. There are lots of talented people out there, and there鈥檚 nothing I want more than creators to earn what they deserve. 

    At the moment, I don鈥檛 think there鈥檚 anything more rewarding. 


    Hustleprint stories drop every two weeks on Tuesdays at 12 p.m. WAT, and Hustleprint guides will drop in the interim weeks. 

    So you can follow each drop, Hustleprint will be published in .

    About the Authors

More By This Author

91大神 amplifies African youth culture by curating and creating smart and joyful content for young Africans and the world.