Unilever Nigeria Plc. is the longest-serving manufacturing company in Nigeria, with several household name brands that have stayed with Nigerian consumers from generation to generation. In this interview, the company’s Managing Director, Carl Cruz, speaks on the company’s business strategy, socioeconomic contribution, and sustainability commitment, among other issues.
Tell us the vision of Unilever and what has made it stand out through the years.
Unilever’s journey began with our founder, Williams Lever. His vision of making products that solve environmental challenges was evident when he introduced Sunlight Bar soap in the early 1890s.
This milestone helped the Lever Brothers to become the first company to popularize cleanliness in Victorian England.
This particular vision has become a Purpose for Unilever- a purpose that underpins our business strategy and guides our operations. Over the years, we have become a leading company in health and hygiene products.
Our vision to make sustainable living commonplace permeates our global and Nigerian operations driving Purpose. In Nigeria, everything we do is centered on creating a positive social impact.
Could you tell us how Unilever Nigeria PLC has evolved over the years and what makes it a truly Nigerian company?
As a business that is 100 years old in the country, we have evolved into a truly Nigerian company, full of pride and positive impact through our brands that are household names in Nigeria.
Our journey of impact, in the country, over the years has been made possible through various stakeholders- our employees, government, regulators, trade associations, NGOs, key distributors, vendors, suppliers, and our consumers.
I have been with Unilever for decades and worked in different markets. I can clearly say that our business in Nigeria is deep-rooted in the resilient spirit of Nigerians.
The Unilever story has been guided by Purpose, and this has been an exciting journey of the impact that has fuelled socio-economic development in Nigeria through partnerships.
Kindly share an overview of how this Purpose has been a catalyst, driving impact through brands and operations.
Purpose underpins our operations in all markets including Africa and Nigeria. Through our journey and guided with purpose, we built the Unilever Sustainable Living Plan (USLP), launched in 2010 and wound down in 2020 after making an incredible impact across our ecosystem in that particular decade.
Our Purpose, now re-launched through our COMPASS strategy, is more holistic and encompassing for a more significant impact through our brands, people, and operations.
Through our journey of 100 years and guided by Purpose, we are leveraging on building partnerships for impact. Our impacts cut across several sectors, enabling us to contribute to Nigeria’s socio-economic development.
We are intentional about our localization agenda, diversity and inclusion, women empowerment, building capacity and capabilities of the youth in preparing them for the future of work, and most importantly, improving the planet’s health through our plastic collection drive.
Unilever will stop at nothing to continue driving impact through our brands and operations, especially as we celebrate 100 years in Nigeria.
Over the years, Unilever brands, Pepsodent, Closeup, Knorr, and many more are household names that are still very much around today.
How would you describe your brand’s staying power in a highly fragmented and competitive market like Nigeria?
In our industry, teams and brands that engage consumers strategically will always win in the marketplace. At Unilever, the consumer is at the heart of everything we do as an organization. Over the years, we have built great campaigns for Knorr, Royco, Pepsodent, and Closeup. These campaigns have become synonymous with the Nigerian way of life. Having been here for a century, we have had to evolve how we operate and engage with consumers. This makes our brands fresh, relevant, and impactful in the country.
Unilever is a leading voice in equity, diversity, and inclusion advocacy. Can you tell us more about this and how they have been entrenched into the operations of Unilever Nigeria?
This is a crucial success factor for Unilever, especially in Nigeria. As a company serving a diverse consumer base, our employee’s representation reflects diversity such as gender, social and economic background, ethnicity, and beliefs. I am very proud to say that we exited 2022 with a female employee representation ratio of 47%.
More importantly, over 51% of all new hires are female. We have also started a journey to include persons with disabilities in our employee base, which today stands at 1.4%, and our objective is to reach 5% by 2025.
A key thrust of Unilever is to provide a safe zone in the organization. It is a zone where opinions, perspectives, and points of view hold the same way for consideration in decision-making.
This is an excellent way for us and a critical success factor in our operations in Nigeria.
The future of work is a huge conversation that has evolved differently.
As a centenary-old organization with the clamour for adopting technology to take over many human-related activities, what is Unilever doing about adopting technology in the future of work?
I think it is the right topic, and this is big on our agenda in Unilever Nigeria. For us, it is not about technology over humans or humans over technology.
It is about finding the right balance that works well for us to engage the consumers here in Nigeria in the best possible way. We are embracing the future ways of working through our agile work. It is a system that allows everyone to function at their best.
It is not about hierarchy, it is about ownership and responsibility to achieve a set target. This agile way of working has generated tremendous energy and momentum in the organization in Nigeria.
As we continue to embrace the future of work, we are very intentional about our hybrid ways of working. We only require our people to report to the physical office twice a week.
This helps our people to avoid and significantly reduce environmental challenges associated with commuting to the workplace.
We believe that our people should spend quality time focusing on important things like taking care of family requirements, and attending to kids while striking a balance focusing on work essentials to achieve greater results and impact.
The hybrid way of working has done wonders for us as we walk through the challenges of our environment.
It has Improved significantly the productivity of our people and their work-life balance.
In 2020, we did an end-to-end review of our processes to automate our operations, reduce waste, and leverage other Unilever market know-how to improve our operational efficiencies.
The goal is to make us an agile organization that is data-driven and quick to respond to market demands. For us, this is the future of work. We are not over-complicating things; we are making things simpler.
Tell us more about the Unilever Compass strategy and how significant it is to your journey as a centenary old company in Nigeria.
The Compass is the strategy for the Unilever group to be a force for good through purpose and innovation.
The Compass is founded on three pillars: Brands with Purpose Grow; People with Purpose Thrive; and Companies with Purpose Last.
The Unilever Compass corporate strategy puts serving our stakeholders at the heart of everything we do and outlines how we intend to make that ambition a reality.
The Compass very much builds on the past ten years of the USLP: the successes, the failures, and the lessons learned. It lays the pathway for us to realize our vision of being the leader in sustainable business globally – as well as to finally put to bed the debate of whether sustainability is good for business.
The Unilever Compass integrates the financial, environmental, social, and governance dimensions of our business. The Compass forms the basis of our strategic choices in the coming years.
The Compass is underpinned by existing business fundamentals of our operations, such as business integrity; safety at work; employee wellbeing; product safety and quality; responsible innovation; responsible advertising and marketing; safeguarding data; engaging with stakeholders; being responsible taxpayer; and our commitment to transparency.
We have made stretching sustainable development commitments through the Compass.
Our commitments are built around three core pillars and eight sub-pillars. Our core pillars are, to improve the health of the planet, improve people’s health, confidence, and well-being, and contribute to a fairer, more socially inclusive world.
Our eight sub-pillars are focused on climate action, protecting and regenerating nature, a waste-free world, positive nutrition, health and wellbeing, equity, diversity, and inclusion, raising living standards, and the future of work.
As a centenary old company in Nigeria, Compass is our strategy to deliver growth that is consistent, competitive, profitable, and responsible.
Our business simply will not prosper without a healthy planet and society. We’ve set out an ambitious sustainability agenda to tackle the issues that our consumers and stakeholders care deeply about – such as climate change, plastic pollution, and inequality.
Are there specifics you can share with us on your climate change action and plastic pollution?
On a global scale, Unilever has an ambitious plan to take us to net zero emissions by 2039.
We’re transitioning to renewable energy across our operations, finding new low-carbon ingredients, expanding our plant-based product range, and developing fossil-fuel-free cleaning and laundry products.
We’re using our influence to accelerate progress in other areas of our value chain. Our brands are working to reduce the impact of our products when used by consumers. And we’re calling on governments, businesses, and other partners to raise their ambitions and join the race to zero emissions.
On Plastic Pollution – The Circular Economy, Nigeria generates about 32 million tonnes of solid waste every year, of which 2.5 million tonnes is plastic waste.
Most of these wastes, including plastic and non-plastic waste, end up in landfills, drainages, and water bodies.
The Federal Ministry of Environment and the state’s counterparts have taken measures to improve waste management, and some businesses are geared to support the government’s efforts.
Unilever is equally taking action on plastic across our business using our framework: Less plastic. Better plastic.
No plastic. Globally, we are committed to ensuring that all our plastic packaging is reusable, recyclable, or compostable.
We want to collect and process more plastic than we sell by 2025, reduce virgin plastic by 50 percent, and have 100 percent reusable, recyclable, or compostable plastic packaging by 2025. These commitments are been adopted locally.
Strategic partnerships lie at the heart of our efforts to drive transformational change in our society.
Unilever Nigeria has been supporting the efforts of social enterprise, Wecyclers, to collect and recycle waste since 2014. In 2019, we signed a 3-year partnership to collect and recycle plastic waste from the environment that was the equivalent in volume to what we produce and sell using community kiosk models.
We have since extended our collaboration with Wecyclers, with support from TRANSFORM, to create plastic collection and recycling franchises around the country.
These partnerships create jobs and the subscribers to our community kiosks collection model are earning more than the national minimum wage monthly from exchanging their plastics waste.
How has Unilever been able to entrench its “people with a purpose thrive” belief to engender workplace growth that has ticked the boxes of creating capability through lifelong learning, unlocking capacity for change, and deepening the culture of pioneering?
At Unilever Nigeria, we firmly believe that winning in the marketplace requires winning with and through people.
This belief continues to guide how we work and reflects in our policies and practices at every stage of our employment cycle. We are committed to remaining an equal-opportunity employer passionate about diversity, inclusivity, and mutual respect.
Our employees are our most valued assets, and as such, their well-being and Purpose are integral to building a positive work environment that drives growth. In this regard, we deployed initiatives to promote a highly engaged and productive workforce while inspiring a sense of accountability and ownership.
As part of our drive to foster a productive and inspiring environment, we re-launched initiatives such as the “agile working” campaign powered by the recently completed office renovation across our business premises.
We included a crèche, eco-friendly office workspaces, optimized resource sharing, and disability-friendly infrastructure.
These are in addition to initiatives such as flexible working arrangements and the maternity and paternity support (MAPS) scheme.
The MAPS scheme takes effect as soon as the employee is expectant, and this triggers support from the line manager and the leadership team even until and after their return from maternity leave.
We give four weeks of paternity leave, and six months of maternity leave, of which four months are paid. This has engendered an increased sense of belonging, motivation, and commitment among employees.
It is one thing to have a talented team of committed professionals; it’s another to oil their commitment with developmental programs that give them a sense of belonging to the organization. How has Unilever continually gotten the best out of its people through employee engagement and talent development to drive business growth?
Our employees are our most valued assets. Their well-being and Purpose are integral to building a positive work environment that drives growth.
In this regard, we deployed initiatives to promote a highly engaged and productive workforce while inspiring a sense of accountability and ownership.
In 2019, we pioneered a new growth culture where we introduced a management framework to encourage high performance and support employees in living out their Purpose while driving business growth.
In addition to our focus on experiential development through on-the-job deliverables, we implemented robust technology-enable systems to develop better leadership, professional, and general skills in our employees for enhanced engagement and productivity to complement other traditional learning methodologies, with our business leaders being at the forefront of these initiatives.
The introduction of the book club, line manager capability-building sessions, and other related activities continue to create the platform for our business leaders to engage with employees and share their experiences while also giving career coaching and mentoring to young employees within the organization.
As we celebrate the centenary of Unilever in Nigeria, what should Nigerians look forward to from the company, in line with the strategic direction of building a brighter future together?
The intent is to be here in the next 100 years and beyond. After being here for a century, Nigerians can expect a better and stronger, Unilever as an organization.
We want to increase our relevance to Nigerian consumers by continuing to offer established products in a refreshed way and bringing in a diverse set of portfolios from other markets that will be genuinely relevant to making the lives of Nigerians much better in the next 100 years and more.