Performance Marketing vs. Brand Marketing: The Ghanaian Brand’s Guide to Sustainable Growth

For any ambitious Ghanaian brand, whether you’re a fintech startup like Nsano, Kowri, Korba, Hubtel, etc., in Accra, a fashion house in Kumasi, or a growing agribusiness in Tamale, understanding the balance between performance marketing and brand marketing is crucial for long-term success. These two strategies may seem similar, but each plays a unique and vital role in building a business that lasts.

Let me break it down with a relatable analogy for easy understanding of what performance marketing and brand marketing are.

What Is Performance Marketing?
Performance marketing is a results-driven approach where you pay only when a specific action like a sale, website click, or app download happens. It’s all about accountability and fast returns, making it very attractive to Ghanaian SMEs and startups looking to scale quickly.

What are the key characteristics?

Popular Performance Marketing Channels in Ghana:

Example:
A Ghanaian online fashion store runs a Facebook ad campaign targeting Accra residents with a “Buy One, Obtain One Free” offer for Independence Day. They track how many sales the ad generates, measuring direct impact and ROI. ROI is calculated as ROI = (Net Profit / Total Cost of Investment) × 100.

What Is Brand Marketing?
Brand marketing is about building a strong, trusted reputation over time. It’s why Ghanaians think of FanMilk for a cool treat or Melcom for variety. It’s less about instant sales and more about becoming a household name so that when Ghanaians need your product, yours is the first brand they remember (top-of-mind awareness).

Key Characteristics:

Brand Marketing Channels in Ghana:

Example:
Kasapreko, a leading Ghanaian beverage brand, sponsors major festivals and runs uplifting TV ads about Ghanaian heritage. Their focus isn’t just to sell a bottle today but to be the brand Ghanaians think of for every celebration.

Now, consider the Cocoa Tree Analogy: Growing Your Brand in Ghana.

Think of your business like a cocoa tree, a symbol of Ghana’s agricultural legacy.

Brand marketing builds the roots and strength of your business for the future. Performance marketing drives measurable results today.

Why Ghanaian Brands Need Both
Some Ghanaian businesses invest only in performance marketing, chasing quick sales but struggling to build loyalty. Others focus only on brand, hoping trust alone will convert customers. The strongest brands blend both.

1. Brand Marketing Makes Performance More Effective

When Ghanaians have seen your brand on TV, heard about you from a friend, spotted your logo at a local event, or seen your billboard around Circle or Kasoa, they’re more likely to trust and respond to your ads. This lowers your cost per click and makes every cedi spent more effective.

2. Performance Marketing Fuels Brand Growth

The data from your campaigns tells you what Ghanaians like, which promotions work, and who your customers are. This information shapes your brand messaging and ensures your investments reach the right people.

The Funnel in a Ghanaian Context:

Neglect one, and you’ll either struggle for sales or lack a loyal audience to convert.

How can a Ghanaian brand effectively blend both strategies?

Blending Strategies: A Modern Ghanaian Example

Don’t choose between building a strong brand and driving immediate results. Use performance marketing to fuel your growth today, and invest in brand marketing to ensure your name is known, trusted, and loved in Ghana for years to come. Grow Your Ghanaian Brand for Today and Tomorrow. Combine both strategies, and watch your business thrive season after season, harvest after harvest.

Samuel Kwabena Ansong is a versatile digital marketing expert certified by Harvard Business School Online. Currently enrolled in an MPhil program in Digital Marketing at Ghana Communication Technology University.

Disclaimer: "The views expressed in this article are the author’s own and do not necessarily reflect ModernGhana official position. ModernGhana will not be responsible or liable for any inaccurate or incorrect statements in the contributions or columns here."

   Comments0

More From Author