RJ: HEAD OF APPLE & CORE GROUP SPEAKS ON THE PASSION CALLED NIGERIA
''NIGERIANS DO NOT KNOW WHAT THEY HAVE IN NIGERIA''
*This story is brought to you by courtesy of HERITAGE BANK, NIGERIA .
**A Cerutti Media exclusive..youngchief@yahoo.com. Roaming +234 7042631895
*This story is brought to you by courtesy of HERITAGE BANK, NIGERIA .
**A Cerutti Media exclusive..youngchief@yahoo.com. Roaming +234 7042631895
Only recently, time conscious and forward minded, Mr. Rutger-Jan van Spaandonk,
RJ for short, Head of Apple and CORE Group, South Africa was in the giant of
Africa city, to project the brand I phone here, we were privilege to have an exclusive
breakfast audience with him at the exclusive LAGOS Sheraton CROCKPORT
restaurant.
And now after waiting several years to purchase genuine
Apple products from reputable source, Apple products customers in Nigeria’s
commercial capital, Lagos will now be delighted to formally welcome the first
official is store, reports CERUTTI MEDIA
Accessibility to official Apple
products will increase in Nigeria with the opening of the first iStore locally
- iStore Ikeja Mall. This one-of-a-kind retail store welcomed its’ first
customers last week and thereby effectively making it more convenient for
Nigerian consumers to purchase Apple products and accessories. Now, we can
reveal that the Istore in ikeja mall set up by RJ's Core Group Africa is home
of everything Apple in Nigeria
We scoop that he is one of the most disciplined
men around who keeps fit and exercises almost every day by 6am. Uses the gym
and swims
IN an interactive session, Rutger-Jan van Spaandonk says
if his parents had known he’d eventually make a home for himself outside of The
Netherlands, his country of birth, they’d have given him a name that’s easier
for foreigners to pronounce.
The executive director of Core Group, who is
known by most people simply as “RJ”, emigrated to SA almost by chance in the
late 1990s. He says he’s since fallen in love with the country and, though he
still travels extensively to Europe and West Africa on business, he says he has
no intention of living anywhere else.
Van Spaandonk is a colorful character in SA’s
technology industry. In the little more than a decade he’s been in the country,
he has courted more than his fair share of controversy, particularly in his
role at Core Group, the exclusive distributor of Apple products in SA, where he
has been since 2001.
When we meet outside Sheraton lobby, Van
Spaandonk, wearing his trademark braces and carrying a copy of the BUSINESS WORLD makes it clear he is
keen to get down to business In Nigeria
As we sat in the very immaculate hotel lobby,
he begins to recount the path that led him from The Netherlands — via the US
and London — to the southern tip of Africa.
The son of construction firm executive and a
high school teacher (both now retired), Van Spaandonk grew up in a small
village called Berkel-Enschot. After school, at the age of 18, he was enrolled
at Nijenrode, a private university built around a storied 13th century castle,
where he completed a three-year bachelor of business administration degree.
He spent four years as a consultant in the
property and infrastructure industries before securing a bursary from McKinsey
& Co and heading to the US in 1995, at the age of 25, to do an MBA at the
prestigious Wharton School at the University of Pennsylvania.
Why the US, I ask? “It’s very expensive,” he
concedes, “but most international companies, especially in consulting and
financial services, will repay your investment very quickly.”
Van Spaandonk adds with some hubris: “There
are people who have an MBA and there are people who have an MBA. It’s something people in SA
don’t want to hear but it’s very different studying at a local school and
studying at one of the world’s top universities. If you want to do an MBA, go
to one of the well-established institutions, otherwise you’re wasting your time
and money.”
After completing his MBA, Van Spaandonk
joined US consulting firm Mitchell Madison Group, a McKinsey spin-off, based in
London. But the grey weather quickly got to him. So, in February 1998, when he
came to SA on Mitchell business — the company was establishing an office here —
he decided to stay. “I found such a great, positive vibe,” he says. “Everyone
in SA had this attitude that they could make something of the country.”
Still with Mitchell Madison Group, Van
Spaandonk helped Transnet and Standard Bank drive some of their e-business
initiatives at the time.
However, Mitchell, which by then had morphed
into MarchFIRST after various corporate mergers and deals, went bust.
“My pension fund, everything, was tied up in
the dot-bomb bullshit,” Van Spaandonk says. “I know what it means to lose a lot
of money.”
After the MarchFIRST collapse, Van Spaandonk
struck out on his own, forming a small, Johannesburg-based consultancy called
Future Foresight with several ex-McKinsey colleagues.
But it wasn’t long before he met Core Group
CEO Rodney Ichikowitz. At that stage — it was 2001 — Core was a relatively
small distributor of IT solutions for the media industry. Today, it has
revenues of “well in excess of R1bn/year” and is the sole distributor in SA for
the Apple and Nintendo brands.
Ichikowitz brought Van Spaandonk on board to
help run the company as head of strategy and business development, and to be
its public face.
It is in the latter role that Van Spaandonk
has racked up a number of detractors, people who accuse him of being arrogant
and defending a company whose prices, they say, are excessive.
Van Spaandonk says he has little time for critics
who criticize Core Group and its prices without doing adequate research into
prices in similar markets around the world. He seems to be trying his best not
to let them get to him, but it’s clear he takes the attacks personally, and
then assured that quality of what Istotes sell cannot b e compromised in
whatever way
When I ask him what he does for fun, he tells
me about his love for writing and the articles he writes for Business Day’s Wanted supplement
and for GQ magazine. But he
quickly uses this to take a pot shot at Core Group’s critics. “I tend to write
a lot, but not on blogs,” he says. “Please put this in your story: unlike
bloggers, I actually get paid to express my opinion.”
It takes a little effort to steer the
conversation back to his private life, but eventually Van Spaandonk eases back
and begins talking about his love for the finer things in life: Cuban cigars,
luxury cars, and good food and wine, then he loves to jog also
“I take food and wine very seriously,” he
says. “I can wax lyrical about a bottle of wine for hours.”
And a meal in a restaurant is never to be
rushed. “Taking someone out for a meal is the start of a relationship. Sharing
food with someone is one of the most basic and meaningful things you can do,”
he says. “That’s why when I meet people for the first time, I do it over lunch.
And you’d better cancel your appointments for the rest of the afternoon.”
One of Van Spaandonk’s other great passions
is reading. He gets through a book a week — fiction and nonfiction. And he
doesn’t only read in English and Dutch. He is fluent in German and French, too.
“It’s important to delve into ideas in depth,” he says of his passion for
reading. “The Internet and television are not enough.”
He also enjoys travelling and says he is “not
afraid” to explore Africa. He spends considerable time in Nigeria on business,
Nigeria do not know what they nave, example I LOVE SUYA to point of no return
Van Spaandonk, is not married but is in a
long-term relationship of more than 17 years. He has no children and professes
to have no interest in having any. “I’m too busy enjoying life,” he says. “You
need the freedom if you want to travel a lot. Kids are a drain on your energy
and on your time.”
With
istore now home in LAGOS, Nigeria is gradually emerging as a global brand
market
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