By Obinna Nwachi
The job of managing the image and reputation of a company like the NNPC, that many love to hate and others hate to love, is no mean task. Very often, one leaves the job inheriting the ‘enemies’ of the company as personal enemies. Very rarely does one leave the job in a gale of accolades and a bouquet of flowers and comfetti as Dr. Kennie Obateru is doing today.
Having worked in the Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation (NNPC) for over 29 years, clocking the statutory retirement age of 60 today means its time to go home and take a deserved rest.
Obateru assumed office as the Group General Manager, Group Public Affairs Division of NNPC in March 2020 at a time when various countries across the world, including Nigeria, were going into lockdown to curb the damaging spread of the COVID-19 pandemic.
Time was not on his side. But he managed to quickly retool and recalibrate the Division to be able to promptly respond to the challenges of the time.
This saw the robust engagement of the Corporation’s publics, with the Group Managing Director, Mallam Mele Kyari, leading the charge in clarifying the issues around production cuts, decline in crude oil sales and efforts to shore up revenues for the nation, who economy was facing terrible strain.
Apart from ensuring the vigorous implementation of the corporation’s Transparency, Accountability and Performance Excellence (TAPE) through timely communication of NNPC’s operations and activities, Obateru maintained an open-door policy which ensured prompt handling of all enquiries from the public on its activities.
This obviously resulted in a near-zero bad press for the NNPC in the one and half years he held sway as the chief reputation manager of the corporation.
His professionalism did not go unnoticed, particularly by his friends and colleagues.
For the Executive Secretary of the Nigerian Extractive Industries Transparency Initiative (NEITI), Dr. Orji Ogbonnaya Orji, the transparency agency owed the very cordial relationship it enjoyed with the NNPC to Obateru’s professionalism and engaging human relations skills.
“It is with mixed feelings I learnt about Kennie’s retirement. Kennie Obateru is a very tall man, taller in ideas, but tallest in competence and integrity.
“He’s a man of details; learns lessons from opportunities and from the ups and downs of life.
“We had a smooth working relationship with the NNPC during his tenure, and it was all due to his professionalism and leadership style,” he declared.
Stakeholders from across all sectors of the oil and gas industry who had the good fortune to encounter Obateru in his long career that spanned 29 years across various subsidiaries and the Corporate Headquarters of the Corporation are all agreed on his excellent human relations skills.
One of such is Sopuruchi Onwuka, the publisher of Oracle News who traced his first encounter with Obateru to his days as the Manager, Public Affairs Department, Port Harcourt Refining Company (PHRC), Port Harcourt, Rivers State.
Onwuka described Obateru as “a thoroughbred public relations professional and a perfect relationship manager who succeeded in getting the public to see NNPC through him.”
“He is down to earth in his dealings with people. He is polite and urbane. He doesn’t talk down on you or force you to accept his point of view. He wins you over.
“Another thing I find particularly fascinating about Dr. Obateru is his ability to listen patiently and respond to issues no matter how busy he is. If his busy schedule makes it difficult to take your call and respond to your questions immediately, he will send a text message that he will get back to you, and he returns with answers,” Onwuka said.
From colleagues and media practitioners who had to deal with Obateru on a daily basis in the course of his job, none could think of anything negative to say about his personality and style as a reputation manager.
A veteran energy journalist, Olusola Bello, who related with him closely for years in the course of his job described Obateru thus: “He is a very competent public relations man, who knows his job.
He is very accessible and always reaching out. In fact he has a way of drawing people close and taking them into confidence about developments in the industry. This style made it difficult for a lot of us to do stories that could negatively impact on NNPC and its subsidiaries, because it would make you feel guilty that you are betraying your source”.
Bello’s submission holds the secret to the general positive reportage NNPC enjoyed throughout Obateru’s tenure as the corporation’s spokesman, a job for which he came fully prepared by virtue of his vast experience within the NNPC and the oil industry.
Before his appointment as the Group General Manger, Group Public Affairs of the NNPC in 2020, he was the General Manager, NNPC London Office.
He joined the services of the Corporation in 1992 as an experienced hire and since then has held several key and strategic positions in the Public Affairs Division.
He was Manager, Public Affairs of the National Petroleum Investment Management Services (NAPIMS), a corporate service unit of the NNPC between 2010 and 2015.
Prior to that, he was Manager, Public Affairs Department, Port Harcourt Refining Company (PHRC) between 2008 and 2010 and was Manager, Media Relations in the Group Public Affairs Division from 2007 to 2008.
Dr. Obateru was Deputy Manager, Media Relations in GPAD between 2006 and 2007, and served as a team member in Project PACE-SMS, CP Core Process Teams between 2005 and 2006.
From 2001 to 2005, he served as the Supervisor, Budget & Planning in GPAD.
He also doubled as Supervisor, Audio Visual, between 2000 and 2001. His versatility was brought to bear on the print side of the corporate communication business when he diligently served as Editor, NNPC News, a monthly publication of the Group Public Affairs Division from 1998 to 2000.
Between1993 and1998, Dr. Obateru was the Protocol Officer to the then Minister of Petroleum Resources. He cut his teeth in the Corporation as a Protocol and Consular Officer between 1992 and1993.
He is an alumnus of the Nigerian Institute of Journalism, Lagos; University of Ilorin and University of Stirling, Scotland, United Kingdom, where he obtained a Certificate in News Reporting, a B.A. (Hons) Performing Arts and an M.Sc. in Public Relations respectively.
In 2012, Obateru joined the doctoral club of eggheads when he was awarded a Doctorate Degree in Management (Honoris Causa) by the Commonwealth University, Belize.
He has attended numerous professional courses and conferences at home and abroad which included three International Public Relations Association Conferences, five World Petroleum Congresses (WPCs) and 15 OPEC Ministerial Conferences, among others.
Dr. Obateru is a Fellow of the Nigerian Institute of Public Relations, a Fellow of the Institute of Management Consultants, a member of the International Public Relations Association, a senior member of the Africa Public Relations Association as well as a member of the Nigeria Institute of Management.
His hobbies include Lawn Tennis, Table Tennis, reading and dancing. Dr. Obateru is happily married and his union is blessed with four children.
Dr. Obateru bows out after 29 years of meritorious service to the NNPC.
Obinna Nwachi, a public commentator and analyst, wrote in from Abuja.
Obateru hands over the baton to his successor, Garbadeen Mohammed on Friday in Abuja.