The Nigerian music online community was recently stirred by the unflaterring remarks of rising star Mr. Fido who had a lot to say about the roles his marketing team played in his success.
According to Fido, these marketers hold themselves a little too highly and act like without them, he wouldn't have recorded the success he now enjoys. The singer also shared that any attempt to point this out would result in him becoming a persona non grata in that community.
Marketing company go make you feel like na them Dey help your life, where as na you Dey make money for them, dem go still make you feel like say without them you no go fit make am. My brothers and sisters open your eyes and be wise, the day you show to them they you know what…
— Fido (@MrFidooooo) March 5, 2025
His comments has been met with angry reactions from music marketing professionals, industry executives, and surprisingly even from fans who are known to often take the side of the artist irrespective of the context.
Nobody discovered me, na me discover myself, anywhere you see say person talk say na dem discover me, na scam oo.
— Fido (@MrFidooooo) March 5, 2025
Na God discover me not man. No let them scam you oooooo#onlyGod is the key.
In another post, Fido said nobody discovered him. He ascribed the credit of his discovery to himself and then later to God, all in the same post.
This claim has since been disputed by documented evidence from Caleb Oyolola of Inner Circle Entertainment, who discovered him and steered him on the path of success.
Inner Circle discovered you, gave you a name, and built your brand. I personally convinced Bimbo to come on board. We pushed 'Awolowo' together in Bariga. Now you dare say we never invested in you? He talks about investors as if he brought them. Investors wey invest in the team. https://t.co/wIfkqdCElx pic.twitter.com/brMuAmVS9A
— Screenshots Deserving (@caleb5g) March 6, 2025
After the success of his hit singles 'Awolowo' and 'Joy Is Coming,' Fido now appears intent on taking all the glory for himself, and should there be any left, it belongs to his God.
His comments rehash the question of the role other professionals play in the success of an artist and whether good music can sell itself.
The short, simple, and straightforward answer is no.
There has hardly ever been a product that achieved commercial success simply based on its inherent qualities, perhaps except for staple food.
For a quality product such as good music to gain success, it first of all needs to attract substantial attention and this is the role of marketers and the PR team.
They strategise ways to communicate the music to different consumer demographics through mediums and contents that appeals to their interests and sensibilities.
Branding strategies, press features, a dance routine, a meme video, radio airplay, playlisting, influencer marketing, and interactive content, whether thought-provoking or controversial, are some of the ways music marketers take music to the target audience.
Without this active effort by a creative and dedicated team, the music will simply remain good material painfully lacking the required visibility to scale. This is the story of many artists who have good music but lack the resources to market it.
That Fido provides these funds to the music marketers doesn't give him the license to condescend on their efforts. Rather, it's simply a case of both parties holding up their end of the bargain.
It's even important to note that music marketing campaigns that yield the required result are, in every sense, a big deal, especially at a time when music marketing is very expensive and guarantees are at their lowest.
Mr. Fido might wield palpable talent, but there's a reason his success came only after he was discovered by the team at Inner Circle Entertainment, who expended resources to further his career, coupled with the efforts of the marketing team of Cidar Africa, who crafted ways to get the music to the mass audience.
Without them, he would probably still go by Phydo and simply be just another talented emerging artist waiting for his time in the spotlight.
This is, in fact, not hypothetical, as Fido failed to gain success when he attempted to do it "on his own" with the release of 'Mr. Lover' and 'Awolowo' remix featuring Kapo for which he didn't enlist the services of Cidar Africa.
Fido's statement becomes even more unfortunate when one considers the Cidar's past success with Wizard Chan, Shoday, and more recently Kunmie who is the early breakout star of 2025.