51
 countries, 60 direct reports, 60,000 customers, 4,000 employees, 14 
aircraft, 2 young children and 2 dogs! Charles Brewer is the MD who 
loves leading all of that
CAPE-TOWN, South-Africa, August 13, 2014/ -- DHL
 Express, who has been in sub-Saharan Africa for more than 36 years, is 
the ‘Most International Company in the World’ and has a significant 
operation in Africa, moving thousands of shipments every day.
At
 the helm of this business is Managing Director Charles Brewer, who has 
been with DHL for more than 30 years, has worked in all regions of the 
world and found himself in Africa for the first time three years ago.
 
|  | 
| Charles Brewer, managing director for sub-Saharan Africa at DHL Express) | 
 
“Like
 many who haven’t actually been to Africa, the perceptions I had were 
found to be very different in reality,” Brewer says. “Simplistically, 
Africa is the last frontier. It is the most beautiful, dynamic and 
exciting region I have had the pleasure to live and work in, and despite
 the very obvious challenges and occasional risk, I love being part of 
this exciting journey.”
His
 role, as MD, is to “motivate and excite my employees to deliver 
unbelievable and unparalleled service levels and to help our customers 
grow and be successful” and it is clear that customer centricity is at 
the very core of Brewer’s DNA.
So what does it take to oversee this many people and territories?
“We
 worry a great deal less about formal qualifications and focus far more 
on emotional qualities, experiences and abilities” – not surprising when
 you consider that he spends huge amounts of time on the front line and 
considers himself the Chief Energy Officer.
Every
 week you will find Charles in a different country in Africa – he could 
be with a courier in Rwanda this week, selling with a sales executive in
 Senegal the next, to sitting side-by-side with a Customer Service Agent
 in Lagos the week after. “If you want to know what your customers or 
employees really think about your product or your company, get to where 
the action is as often as you possibly can.”
A
 few years ago, just after Brewer arrived in Africa, he took the bold 
decision to completely de-layer the management structure, with an aim to
 bring everyone closer to the “sharp-end” and to significantly improve 
communication and speed of decision making.
“Africa
 is so dynamic and I just felt that we were too far removed and 
operating far too slowly”. All 51 countries now report directly to 
Brewer and the new structure has proven to be really successful.
“The
 new structure is very different and demands a very open, rapid and 
engaging leadership style but it is working really well, with quicker 
decision making, simpler communication lines and a significantly 
improved employee engagement level”. As an example, the couriers, who 
are key to the DHL service delivery promise, are never more than four 
levels away from Brewer and five from the Global CEO.
Think global, act local and TRUST!
One
 of the key lessons learned over the past three years and specifically 
as DHL went through the structural change, was the importance of trust. 
“With so many countries, all with different opportunities and 
challenges, you have to trust the teams on the ground”. What that means 
is using the global processes and procedures, but allowing a high degree
 of input on how best to execute locally.
To
 illustrate his point, Brewer describes a recent example were DHL was 
running a retail point of sale promotion to attract new customers to its
 ever-growing retail points. The typical approach would be to offer 
discounts and/or corporate give-aways to incentivise walk-in customers. 
The country manager in Ethiopia however suggested a much better idea – 
giving customers a chicken as part of the Easter celebration.
“When
 the Country Manager first suggested ‘chickens’, I had to laugh and 
genuinely thought she was joking, but she was serious and right – the 
promotion was hugely successful”.
It is big, but do-able!
DHL’s
 sub-Saharan regional headquarters is based in Cape Town, but Brewer 
spends a considerable amount of time visiting the company’s operations 
across the rest of the continent. “You have to be very visible”.
In
 a region as large as Africa, this is however easier said than done. 
Unlike Europe where one would struggle to fly a stretch of more than 
four hours, travelling across Africa can be gruelling. Just visiting 
each of the countries in West Africa can easily take two to three weeks.
“It
 has its challenges in terms of flight schedules and being away from 
one’s family, but it makes for an interesting experience and I’m still 
having lots of fun. Playing a small role in the African growth story is 
an incredible privilege and one that I am very proud of,” says Brewer.
As we leave his office I hear him call out to his assistant, “which lucky country am I going to next week?!”