Kui Kinyanjui

Kui Kinyanjui is a Kenyan journalist and media relations executive. She most recently worked at the Kenyan newspaper Business Daily where she covers the information, communication and technology beats.[1]

Kui Kinyanjui
Kinyanjui in 2017
Born
Other namesMarie-Anne Kinyanjui
Marie-Anne Kui Kinyanjui
OccupationJournalist
Media relations
Years active2000-present

Early life and education

Kinyanjui was born and raised in Kenya, attending school in the country until high school, when she moved to the United States to attend the Madeira School. She then went on to study journalism at Fordham University.

Career

Kinyanjui's formal career began in 2000, when she began to freelance for a selection of international titles. In 2001, she worked for Kenya's oldest business journal known as the Executive, where she rose from the position of editorial assistant to become a regular writer for the monthly publication.

Later in 2001, Kinyanjui moved to PC World East Africa, where she rose to the position of Editor, reporting on technology in the East African region. Her work there also included conducting Public Relations work for brands such as Toshiba and Gateway. Once the owners of the magazine made a decision to fold the publication, Kinyanjui embarked on forming her own start-up to continue publishing the magazine, which is the regional version of PC World, and IDG publication.

In 2005, Kinyanjui went to work for Ogilvy & Mather PR East Africa in its Nairobi office where she worked on communications with the tech and fast-moving consumer goods (FMCG) sectors.[2]

In 2006, Kinyanjui was among the founding journalists that formed Nation Media Group's Business Daily. She wrote about the region's fast growing Information and communications technology (ICT) sector for Kenya's first daily business newspaper. Based out of Nation Media Group's Nairobi bureau, Kinyanjui edited a standalone pullout known as Digital Business in the paper, where she continued to cover the ICT sector.[2]

In 2008, Business Daily won the Diageo Africa Business Reporting Award (DABRA) for business reporting.[3]

From 2011 to 2014, Kinyanjui worked at IBM, where she was in charge of external relations for IBM's African hardware sector.[2]

In 2014, Kinyanjui left IBM for the position of Senior Manager, Corporate Communications at Safaricom.[2]

In 2015, Kinyanjui was appointed Head of Corporate Communications at Safaricom in Kenya.[4]

In January 2018, Executive Director Katherine Maher announced that Kinyanjui would be joining the Wikimedia Foundation in March 2018 as its Vice President of Communications.[5]

gollark: See, I find the web way nicer for that sort of thing.
gollark: Okay, that might be problematic.
gollark: Excessive stuff is bad.
gollark: Minimal is fine.
gollark: I mostly just aim to put together something fairly nice-looking and leave most stuff to the browser's builtin stylesheets.

References

  1. Reporter, B. T. (2018-02-01). "From Silicon Savannah to Silicon Valley: Kenyan journalist lands big job at US charity". Business Today Kenya. Retrieved 2020-05-25.
  2. Ouma, Michael (27 October 2014). "Marie-Anne 'Kui' Kinyanjui leaves IBM for Safaricom". Aptantech.
  3. Gachenge, Beatrice (8 July 2008). "'Business Daily' bags top regional award". Daily Nation.
  4. Mark, Okuttah (23 April 2015). "Safaricom picks in-house manager to replace Waita". Business Daily.
  5. Maher, Katherine (5 January 2018). "Leadership of Wikimedia Foundation's Communications department" (mailing list post). Wikimedia-l. Wikimedia Foundation.
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