Bridging the Gap Between Academia and Industry: Insights from AMAC 2025

The IMM Graduate School attended the 2025 African Marketing Academic Collaboration (AMAC) Seminar, represented by Riana Prins, Head: Assessments & Learning Management System, and Dr Helena van Wyk, Dean: Postgraduate Studies and Research.
The seminar, hosted by the Cape Peninsula University of Technology’s (CPUT) Faculty of Business and Management Sciences and Department of Marketing, as well as the University of Cape Town (UCT), took place from 11 to 12 September 2025.
This year’s seminar theme, Bridging the Divide between Industry and Academia for Sustainable Futures, challenged attendees to explore innovative ways to align marketing education with the evolving demands of industry and society.
As Dr Sandra Williams, Acting Head of the Marketing Department at CPUT, explained during her opening address, “We need to collaborate; we need to rethink and reimagine so that we can align education with the evolving needs of industry and certainly society.”
Since its inception in 2016, AMAC has expanded from a small gathering of universities to a network of over 20 institutions across Africa and beyond. As Prof Mercy Makhitha, Dean of the Faculty of Business and Management Sciences at CPUT, noted, the event provides a platform to share best practices, benchmark against other institutions, and foster collaborative relationships between marketing departments.
This collaboration ensures that marketing education does not operate in isolation but is responsive to real-world challenges.
Keynote Insights
The seminar featured keynote presentations from Martin Neethling, former Chief Marketing Officer of PepsiCo, and Prof Mornay Roberts-Lombard, Professor of Management at the University of the Western Cape. Prof Roberts-Lombard emphasised the critical role of marketing in South Africa, highlighting its strategic importance for research growth, customer value creation, and long-term brand equity.

A panel of industry and academic experts at the joint CPUT and UCT seminar held from 11 to 12 September 2025, contributing to this year’s theme, Bridging the Divide between Industry and Academia for Sustainable Futures. (Photo supplied)
He noted that while technology, AI, and predictive analytics are reshaping the marketing landscape, human creativity, cultural insights, and ethical considerations remain essential.
Martin Neethling offered a candid look at the current education-industry disconnect. Citing research from Hult International Business School, he highlighted that only 24% of graduates feel fully prepared for their roles, while 85% believe their studies could have better prepared them.
He argued that traditional undergraduate curricula have not kept pace with a rapidly changing global workplace and emphasised the need for continuous learning, practical experience, and strategic literacy.
Leading the Way in Industry-Aligned Marketing Education
The IMM Graduate School continues to participate in bridging the gap between marketing education and industry practice. By actively contributing to forums like the AMAC Seminar, the School demonstrates its commitment to research-driven insights, practical learning, and innovative approaches that prepare graduates to thrive in a rapidly evolving marketing landscape.
At the IMM Graduate School, students gain the skills, knowledge, and industry perspective needed to make a real impact from day one.