London — Africa’s broadcasters nearly all took a financial hit during Covid-19 and are now about to face the impact of a global economic downturn. Russell Southwood tries to unpick the business choices that will help broadcasters through this new wave of turbulence.
I’ve looked at two aspects of these financial pressures which are already very evident: the slide in the value of Pay TV incomes because of local currency devaluation (see issue 388) and the likely slowdown in advertising revenues this year after the bounce-back last year (see issue 386).
Digital is already disrupting traditional broadcasting forms in Africa and as bandwidth speeds improve and prices fall will continue to do so. In days of yore, being a broadcaster in Africa used to mean that you both made content and owned or leased the means of distribution. For example, Kenya’s Citizen TV went to a great deal of time and trouble to create its own physical broadcast network. The business model was vertically integrated.
But digital has disaggregated the means of production from the means of distribution. In that rather inelegant and dead phrase, broadcasters are now ‘content producers’, using multiple channels to connect their content with audiences.
Perhaps the biggest impact of Covid-19 has been how it has changed broadcasters’ attitudes to what broadcast TV is supposed to look like. There’s now much greater acceptance that people can be interviewed using Zoom and Skype. For TV reporters unable to move around so easily during lockdown, picking over social media for stories took on a much greater significance.
Many broadcasters are part of multimedia groups that run TV, radio and newspapers. The ‘holy grail’ for these multimedia groups is to create news content that can be used across different media. TV news and feature content can be collected in such a way that it can be repurposed for radio use and vice-versa.
Digital technology means that reporters and other content creators can both collect and send content from a far wider geographic area and often as live broadcasts from a phone. It means broadcasters can get closer to their audiences and the experiences they are going through. This might be in the traffic jams of the big cities or with the family farmer on the Shamba. As local viewers find themselves under the same economic pressures as broadcasters themselves, the broadcasters can champion the struggles of those viewers to make ends meet. And this applies as much to the overstretched, middle class salary owner as the mother trying to make ends meet by selling vegetables by the side of the road.
The other part of the digital piece is distribution: terrestrial, satellite, streaming and social media. The challenge is to find ways that work to connect your content to the largest number of the people you are promising to deliver. Here the choices are different for where you are in the market.
If you are one of the top four broadcasters still holding on to a significant terrestrial audience, then everything else will orbit round this central core. You can use your large audience to promote all your other channels. But your secondary channels are unlikely to challenge – in audience numbers terms – the primacy of your terrestrial audience. These top players have often created a market research infrastructure that measures audiences and provides reassurance to advertisers.
However, if you are one of 20-50 channels on a DTT platform struggling to find new audiences then any additional distribution channel will give you greater reach. The skill will be in picking the channels that are most appropriate for the audience you are targeting. For low-income audiences, it might be a text-based service and for a younger demographic the up-and-coming Tik-Tok platform. If one channel is not working, close it down and try another one. In the absence of market research data on audiences, visible numbers of subscribers on social media platforms are not a bad substitute.
Finally, to succeed new channels need new talent and although this may take a long time to establish, there are short-cuts. The comedian attracting several hundred thousand views on YouTube or the smart mouth with good insights on Twitter will both still understand the attractions of terrestrial TV. It provides a form of validation. It says you’ve arrived.
I don’t know what African broadcast will look like in ten years time but it surely not be the same as it is now. The future is there to be seized. For as Black Panther Eldridge Cleaver was often misquoted as saying: “You’re either part of the problem or part of the solution.”
In Brief
Nigeria: SPI/FilmBox has announced a new partnerships deal with Nigerian telecom operator Globacom to bring nine channels from its portfolio to Nigerian streaming service Glo-TV. The agreement sees channels added to the streamer, including FilmBox Africa, Dizi, Action, DocuBox, Fast&FunBox, FashionBox, FightBox, 360 TuneBox and Gametoon. Glo-TV is available in Nigeria, with subscription prices ranging from US$0.35 to US$7.52 for 3-Day to 30-Day packs.
South Africa: Gideon Khobane, MultiChoice’s group executive of general entertainment, has exited the satellite pay-TV operator for a position at Amazon Prime Video.
Namibia: Namibia Broadcasting Corporation’s entertainment channel, NBC3, has now been added to DStv and GOtv.
The first-ever, Southern African Broadcasting Association,-SABA TV channel is almost ready to go live with commercial local content produced by locals. SABA President Stanley Similo says the stakeholders are finalizing some technical issues before the launch within three months’ time.
Nigeria: In Nigeria, the National Film and Video Censors Board (NFVCB) says that the country’s film sector produced 553 movies in the second quarter of 2022. According to Alhaji Adedayo Thomas, the Executive Director/CEO of NFVCB, the figures were provided by the Department of Film Censorship and Classification board in its Second Quarter Report for the year. Thomas added that the report captured all films submitted to the board from across the country.
Senegal: StarTimes has opened its “Access to satellite TV for 10,000 African villages” in Senegal officially on 18 July. It aims to cover 600 villages in Senegal. After the first phase, a first phase made it possible to access to satellite TV in 300 villages. The second phase is at 85 percent execution and will ends later in August. According to StarTimes, the State and the Ministry of Communication will be responsible for checking on delivery of the project.
Netflix’s first Afrikaans title series Ludik is set to burst onto screens globally on 26 August 2022. The racy, skop-skiet-en-donder six-part series features South African-born Hollywood actor Arnold Vosloo (Silvertone Siege) in the titular role of Daan Ludik alongside local heavyweight talents Rob Van Vuuren (Swys De Villiers), Diaan Lawrenson (Anet Ludik) and Zane Meas (Brigadier Davies). The series revolves around Ludik, who appears to be a salt of the earth oke, styling himself as a wholesome family man running a successful furniture business. However, behind the veneer of respectability, Ludik is steeped in the underworld that sees him crossing paths with mobsters and murderers. With his family in turmoil, jail time on the horizon and death imminent, Ludik must rely on both his old and new allies to prevail and save his everything.
Get the latest in African news delivered straight to your inbox
By submitting above, you agree to our privacy policy.
Almost finished…
We need to confirm your email address.
To complete the process, please follow the instructions in the email we just sent you.
There was a problem processing your submission. Please try again later.
Nigeria: The government of Nigeria on Thursday (28 July) said it will sanction the BBC and Trust TV for allegedly promoting terrorism and bandits in their reports. Lai Mohammed, the Minister of Information and Culture, disclosed this during a media briefing in Abuja. In a documentary aired over the weekend, the BBC’s Africa Eye Programme exposed the bandits’ activities in Zamfara forests. Mohammed said the government is aware of the unprofessional documentary by the BBC’s Africa Eye, where interviews were granted to bandit warlords and terror gangs, thereby promoting terror in the country. Earlier, Trust TV had aired documentaries revealing the crimes committed by the bandits operating in Northwest and parts of Northcentral. The minister also pointed out that the relevant federal regulatory body was already looking at the infractions and appropriate sanctions that would be meted to both platforms.
South Africa: Telecom regulator, the Independent Communications Authority of South Africa (Icasa), has announced the appointment of Councillor Charley Lewis as acting chairperson. Lewis’ appointment follows the resignation of Dr Keabetswe Modimoeng in June. In a statement, the regulator mentioned that Lewis’s appointment is effective from 16 July 2022 to 3 April 2023, until a chairperson is appointed in terms of the regulations Act.
Balancing Act publishes a wide range of video and other resources, which can be found on the original of this article on their website.
AllAfrica publishes around 600 reports a day from more than 100 news organizations and over 500 other institutions and individuals, representing a diversity of positions on every topic. We publish news and views ranging from vigorous opponents of governments to government publications and spokespersons. Publishers named above each report are responsible for their own content, which AllAfrica does not have the legal right to edit or correct.
Articles and commentaries that identify allAfrica.com as the publisher are produced or commissioned by AllAfrica. To address comments or complaints, please Contact us.
AllAfrica is a voice of, by and about Africa – aggregating, producing and distributing 600 news and information items daily from over 100 African news organizations and our own reporters to an African and global public. We operate from Cape Town, Dakar, Abuja, Johannesburg, Nairobi and Washington DC.
Get the latest in African news delivered straight to your inbox
By submitting above, you agree to our privacy policy.
Almost finished…
We need to confirm your email address.
To complete the process, please follow the instructions in the email we just sent you.
There was a problem processing your submission. Please try again later.