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Convergence, media density and Africa

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Media - identity, vs Media - low impact. Media - politics, vs ... Chicago Tribune, Tampa Tribune, Washington Post. Combining newspaper, radio, TV and web. ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Convergence, media density and Africa


1
Convergence, media density and Africas
Information Society
  • Guy Berger, Rhodes University
  • 1 September 2003

2
What well cover
  • Information society context
  • Media density
  • Commercialisation
  • Media coalescence and convergence
  • South Africa experience
  • Prospects in Africa

3
1. Info Society context
4
Us and Information
  • We tend to assume that info is vital for
  • Democracy/despotism
  • Why? Write down a reason
  • Development/underdevelopment
  • Why? Write down a reason
  • African medias place in the role of info
  • Reactionary or progressive?
  • Mainstream or marginal?

5
2. Media Density
6
Conceptualising Media Density
  • What would it refer to? Write a definition
  • First World and Third World
  • Info overload vs Info starvation.
  • Media -gt identity, vs Media -gt low impact.
  • Media -gt politics, vs Politics -gt media.
  • Media as economics, vs Fragile media.

7
Density quality or quantity?
  • Write down 2 arguments for why,
  • wrt to Africas politics and economics,
  • the quality of content is more important than the
    volume of content.
  • Write down 2 arguments for why
  • quantity is overall more important

8
My view
  • More media prospects for quality
  • Schechter more you watch, less you know
  • Berger the more there is, more you can find
  • Africas priority is to grow its media industry!
  • Aim should be to build media density.

9
How???
  • Coming up
  • What drives media development?
  • Can media grow faster than the general economy?
  • First, write down 2 points for each topic
  • Political preconditions for media growth
  • Economic preconditions
  • Sociological preconditions
  • Technological preconditions

10
Analysis Media Density
  • Modernisation theorists looked at
  • Urbanisation, literacy, newspaper sales, radio
    ownership, cinema attendance, telephones per
    head, TV set ownership,
  • Implicit in this
  • Tech Distribution (sets per 1000 people)
  • Tech Usage (sales, calls, paper consumption)
  • Spending on information ( of GNP)
  • Info workers as of occupations

11
Deconstructing density
  • Distinguish between
  • Media Provision
  • More media in the society
  • Media Consumption
  • More use of the media
  • For me density works at both levels

12
Growth on the supply side
  • Give 3 examples, then look at mine
  • More media by expanding existing
  • More pages, new supplements
  • Faster, more frequent delivery turn-around
  • Longer news bulletins
  • cntd ..

13
Growth on the supply side
  • More media thru increase in outlets
  • New titles in a stable, sister stations,
    greenfields ventures
  • More media thru increased reach
  • wider signal distribution, reach extra audience
    outlets, syndication, more possibilities for
    advertisers.
  • More media thru new platforms
  • (eg. web, cellphones, electronic billboards)

14
Growth on the demand side
  • Give 3 examples, then look at mine
  • Access (literacy, language)
  • Availability of receivers (sets, phones)
  • Awareness (result of marketing)
  • Appropriateness
  • Timing, content appeal and use-value.
  • Advertising (ad-readiness by sellers)
  • Affordability (elasticity of budget items)

15
Which is more important?
  • Deepening media density depends on both the
    supply demand side working at optimum levels.
  • But
  • Does supply drive demand, or
  • Does demand drive supply?
  • Write down 2 reasons in favour of
  • Media supply drives demand,
  • And Media demand drives supply.

16
Complex linkage
  • Consumers can increase time with media, or imbibe
    extra media by sharing others intake.
  • So demand can increase, without any increase in
    supply.
  • And, increased production does not necessarily
    mean more consumption!
  • You can add inserts to a paper, who reads them?
  • But whichever leads,
  • ultimately, expanded supply is needed if media
    density is really to show an increase

17
3. Looking at the supply-side
18
Growing media supply
  • Media grows through new products or expansion of
    existing ones.
  • The demand market is a both a constraint and an
    opportunity.
  • We can pinpoint conditions for growing supply,
    relatively independent of demand.

19
Growth is facilitated by
  • Politically enabling environment (eg. pluralistic
    policies in broadcast)
  • Conditions increasingly favourable
  • Economic context possibilities
  • Economic strategies
  • Commercialisation
  • Concentration centralisation
  • Tech (eg. FM, dtp, web, convergence)

20
Ecos context possibs
  • McCoombs Constancy Factor
  • Media in USA was never gt 5 GNP
  • Media spend per household also 5 max
  • Implications
  • New media have to take from old media.
  • Re-slicing of a fixed ad and audience pie.
  • People dont increase their total media
    consumption, instead they switch between
    Functional Equivalents.

21
Africas context
  • We come off a low base (less than 5)
  • Also have potential to export
  • In the Info Age, industry has to grow!
  • Unlike the USA, we are open to role of
    extra-market resources for growth eg.
    volunteers in community radio, state subsidy for
    public broadcasters or grassroots media.

22
Economic strategies
  • Commercialization problem in North
  • Oligopolies alliances ( barriers to entry)
  • Commoditization ( sensation, expense)
  • Conservatism ( panders to prejudice)
  • Cultural ethnocentrism and narrowness

23
Economic strategies
  • Commercial positive role in the South?
  • Develop dynamism outside of moribund states?
  • Democratic significance independent of govts?
  • Good for governance wider economic growth.
  • Small markets, but low labour costs
  • Eg. local content can be competitive to imports.

24
Economic strategies
  • Commercial positive role in the South?
  • Leapfrog into new markets (eg. cellular).
  • Retain space for non-commercial facilitation.
  • Incredible info riches lying waiting to be
    mined.

25
Commerce and African media
  • Much growth nowadays is market-driven.
  • Services the elite.
  • Cherry picking ( the poor are neglected).
  • Limitation in terms of democracy devt.
  • Knowledge Gap theory elites use the info.
  • But
  • no point in shared info-poverty,
  • An un-informed elite benefits no one.

26
Commercialisms children
  • Coalescence
  • Industry level,
  • Organizational level
  • Convergence
  • Technological level
  • Both of them
  • Reduce costs
  • Expand output
  • A blessing or a curse?

27
Coalescence
  • Merger, acquisitions, ownership.
  • Alliances and 3rd ventures.
  • Collaborations
  • Marketing
  • Content-sharing
  • Research
  • Purchasing inputs

28
Examples from SA
  • Joint advertising sales
  • Cross-language publishing eg. Naspers
  • Fusion eg. Business Report
  • Piggy-backing eg. Sun
  • Newsrooms Cape Newspapers
  • Audience data-mining sale Sunday Times
  • Conclusion positive for Media Density

29
4. Convergence
30
Significance
  • Digitalisation and Networking
  • Media content costly to produce,
  • But cheap to reproduce.

31
USA example
  • Time Warner and AOL merger
  • Bid to control content distribution platforms
  • Various Telcos looking at content link-ups
  • Effect on media density? Too early to tell

32
Convergence in media
33
Examples in USA
  • Chicago Tribune, Tampa Tribune, Washington Post
  • Combining newspaper, radio, TV and web.
  • Mainly content-sharing after production,
  • A degree of production integration.
  • Results
  • Less cost-effective than expected.
  • More, and richer, content outcomes.

34
Examples in SA
  • History of Web 1995 -gt
  • Web sites emerged as added-platform publishing
  • Portal development e-commerce aspects.
  • But 2000 -gt
  • Medium neglected poor interactivity,
    multi-media.
  • Poor revenue and sustainability.
  • Websites now just add-ons, brand-building role
  • Small but strategically NB - incr in density

35
More examples in SA
  • Production convergence
  • Most print/broadcast web were failures at
    integrated newsrooms.
  • Ghetto mentalities too hard to change.
  • Convergence -gt diverged operations -gt re-location
    but still no real integration.
  • Web remains picking up crumbs.

36
More examples in SA
  • Production convergence
  • Bi-media experiment at SABC failed
  • radio Cinderella, diluted output quality
  • Hard to train, hard to manage.

37
Indications
  • Convergence is thus not a panacea for increasing
    Media Density
  • Technology promise is not realised
  • But dont write it off yet

38
Glimmers of hope
  • Web advertising is growing.
  • Non-media groups are now web-publishers.
  • Co-ordinated multi-platform synergies evident in
    Big Brother.
  • Database-driven multiple media publishing is
    growing.

39
Glimmers of hope
  • Cellphone platforms show potential.
  • Wi-fi is emerging.
  • Connectivity increasing, costs declining
  • More online users each day.

40
5. Overview
41
Context Africa
  • Poor results from Pana
  • Due to old politics, ecos, analogue media
  • Now there is increasing democracy and economic
    integration across continent
  • Prospects for more media?
  • Good global and African preconditions
  • Coalescence proceeding
  • Convergence not dead, just beginning to walk

42
Summing up (a)
  • We have
  • Looked at the Big Picture
  • Medias place in information society
  • Analysed concept of media density
  • Media production, and media consumption
  • Assessed political conditions
  • Generally more positive for media growth.

43
Summing up (b)
  • Looked at economic trends and conditions
  • Commercialisation, coalescence effects
  • Taken stock of technology
  • Track record of convergence, limits potential

44
Conclusion
  • African medias reach and role is changing
  • Will we lead or lag in relation to the political,
    economic, and tech possibilities?
  • It depends on our information and understanding,
    and our ability to communicate this.
  • So, it is partly up to us!

45
Thank you
  • http//journ.ru.ac.za/staff/guy/fulltext/
    density.ppt
  • See also
  • http//journ.ru.ac.za/staff/guy/Research/Demo
    cracy/moremedia.htm
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