MAL37:20 | Page 11

not repetitive. Going forward we are diversifying the business and investing more on our digital platforms such as Afrilyfe. Looking yonder I encountered one Edward Roussel, the digital editor of the Telegraph Media Group, instrumental in restructuring the Telegraph’s newsroom in an article he wrote where he gave ten ways for newspapers to leverage digital. I summarised them into four. Firstly, is to narrow the focus and go deep, not wide. This is a lesson that newspapers can learn from magazines which have always been specialised in nature. Focus on a few topics and editorial content that is unavailable elsewhere but highly valued by readers and do them well. Add value by looking at the news from several angles. This might also be useful for television. Kenyan TV tries to please all children, teens and their older guardians. This means that one has to wait, for say business news later in the day as the morning has children’s programs and afternoon teens. The launch of KTN news may be the way to go where stations have specific stations for specific audiences. This is what DSTV offers. Secondly, curate content from various sources by linking the reader to networks that cover areas the paper may not have expertise. Journalists will, therefore, act as filters selling this expertise, not just content. Just like most curators working for museums and art galleries are not necessarily artists. They understand their customers and have an eye for the best. Third, enhance the experience by engaging with the readers. The explosion of blogging and social media websites has created a culture in which consumers of news expect to be included. Create a functionality that encourages readers to share eyewitness accounts of breaking news, rate services such as restaurants and hotels, and get into discussions and debates. Lastly is cutting costs by collaborating and outsourcing. When I watch the Ministry of Health updates, there are so many journalists from different media houses. Outsourcing such events may be the way to go. Also, each media house may not need to have a journalist in each county, hoping to scoop a story. Printing is another huge cost and the investment in modern presses takes time to pay off. But what if they could sell or lease this presses to printers who can utilize them fully instead of for a few hours each day? The advantage of having a unique headline as a result of a scoop are long gone, most print headlines are old news today. And they are almost always the same anyway! He pointed out that this will not be easy but change calls for flexibility. Newspapers have been around for long. Journalists have spent a lifetime working around the going to ‘press deadline.’ They may find it difficult to switch to the continuous reporting demanded by web audiences. Njoki Chege, too, spoke on the need for ‘the media to be more flexible and change their perceptions and fix their rigidity and post covid the media must leave room for fresh ideas, have the patience for new challenges and the courage for higher risk appetite.’ The issue of fake news was also discussed, bringing out one of the advantages of traditional media - trust. Given the editorial policies that guide news reporting traditional media has strong guidelines around authenticating their content. This is a massive advantage over start-up news operations: They are trusted brands at a time when the proliferation of news sources has made trust a premium for readers and advertisers alike. That is an excellent springboard for success but time is running out. The challenge of getting people to pay for online content also came during the webinar. One barrier to this is the perception that the media houses are wealthy and should give online content for free. The other is that there is a lot of free content on the Internet. My take is that three things determine the willingness of people to pay for content: First, the content must be unique and delivered excitingly; Second is the experience: it must be easy to use; Thirdly, is the customer service, mainly when problems occur. They must be resolved quickly. One of the newspapers recently ran a promotion giving free e-newspapers. A friend and I tried in vain to subscribe, and our patience ran out and so did the free trial period. If they get the above right and charge a reasonable fee I think it can work. This is not unique to Kenya though, writing in the Winter 2006 issue of Nieman Reports, Picard wrote ‘in the decade and a half since the Internet emerged as a viable medium, and the decade since mobile communications became practicable, questions of how content providers can effectively earn money from either have remained prominent. The lack of truly effective revenue models to support the gathering and distribution of news has led many to argue that providing this serves other purposes, especially in creating interactions that strengthen the brand and form and maintain relationships that bond users of various platforms to news organization’. However since then a number of traditional media and in particular newspapers and magazine have found a viable model and Kenya can learn from them. Invaluable lessons can also come from the likes of Netflix and Amazon (Amazon books). Netflix, is particularly relevant here. They offer affordable, quality content, and their use of Artificial Intelligence makes things easy to anticipate and satisfy customer needs. No wonder, according to BBC, their new subscriptions jumped 26 M compared to 28M the whole of 2019 with revenue growing by 25%. Though the numbers of Kenyans on Netflix, Spotify, and Amazon may be few, it still goes to illustrate that they can and do pay for content. One of the areas newspapers and even television can explore is curating their past articles and availing them at a nominal fee on digital. For example if I wanted to read all the articles written by Macharia Gaitho for Daily Nation, and I am prepared to pay for them can I? That’s the model for Netflix curate content. But to exploit such opportunities traditional media has to put all ducks in a row, especially putting the customer at the heart of the media. I end on an encouraging note, as told by William Kisang, writing in The Daily Nation recently; ‘on a positive note, while the media environment may, at present, look bleak, all is not lost for it as we see in the West and elsewhere, where big newspapers that embraced digital journalism early on are thriving. They include the New York Times, which, as other newspapers shed staff over recent years, has been on a hiring spree.’ The lessons mentioned above should help us avoid living out the quote “the Earth will go on but some dinosaurs will die’ for we need all forms of media for the unique role they each paly in our society. It still has a place in this digital age. Robert Wamai is a trainer and advertising consultant, a passionate consumer advocate and believer in the power of brands. You can engage him on this or related matters via email at: [email protected].