![]() |
Digital space rewards those who are first - 24.com GM Geoff CohenMedia24's 24.com digital division is the big kahuna of the country's online journalism world. It has big numbers and even bigger ambitions. To kick off an exclusive Bizcommunity.com series of interviews with South Africa's top online managers, 24.com GM Geoff Cohen tells us why 24.com has gone for scale and why it's cool for the growing digital operation to help keep the group's print titles in business. ![]() Geoff Cohen, 24.com GM. Bizcommunity: So where are you guys at the moment? And how do we acquire that audience? We acquire it with three basic services: technology to build platforms; technology to build ways for people to interact with each other; and technology that builds it off content and, ultimately, communities. So the way it cascades out is that technology builds your platforms, content is what you use the platform to distribute and community is what happens when you have people deeply engaged in content and wanting to interact with each other. Biz: I see you guys have recently built and released an iPad app for City Press (newspaper) to follow on from the News24 app? Biz: This April? That's fast. Biz: Is that possible? And the first interaction is going to be very, very basic, which I think is OK. So we say: "Here is a basic application for a newspaper - it's not singing and dancing." We don't make any great claims to that. But what we get out of that early entrance is to build up visibility and learn how consumers interact with our offering. And it's off that basis that we can refine our offering, add in more and more features. Biz: Well, you guys are ahead of all the big media houses in the tablet arena. So what have you learned about how South Africans interact with the News24 iPad app? We see our interaction sliding the more data is required to be pulled through an application, so with anything more than a 10- or 15-second load time, we see guys bail right out of it. Their expectation - particularly from a tablet or mobile device - is when you click the button, something must happen very, very quickly. So in some ways what that means from a creative perspective is your creative input is reduced. You've got to take away a lot more before you start adding in. I don't see an application like The Daily [the first iPad-only newspaper created recently by Rupert Murdoch's NewsCorp for the US market] kicking off here because it takes too damn long to download all that information. Biz: Are the title editors in Media24 interested in tablets and apps for their newspapers? Effectively, we at 24.com own the digital strategy and technology platforms; the editorial guys own the words and how that story gets told - but you have to have a platform first to able to do that. I think we've got to the point where they understand that creating a Rolls-Royce for a market that wants Volksie bugs is not effective. But I do think there is this desire to create something absolutely cool - and that's right. That's exactly what should happen - there should be this creative tension between the guys building the platforms and the other guys trying to push the envelope. Biz: And SA's bandwidth is getting better all the time. What we want is audience scale so we want to have something that is as broadly accessible and as useful as humanly possible to as many people as possible. Biz: So do you want audience scale because the majority of the revenue comes from advertising? As a guiding principal we say: "Let's get the scale." The Internet allows you build audience at massive scale at very low marginal cost. Once you've got that scale. you can start segmenting it out. Then you can say: "Fine, we've got 300 000 people who use our tablet application and of those 300 000 people, 10% would be willing to pay for a super-premium experience" ...But if your first throw of the dice is to create that super-premium experience, your cost of customer acquisition is going to be massive and it's unlikely you're going to build the traction you're going to need. Biz: So where does the advertising revenue chiefly come from among the 24.com sites? Biz: So are advertisers and media planners in SA asking more complex questions about your audiences and brands? The issue is that, because we're such a fast-moving environment, the commercial and operational knowledge differs in different areas. Which is to be expected, if you think about it. We've been growing at a fairly hectic pace over the past couple of years. The skills to invest in a marketing campaign in the digital space is spread unevenly. So what is our challenge as media owners? The challenge is to ensure we have informed the market as best we can through the channels we have - either the DMMA or direct relationships with agencies and clients - of the pros and cons of digital-display advertising. Particularly of brand advertising. And we have to be upfront about it. Biz: What are the pros and cons? We compete against other players in the digital market that offer advertising models based on pay-per-click or pay-per-action type response rates. And that works well for some advertisers who are not looking to build out a brand presence but looking for direct engagement. But the efficiencies in our business get compared to a pay-per-click model and at first glance a comparison looks completely skewed. You might ask: "If I'm paying R10 a click on Google, why should I pay 10 times that for a creative execution on You (magazine) news portal?" And our story back for that is all about deepening the brand exposure. So we're looking at building out some absolutely awesome creative executions so, when you come and see any of our destinations, you'll see at most two ads. But the ads that you see there won't be a flashing purple banner measuring 468[mm] by 60[mm]. It will be big - so we can say to creative agencies: "Here is a canvas that gives sufficient size to create work that is as good in quality as you find in a 30-second spot on M-Net." Biz: I imagine that it's key for you to keep your costs down - run a tight ship with a low staff complement. Don't you ever get tired of that? Biz: Really? That the size of a regional newspaper. The thing is we've invested at the rate that the market can bear and the size of our organisation represents our ability to take revenue out of the market and serve audience. Certainly, we're finding sufficient traction in the market to justify our overheads more than adequately. Biz: So that's very positive - much more so that if you were the editor of a newspaper worrying about how long newspapers in print form will be around. Then we turn around and say: "Digital ad spend in South Africa is way behind the curve of the rest of the world." In the rest of the world, just digital-display brand advertising equates typically to anything between five and 15% of total ad spend. In SA we're sitting on a realistic basis of between 1-2%. If we can just get to the point where the spend allocated to digital goes from just 2% to 4% and we maintain our market share, you've got a fundamentally different business. Biz: So what would you do then - if the ship really came in? But the other side of it is that every little bit of this helps to keep more marginal newspapers to keep publishing or you add another year of lifespan onto a title of some kind. And those are all good things. Biz: What I find interesting about companies such as Media24, Avusa and Independent Newspapers is that you have an intersection of digital and print people. They have such different mind sets. For more:
About Gill Moodie: @grubstreetSAGill Moodie (@grubstreetSA) is a freelance journalist, media commentator and the publisher of Grubstreet (www.grubstreet.co.za). She worked in the print industry in South Africa for titles such as the Sunday Times and Business Day, and in the UK for Guinness Publishing, before striking out on her own. Email Gill at gill@grubstreet.co.za and follow her on Twitter at @grubstreetSA. View my profile and articles... |