![]() |
Power to the IOL title sitesContinuing a series of interviews with South Africa's top online managers, IOL GM Quentin Wray tells Bizcommunity.com about the challenges of (and what he's chuffed about) the job he took over at the start of the year - and why he's building a new suite of online title sites for Independent Newspapers. Bizcommunity: You've been in the job since the beginning of the year [having moved from being Business Report editor after years of being an economics and business journalist] and are new to online? Why the move? ![]() Quentin Wray, IOL GM. Biz: Many journalists would run a mile from running a business. Biz: What have been the main challenges since taking over? When I was at Business Report, it was almost as if there was a technology fairy. If you whinged, magic happened and it was fixed. And you made up a page and printed it so it was quite static once you'd decided what goes where - the process is about making it fit and making it right and all of those good things. So one of the big challenges was coming in and learning a new industry from an absolute standing start. Like a lot of journalists, I consume a lot of media. I've always read websites but I hadn't really thought about how they get produced because I was pretty much a print snob. Also, taking over a job where it's not just a team of reporters [is a challenge]. Here [at IOL] there is the editorial staff and the sales staff and technical staff - and everyone has to be managed differently. I'm finding it absolutely fascinating, getting into the nuts and bolts of how to generate revenue. Biz: Let's talk about revenue. Is it driven mostly by display advertising? Biz: Although South Africa is behind the curve in terms of online advertising, it is growing. What's your impression of what advertisers want from online ads? My focus has been getting the content as good as it can be and then looking at how to monetise it... My view is that the online industry - and maybe this is hopeless naivety that's going to be proven wrong over time - is at a sweet spot. I think people are realising that somehow it's got to be paid for, that it's not magically produced for free... So we're all sort of muddling through this and figuring it out [how to monetise our sites] but I don't think there's an inherent desire by advertisers not to pay fair value for what they get. I just think that the measurement, of what that fair value is, is up in the air at the moment. Biz: One one side of the spectrum in South Africa, there is News24 and its model has been to get the scale and, thereafter, to segment the audience. On the other side, you have plenty of web-only operators that are niche - such as MyBroadband, TechCentral, Bizcommunity. So where do you see IOL fitting in? In all of our markets we are the dominant publication as a general rule, though there are some exceptions. So I want to be able to have the big-scale online news organisation, which is IOL, but we're also building a tremendously powerful suite of title sites... What we're going to be able to do is offer advertisers the best of both - and leverage content between the two. Biz: That's interesting because IOL has had pay walls up on its title sites for a long time. Biz: So is the idea that your title sites will give you community - and all these communities will give you scale of audience? Biz: That's quite hard to do. I think that, when I was a print editor, that was something I wanted our site to do for us: to give us the extra pages we didn't have. All print editors complain they don't have enough space. IOL can give them the space and use the web to generate user-driven content and for things like spill-over of letters. There's a lot of synergy and what I'm trying to do is build that relationship [between print and online]. Biz: And are the editors interested? Biz: Now what about tablets. Are you guys working on iPad apps? Biz: Mobile is important. Biz: Do you have quite a big development complement dedicated to IOL? Biz: IOL is profitable, isn't it? Biz: Like what? Biz: What are you most pleased with since taking over? So there's a flexibility in the business and it's growing very nicely and I think our content offering is very good. And, you know, in print, you often had people coming to you to complain and ask you to pull stories and you got to tell them to "sod off". I got to do that the other day [at IOL] and I thought; "Hey, I can still be a journalist." Follow Quentin Wray on Twitter at @qwray. 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... |