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Koos Bekker on Media24's future and how it fixed last year's 'bloody mess'Media24 has been much in the news lately, with a new CEO Esmaré Weideman appointed in April 2011 and now a far-ranging reorganisation that sees the Rapport editorship become vacant and Peet Kruger being made editor of Beeld again. On top of it, there's another round of restructuring on the go at the company - this time at Finweek. ![]() Koos Bekker So a tumultuous time for the media company and that's not even the half of it, as Media24 has also weathered the very troubled installation of a new IT system that governs the distribution and subscription systems of its many magazines and newspapers. Koos Bekker, CEO of Media24's parent company, the global giant Naspers, tells Bizcommunity why the new system was a "bloody mess", how they've remedied the situation and why the company sees the tablet as a total game-changer. Bizcommunity: I think people look at Naspers and think that it's forging ahead into the digital arena but print is still important, isn't it? But if you're in your 20s, you'll actually do it the other way around. You'll say: "I'm actually more comfortable with the electronic version. I'd like to email it to my friends and do a Facebook 'like' on it and so forth." But I think that print will be a good business for many years still. Biz: Mmm. I turn 40 next year and I've realised lately that even though I get three newspapers delivered to me, it's a waste as I'm not reading them. I get my news online or on my phone now - mostly because reading print newspaper is time-consuming. I'm very interested in the fact that the digital and print arms at Media24 seem to be moving closer to each other - with 24.com now falling under newspapers. So what's the future? I know no one has the answers but what do you think is the way forward - get everything on to tablets? It has often been established in research that over a certain length over an A4 page, the Internet doesn't read as well as print, nor do you remember as much. But the tablets brought a change and I find reading a newspaper or a magazine on a tablet much more satisfactory than reading it on a PR or laptop. The tablets have clearly made a difference. So we're pushing all our products on to tablets... Before the end of this year every magazine and every newspaper we have will be on tablet - and we'll also starting charging for certain products. Now whether we'll successfully selling those remains to be seen. [take the biz poll: Would you pay the same subs fee for a digital edition as for print?] Looking abroad and in the US in particular, there's been a lot of flip-flopping between free and paid [models]. We'll have free and paid products and the tablets will be an important piece of this mix. I think within in a very few number of years - possibly three years - we'll have a US$100 tablet -that costs about R1000 -and it will be a true mass product. Biz: I would have thought the key to getting your stuff read on tablet is to charge for it so that people get their money's worth by using and reading your app. Somehow the tablet makes it easier than on a PC. On tablets, people are more prepared to pay and the mechanism of payment is more well-established. Biz: And do you think your tabloid newspapers (such as the Daily Sun, Son, Sondag) fit with tablets? The Daily Sun in particular is aimed at an lower LSM market that don't have tablets yet. In our minds at the time, the cellphone was a very bulky thing, costing several thousand rand and the physical object then cost about R500 a month to rent. But by driving down the cost, the cellphone became a phenomenon. Every farm labourer, every plumber has a cellphone today and it's assumed you can't live without a cellphone. And the same thing will happen with the tablet. You'll say this is the way I access the world. It costs less than a R1000 and it displays a lot of free and paid content and it will become common currency. Kids will do their homework on it. Biz: Can I ask you about the Afrikaans press (Die Burger, Beeld, Volksblad and Rapport). I wrote a Bizcommunity column a little while ago questioning whether they are losing the power to influence because government people don't read Afrikaans and English journalists aren't really following what happens in the Afrikaans press anymore. What's your view on this? But the Afrikaans papers have held up very well. If you look at circulation figures for the past two years, Afrikaans papers have held up as well - in some cases better than English-language titles. It's actually quite peculiar. We expected more of a decline and it's not happening. I think the issue is that if you give people a good quality newspaper in their home language, they default to that even if they speak English at work. Biz: Now in the latest Naspers results, it says that Media24 came in with a 8% increase in advertising revenue but trouble with the new enterprise resource system [to manage subscriptions and distribution] cut into margins. I've heard Media24 talk about the trouble with the Cycad system - that subscribers who had been getting their papers for decades suddenly weren't receiving deliveries anymore. How serious is it? We worked on Cycad for a number of years but the implementation was flawed and it caused a lot of disorganisation. But now I think we've stabilised it and the last few months it has been running in quite a stable fashion and we are superimposing a better system. So I think we've fixed it but it was very disruptive. Biz: And there is obviously long-term damage. If you have subscribers not getting their papers, they lose faith in the delivery system. Biz: That's terrible for a print operation because in today's world it's brutal out there. Biz: So what was the short-term cost of fixing this and getting a new system. The problem with such [an enterprise resource] system if it goes wacky is that it distributes cost across different areas. The worst part was October to December last year - that was quite rough - and then we brought in a strong team to settle down the system and now, over the next year, we'll start improving the system. Biz: So this is also why many of your newspapers' circulations seem to be down recently? Biz: So the editors are not really clear on their circulations numbers - or where they're going with circulation. 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... |