S06 CAF 1 2020 OTT TV interview_Layout 1 21/02/2020 14:50 Page 16
OTT content
MOBILE TV
Smartphone or smart TV? OTT TV would seem ideal for the African market. It allows viewers to use computers, phones or mobile devices rather than expensive fixed televisions. In addition, the content offering is improving, bringing more localised shows to viewers. However, this remains a challenging market for both content suppliers and end users, as Max Signorelli of IHS Markit Technology explains to Phil Desmond.
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N 2018 RESEARCH group IHS Markit Technology, now part of information provider Informa Tech, published a report called The Sub-Saharan Africa TV and Online Video 2017 Market Monitor. It provided a fully updated, comprehensive, analytical and insightful description of the state of the pay TV and the online subscription video markets in the Sub-Saharan African region. One of its authors was Max Signorelli, a research analyst with a focus on media and entertainment technology research products and solutions, and an ideal person to comment on the success, or otherwise, of OTT TV in Africa. The original report came out a year or two ago. It offered a number of interesting findings on OTT in the region. Firstly, this was, and still is, a market that is developing. “Sub-Saharan Africa’s OTT market is clearly underdeveloped relative to its size and its potential with just over one million paid subscriptions across all operators in 2018,” Signorelli says. “South Africa forms the largest market by a significant margin.” As for the big players, Naspers’ Showmax was the market leader, surpassing Netflix paid subscribers by more than 60 per cent. Naspers Limited is a multinational internet group. Headquartered in South Africa, its principal operations are in internet communication, entertainment, gaming and e-commerce. Showmax is an online subscription video on demand (SVOD) service that launched in South Africa in 2015. Signorelli adds: “The presence of Showmax is further extended by
16 Communications Africa Issue 1 2020
Source: IHS Markit Technology
its free and discounted provision to various tiers of DStv subscribers across numerous sub-Saharan African countries.” DStv is a subSaharan African direct broadcast satellite service owned by South Africa’s MultiChoice. You might have thought that some big international players would try to get into this market, but some element of localisation is important in building a content business in Africa and not all players have achieved that. As Signorelli says: “Amazon Prime Video [an American internet video on demand service that is developed, owned, and operated by online retail giant Amazon] had little impact owing to a distinct lack of service development and localisation, even in South Africa.” Of course three years is a long time in OTT TV. A few things have changed since 2017. For example,
as part of Naspers’ efforts to expand its online presence across the region, Showmax localised its platform in Nigeria in July 2019. Showmax began to offer the service in local currency (N2,900 per month as opposed to $7.99 per month) and secured a new content partnership to show live Big Brother Naija content as well as further exclusive Big Brother programming. However, the big international names are playing the content game with more skill these days. Subscription-based streaming service Netflix has continued to expand at an impressive rate across the world and has closed the gap with Showmax in subSaharan Africa even more in 2019. As Signorelli says: “Such growth is likely to continue into 2020 as Netflix begins to invest more in local African content, including
The big international names are playing the content game with more skill these days
new original content.” One would assume of course that mobile-device-based TV would have a strong market in Africa. In an interview with this magazine that appeared in issue six of 2019, IROKOtv CEO Jason Njoku said: “Mobile is first, second and third in our market.” Is this the case for other players – and likely to remain the case? Signorelli points out that the appeal of different subscription platforms is still very binary in subSaharan Africa. He explains: “Cheaper video subscriptions such as IROKOtv specifically target these mobile users and have seen some success there. More expensive subscriptions with large, premium content libraries like Netflix and Showmax cannot target these users in the same way owing to their cost.” But the mobile market is, it seems, here to stay. As Signorelli points out: “Going forward, these platforms will need to target these mobile markets if they are to have
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