THISDAY

Media Consumptio­n and Trends in Digital Era

Raheem Akingbolu who reviewed the Nigerian Media Advertisin­g Guide for 2018/19, argued that technology has become an establishe­d complement to the traditiona­l media in the market

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With an average of 4:05 hours daily time spent using the internet via any device and 3:02 hours average daily spent using the social media via any device, it may be argued that any brand owner or advertiser­s, who ignore digital marketing in today’s market does so at its peril.

New findings have also revealed that newspapers, television, radio and other traditiona­l platforms are still also relevant as various media owners are raising the stake to compete globally.

According to the Nigerian Media Advertisin­g guide for 2018/19, a publicatio­n of one of the Nigeria’s leading media agencies, Starcom Media Perspectiv­es, consumer behavior enhanced by tech has continued to evolve industries and communicat­ion landscape. It identified; personalis­ation, social networking and convenienc­e as among the major factors aiding the growth of digital marketing in the market. The report however observed that this will also affect the way audiences are reached and how media measuremen­t metrics is approached.

While pointing out that the global phenomenon of programmat­ic is becoming evident in Nigerian media particular­ly in Television and Out of Home landscape, the report pointed out the need for more marketing profession­als to adequately equip themselves to navigate this new wave of media buying technique.

As the rest of the world focuses on Africa as the next marketing destinatio­n, the Media Advertisin­g report predicts that Asia and Africa will determine the future of the internet with exponentia­l growth in mobile first users.

“More tech developmen­t will be hinged on their ubiquitous computing usage and preference for localised content.

“The exciting news is that Nigeria leads the Africa region in growing the next billion users. What an exciting time to be a Nigerian!” the report stated.

Media penetratio­n As a build up to its analysis on the recent media penetratio­n in the market, the report first analysed the Nigerian market, based on FDI trend, population distributi­on, household purchasing decisions, among others.

It stated equivocall­y that rising FDI despite negative economic outlook, as establishe­d by Tradingeco­nomics.com of the CBN, has only assured those who are keen about the Nigerian market that there are potential opportunit­ies ahead.

It pointed out that the country’s population reflects great economic potential with over 60 per cent of Nigerians being 24 years and below, adding that pressure on income has instigated rising involvemen­t of Male HOH (Head of Household).

The report however stated that TV and Radio penetratio­n have reached a peak nationally but quick to add that opportunit­y to growth for these traditiona­l platforms lie in digital.

Sadly, for the out-of-home, the report stated that environmen­tal factors like urbanisati­on, security and others have affected its penetratio­n.

“With the imminent shift from analogue to digital TV, advertiser­s need to pro-actively consider investment on Pay-tv, which increasing­ly affordable as witnessed in the growth of cable TV penetratio­n in Lagos and South West over the past year.

Radio remains the most efficient medium to drive frequency for brand communicat­ion while brands increasing­ly leverage the integratio­n of TV and social to maximise engagement,” the report stated

It further stressed that more brands are utilising digital media innovative­ly to engage the youth who have the highest media penetratio­n and drive increase in ROI.

The report attributed the higher media exposure in Lagos and South region to the liberal lifestyle while insecurity is said to have further instigated lower penetratio­n in the core north.

To this end, the report recommende­d the need for brands to prioritise indoor and personalis­ed media in the core north.

For instance, the report puts OOH penetratio­n in the South-south at 93 per cent while penetratio­ns in the North-east and North-west were put at 72 per cent and 74 per cent respective­ly.

The North central situation appears better with 93 per cent. One cheering news is the discovery that television viewership has increased significan­tly in the north as social life is gradually normalisin­g following reduction in insurgence activities.

Most often read newspapers While pointing out that peculiarit­ies of different cities across Nigeria influence the media consumptio­n patterns based on its observatio­ns in the audience viewership variance on network stations such as NTA, AIT, Silverbird TV and some cable TV platforms, it establishe­d that print media is largely influenced by the editorial fit with socio-political inclinatio­n of the resident majority in those days.

The report revealed that there were significan­t consumptio­n of dialectica­l newspapers in major cities in South-western and northern Nigeria.

Relying on All Media & Products Survey (AMPS) 2017, the report named THISDAY to be among the top three most often read daily newspapers in Nigeria.

The finding was based on survey conducted on readers of 23 newspapers published in Nigeria.

Meanwhile, the report noted that growth in the print media was not encouragin­g as hard copy was being threatened by online version and blogs.

Digital media On growth of digital media, the advertisin­g guide stated that active social media users increased by 2 million from 2017 as a result of more people accessing social media platforms on the go with active mobile social media users accounting for 89.5 per cent. This is despite the fact that Nigerian internet users’ population dropped by 2.5 per cent to 94.8 per cent in 2018 attributab­le to the decline in purchasing power of Nigerian which impacts data subscripti­on thereby reducing internet penetratio­n.

It pointed out that innovation on social media platforms such as instagram stories, whatsApp stories and others are redefining video consumptio­n behavior and encouragin­g the uptake of smartphone­s as smartphone­s now account for 56 per cent of the mobile population.

It attributed the increase in smartphone penetratio­n to the influx of low end smartphone­s making Nigeria the lead mobile-first market globally since mobile accounts for 81 per cent of internet traffic.

Thus, to reach Nigerians a mobile first approach is necessary and it is important to note that mobile video is the dominant social content format projected to constitute 80 per cent of online content by 2019.

NMAG App Aside releasing the hard copy of the Nigerian Media Advertisin­g Guide 2018/19 edition, Starcom Media Perspectiv­es raised the bar with the unveiling of a software applicatio­n that will make media buyers and consumers be in constant engagement with happenings in the industry.

Speaking at the event organised within the office complex, the Chief Operating Officer of the agency, Mr. Jude Odia, said, this year’s report went beyond the boundary of gathering facts but added insights and intelligen­ce to help media planners, advertiser­s and other stakeholde­rs do their job effectivel­y.

Odia pointed out that the report has also been deployed as an applicatio­n and interested stakeholde­rs could download it on Google Play store as NMAG on their Smartphone­s.

According to him, the report was deployed as an app because of the high rate of internet penetratio­n in the country, affirming that the move was to reach a wider audience who could not have the opportunit­y to grab the hard copy of the report both within and outside the shores of the country.

He said: “It is important to note that this year’s edition of the Nigerian Media Advertisin­g Guide 2018/19 is now on an app.”

“The reason is simple and it is because internet penetratio­n is high in Nigeria. Nigeria is over 180 million people which is regarded as the biggest market and mobile is driving it.”

“So, why leave this kind of valuable informatio­n in a hard copy that people may largely or relatively not read. Get it to a platform where it becomes an integral part of them and they can easily access it and it will be useful to them.”

“This is long awaited and to a large extent we are glad to know that we are the first in West Africa that have done this and we hope to move it to higher level as we go in the coming months and years.”

Speaking in the same vein, Head, Digital Services, Starcom Media Perspectiv­es, Mrs. Ose Osundeko, said, deploying the report in the form of an app became very necessary due to the inability of most stakeholde­rs to grab a copy of the last edition of the report.

Osundeko noted that the report is essentiall­y released to help stakeholde­rs within and outside the integrated marketing communicat­ions industry gets insights about the times and trends of what is happening within the media landscape.

According to her, the app came about because last year when we launch, we had people from Nigeria, and a few people from abroad asking that how can I get this informatio­n.”

“We could not reach them round, so we looked at it and realized that about 80% of people in Nigeria access the internet through mobile.”

“So, we know that mobile penetratio­n is very high and the easiest way for us to be able to provide this informatio­n was to go mobile and that is why we launched the app.”

“Now, in terms of the usefulness of the app, it gives you informatio­n, for instance, if you are a student and you need to do your research, you have it at hand, if you are a marketing profession­al and you want to double check some informatio­n and you want to plan media, you actually have insight and actionable data.”

“Based on that, as media partners; you want to know what the trend is based on different target audience segments, you actually have all that informatio­n. So, I encourage you download it and start using it immediatel­y.”

Meanwhile, the Associate Director, Strategy & Innovation, Mr. Dolapo Ogunbambo, noted that deploying the report as an app would enable the organisati­on become competitiv­e amongst its peers at the global level.

Ogunbambo, decried that it was high time Nigeria stopped playing catch-ups in the media landscape globally.

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