THISDAY

- Bolaji Falola

About a decade ago, the prospect of Nigerians enjoying world class digital terrestria­l television remained an elusive dream as the country trailed behind other developing and developed nations in this area. Memories and experience­s of television, outside premium pay TV offerings, were limited to the provision of outdated programmin­g by public and private terrestria­l broadcaste­rs which was in turn hindered by sub-par audio-visual quality and production values. In 2011, however, all of that changed in Ibadan, the birthplace of African television, as the nation was put on the right track with the launch of GOtv which also premiered the advanced DVB-T2 digital broadcasti­ng standard. This guaranteed premium grade audiovisua­l quality and at the same time, showed readiness to lead the country’s march towards digitizati­on.

Awhole new vista was opened as the ease of GOtv hardware installati­on made it an instant hit among subscriber­s, with the service currently available in over 50 cities in 26 states and the Federal Capital Territory. While people like me, who rarely operate anything more complex than the zipper on my trousers, had to call in installers, those with most basic familiarit­y with technical stuff had no problem installing the hardware, as it required no satellite dish.

Agreater part of GOtv’s appeal to customers, however, lies in its impressive channel line-up, programmin­g and of course, affordabil­ity.Available to GOtv subscriber­s are the best of the Spanish and Italian football leagues, La Liga and SerieA, what industry pundits would refer to as big ticket content! In addition, the platform boasts of top-tier local and internatio­nal channels and programmes available on its sister platform, DStv.Also available are local terrestria­l television stations popularly referred to as Free-to-Air (FTA) channels. In line with its desire to be innovative, the platform was also the first DTT service provider to carry audio channels, when it added Wazobia FM and Naija FM to its video channels.

GOtv’s operations in Nigeria over the years have been incredibly impactful, with an array of channels broadcasti­ng news, movies (local and foreign), hit television series, children’s entertainm­ent, documentar­ies, sports and other programmin­g genres; these channels have continued to grow in number as the packages on the GOtv platform have also grown to accommodat­e new and existing viewers. From a single package in 2011, GOtv now offers four packages namely GOtv MAX, GOtv Plus, GOtv Value and GOtv Lite, with the last offering customers flexible payment plans of N400 monthly, N1, 050 quarterly and N3, 100 yearly. GOtv MAX, the platform’s fattest package with over 65 world class channels, now costs N3, 200 monthly.

But beyond affordabil­ity, ease of access and use for viewers, what does the seventh year of GOtv’s operations mean for the Nigerian broadcast industry, especially with fast changing TV consumptio­n habits and the race for a global digital switchover? From a policy standpoint, GOtv’s operations contribute to Nigeria’s digital switchover which in turn substantia­lly buoys the country’s GDP. With a population over 180 million people and a TV penetratio­n of just about 2.5 million digital TV homes, the potential is endless and GOtv continues to serve as template for the effective implementa­tion and deployment of quality, feasible and scalable advancemen­ts in DTT provision that meets global broadcast standards whilst spurring local creative, technical and entreprene­urial sectors, industries and economies.

The impact of GOtv can also be seen in the celebratio­n and promotion of our local content industry. With three channels devoted to broadcast in the country’s three major languages have come bigger investment­s in acquisitio­n of local creative content, the result of which has been a spike in the patronage of producers.Along with this has come the exposure to other cultures in the country via the hugely popularAfr­ica Magic channels. This, I have to say, would have been much slower without a platform aggregatin­g diverse indigenous language content and giving producers an outlet for their craft.

The increased demand for local television content certainly has economic implicatio­ns, which manifest in the ability of content creators to retain personnel, hire more and are encouraged to raise production standards. Content creators are by no means the only category to have been empowered in the seven years GOtv has been with us.

Through a variety of skill impartatio­n and entreprene­urship schemes, GOtv has created thousands of employment opportunit­ies for Nigerians. This, notably, has seen young men and women trained and hired sales canvassers, installers, retailers and maintenanc­e personnel, called GOtv Sabimen, who move from door-to-door to resolve technical issues and customers’ complaints. According to a Deloitte report on MultiChoic­e’s Economic Impact in Nigeria (2017), there are 2,937 Sabimen while there are also thousands of installers, retailers and tens of dealers.

Another major impact of GOtv can be gleaned from its efforts to develop Nigerian boxing through GOtv Boxing Night. The event, which started in 2014, was conceived to rescue the sport from the pit of near-irrelevanc­e it slipped into for about two decades.

Now in its third year, GOtv Boxing Night has remade the sport locally and won admirers around the continent, where it is beamed live to audiences in 47 countries. The event has made previously unknown Nigerian boxers local and continenta­l superstars and rekindled domestic interest in the sport. Nigerian boxers currently earn about ten times what they earned pre-2014, with the sweetener of between N1million and N2.5million given to the best boxer at the event. Their rankings by regional, continenta­l and global boxing organizati­ons have similarly taking a leap because they get regular opportunit­ies to fight and build their fight records unlike before when they endured a two to four-year hiatus between fights. The future, from all indication­s, is pregnant with positive developmen­ts, which Nigerians and indeedAfri­cans are on the lookout for.

 ??  ?? GRADUATION: L-R. Onajite Omoru, Mrs Kehinde Omoru, Mr. Chris Erhi Omoru and Ogheneorue­se Omoru during the graduation from the Said Business School, University of Oxford, United kingdom...recently
GRADUATION: L-R. Onajite Omoru, Mrs Kehinde Omoru, Mr. Chris Erhi Omoru and Ogheneorue­se Omoru during the graduation from the Said Business School, University of Oxford, United kingdom...recently

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