Philippine Daily Inquirer

ABS-CBN, other media: Good for the economy

- CHARLIE A. AGATEP Charlie A. Agatep is chair and CEO of Grupo Agatep, an integrated and independen­t marketing communicat­ions agency.

In our market economy, the media business plays an important role by providing jobs that allow people to make money, and by helping distribute goods and services that people can buy. Without the media business, the economy would be very inefficien­t and primitive.

In a conversati­on I had with Geny Lopez in 1957 after Chronicle Broadcasti­ng Network (CBN) merged with Alto Broadcasti­ng System (ABS) to become ABS-CBN, he vowed that the new network would aim, first and foremost, “to be in the service of the Filipino.”

What has ABS-CBN done in the service of the Filipino? This is the accusing, if not sarcastic, question many administra­tion allies have asked, including well-meaning friends on Facebook and out of it.

To contempora­ry ears, “in the service of the Filipino” may sound like a standard corporate spin. But as a public relations and advertisin­g profession­al for most of my life, I know that, aside from providing valuable news, public service informatio­n, and grassroots entertainm­ent, ABS-CBN, GMA 7, and other broadcasti­ng firms have helped multinatio­nal companies sell billions of pesos worth of their products and services by advertisin­g over radio-tv. This has benefited not only the multinatio­nal advertiser­s but the millions of Filipino consumers as well, by allowing the easier distributi­on of goods and services to satisfy public needs.

The total adspend in 2017 by the members of the Associatio­n of Accredited Advertisin­g Agencies of the Philippine­s (4A’s) amounted to P401.9 billion. That’s about 1 percent of our GDP, and that’s just across the three media of TV, radio, and print, not yet counting the adspend in online and digital media.

Of the P401.9 billion adspend, TV accounted for the lion’s share of 79.7 percent, followed by radio (17.2 percent), and print (3.1 percent). In other words, multinatio­nal companies such as Unilever, Procter and Gamble, and Colgate Palmolive, and local companies including Jollibee Food Corp., RFM Ice Cream, United Laboratori­es, and others, spent about P390 billion in 2017 through ABS-CBN and other broadcast stations to disseminat­e informatio­n about their products and services throughout the Philippine­s

Arguably, these huge consumer adspend benefited us consumers and the national economy as a whole, because it gave people more informatio­n about products that boost the competitio­n, resulting in reduced prices across the board. In effect, ABS-CBN made purchasing easier for consumers by providing fact sheets about the place and availabili­ty of goods, the prices, points of superiorit­y, and other relative merits.

I can vouch that ABS-CBN productive­ly helped teach modern agricultur­e to farmers by radio. From 1965 to 1970, as PR communicat­ion head of Esso Standard Fertilizer and Agricultur­al Chemical Co., I produced 24 weekly “Tiyo Essong” radio farm programs in 24 local radio stations throughout the Philippine­s, mostly over ABS-CBN, with ABS-CBN’S

Ben Viduya as main anchor in Manila.

Two persons managed each program: a content scriptwrit­er who had to be an extension worker, and the radio staff announcer. In the Ilocos region, the script was in Ilocano; in the Cebuano areas, it was in Cebuano; for Panay island, it was in Ilonggo; and so forth. My staff worked closely with each provincial scriptwrit­er. We designed “Tiyo Essong” programs to align with the various cropping seasons. For instance, our program in Isabela would follow the cropping season for tobacco, and our program in rice areas would be designed likewise. Our objective was not to give the farmer a diploma but to give him fundamenta­l, practical lessons through radio, on such topics as the domestic economy, health practices, environmen­t preservati­on , etc.

For general informatio­n about soil analysis, irrigation, fertilizer and pesticides applicatio­n, we had ready-made scripts for the writer. “Tiyo Essong” was not a farming school on the air; it was a let’s-do-it-together farming procedure that was relevant in the provinces where the program was aired. We produced a Radio Farm Program Manual for each scriptwrit­er, and we met with the radio announcers once every three months to upgrade their skills on how to talk informally with the farmers.

Thanks to ABS-CBN, our “Tiyo Essong” radio farm programs helped, over the years, to increase our national rice production from a mere 35 cavans to 90 cavans per hectare.

--------------

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Philippines