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JCDECAUX TARGETS GREAT OUTDOORS

Global advertisin­g group’s regional CEO Martin Sabbagh outlines his vision for the way ahead to Mustafa Alrawi

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Martin Sabbagh comes across as quite comfortabl­e in his own skin, a confident chief executive unfazed by but equally realistic about the current challenges facing his firm JCDecaux in the region with advertiser­s holding back as the fallout from low oil prices makes other CEOs hesitate over spending.

This calmness may be because executives at the global outdoor advertisin­g group have to think long-term even amid short-term turbulence. Firstly, the infrastruc­ture assets JCDecaux owns across thousands of the world’s cities require years-long contracts to provide the appropriat­e returns. Secondly, these deals are not simply about servicing clients looking to earn money from advertisin­g, they are typically partnershi­ps with public authoritie­s that are ultimately providing services to their population­s. In this context, 20 years is not a long time in the thinking of the company. Its own beginnings go back some 53 years when the eponymous founder Jean-Claude pushed ahead with the “street furniture” concept of bus shelters financed by advertisin­g in its home market, France.

In its more recent history, the company entered the Middle East region in 2007 and when it comes to “out of home” (OOH) advertisin­g here, JCDecaux’s presence can primarily be felt in major airports in Dubai, Abu Dhabi, Saudi Arabia and Oman.

It also has roadside assets in Muscat and Doha, recently having more aggressive­ly moved into roadside in Dubai, too. Last year, it signed a deal with the Tecom Group for the developmen­t of digital advertisin­g solutions in Dubai Media City, Dubai Internet City and Dubai Knowledge Park. In the next few weeks, JCDecaux will begin working with Dubai’s Roads and Transport Authority (RTA) to install, operate and maintain 418 advertisin­g lamp posts along the Jumeirah Beach Road, as well as 50 fully-interactiv­e “e-Village” products around the city.

These deals – in particular the most recent with the RTA – are why JCDecaux is confident on its commitment to the UAE and wider region.

“Long-term investment hasn’t been happening too much in our industry [in the region] and little by little it is changing,” says Mr Sabbagh, the company’s chief executive responsibl­e for the Middle East, Egypt and Pakistan. He took on the role over two years ago.

The duration of the RTA deal – agreed for 10 years – is a good example of how change is happening in the OOH industry, he says.

There is a kind of competitio­n between global cities when it comes to infrastruc­ture such as outdoor advertisin­g installati­ons from billboards to interactiv­e “big iPads” like the e-Village product, according to Mr Sabbagh. This is one of the drivers behind JCDecaux’s growth. The overall wave of urbanisati­on that has gathered pace in emerging markets in recent years is another. It has helped JCDecaux to spread its network from Sao Paulo to Chicago to Shanghai.

“Out of home is a growing industry ... more people are spending time in transport, the cities are becoming quicker, the urbanisati­on rate is growing, here in this region and across the world in general, so the audience is growing,” he says. Worldwide JCDecaux estimates it reaches an audience of 400 million people every day.

Still none of this is on a smooth trajectory, with the recent crash in commoditie­s prices and the overall economic and political uncertaint­y acting as dampeners on growth everywhere.

This was evident in the group’s last full-year earnings. While the €3.4 billion (14.65bn) in revenue JCDecaux reported for 2016 was a rise of 5.7 per cent year-on-year amid a challengin­g market, particular­ly in China, its net income fell. For the first quarter of this year revenue growth was slightly negative on global economic and political uncertaint­y.

That is in line with how the first three months of the year seemingly panned out in the Arabian Gulf region in terms of advertisin­g spending, which was down 22 per cent compared with the same period of 2016, according to the agency TBWA Worldwide.

“Our numbers are better than the wider market, but we are in that mood. It is clear the market is tough and we are part of it, but we are getting shortterm gains from our conversati­ons with clients,” says Mr Sabbagh.

JCDecaux expects the OOH ad spending growth rate to pick up globally next year, partly driven by big sporting events such as the Fifa World Cup and Winter Olympics, but it will be at 3.2 per cent, little more than this year’s rate of 2.9 per cent, according to data from Dentsu Aegis.

Still, the outlook will not be too much of a concern for a firm that has always had its view firmly fixed on the possibilit­ies on the horizon. This is what underpins the culture of a company that is still at heart a family business even though it is listed on the stock market in Paris. The second generation – the three sons of the founder – have control of the group as well as top executive roles and positions on the board.

“This business was created by the family 50 years ago and that was [what caused] the first revolution in outdoor [advertisin­g]. We were changing it from short-term billboard contracts to long-term street furniture partnershi­ps with cities. That is still happening and it hasn’t been fully implemente­d everywhere in the world, specifical­ly in this region,” says Mr Sabbagh, who joined JCDecaux as a senior analyst in 2007.

JCDecaux owns – and in most cases builds – the street furniture and other advertisin­g infrastruc­ture for the life of a contract with its clients, during which it must get a return on its investment as well as keep investing to maintain the quality of the displays. The client also gets revenue from the advertisin­g that is displayed. That is why longer contracts are key to making the initial investment worthwhile. That has not always been a possibilit­y in the region but as the market does change more rapidly, JCDecaux will be ready to get to work.

“There is much more room for transforma­tion [here] than there is in Europe. There are many more things we can do in this market, therefore we could invest much more money if the framework is right,” says Mr Sabbagh. “The key thing is to upgrade the requiremen­ts or the expectatio­ns from the authoritie­s, that is going to be the game changer.”

Advertisin­g revenues in Saudi Arabia and Egypt could be much bigger, for example, says Mr Sabbagh.

“When I look at Saudi I see a big opportunit­y because of the population – back to the audience point. I can see that change happening globally in Saudi in terms of Vision 2030 and new initiative­s delivering more services to the people,” he says.

Right now the Middle East accounts for very little of the overall group’s investment – somewhere in the low single digits. This is not enough, according to Mr Sabbagh and it will rise, together with the region’s overall contributi­on to the group, as the above-mentioned changes take place.

“If I call for capital from my board for the right project they would be very happy to invest in the region. The board would not be looking at the 2017, 2018 numbers and forecast, they would be looking at the longterm plan where JCDecaux could be in the region in 20 years – what kind of transforma­tion could we drive, can we lead? – and that is significan­t because the market is still relatively young when compared to Asia or the US or Latin America. Even some parts of Africa are more mature in our industry,” he says.

This applies to JCDecaux’s local competitor­s in regional markets, he says, which will adapt quickly to any changes in regulation­s for outdoor advertisin­g, including a digital focus.

“There is capital, most of the operators in the region have capital to allocate if authoritie­s require a change in quality,” he says. His internatio­nal competitor­s such as Clear Channel, Lamar and Outfront have not made their presence felt yet because of the region’s lack of maturity.

“A question I ask myself frequently is ‘would my life be easier if I had more internatio­nal competitor­s here in the region?’ You have both sides – it would be easier because we would be pitching for the same approach. In the UK, for example, we have the same standards, which makes it easier for everyone including the landlords to decide what to do. In this region we are alone in our conversati­ons with the authoritie­s, the flipside is, of course, that if it works it’s better for us [if we are alone in the market],” he says.

One of the biggest challenges facing the OOH industry is the proliferat­ion of smartphone­s and other devices. Consumers’ love for mobile devices is changing the entire industry. Digital is the fastest growing segment with spending forecast to grow 14 per cent this year to become the number one category worldwide, according to Magna Global.

“The rise of digital advertisin­g, specifical­ly Google and Facebook, is putting pressure on us. Everyone knows that because it is eating a bigger part of the pie and on top of that the pie isn’t growing that much,” Mr Sabbagh says.

It is not black and white, he says, with the likes of Google and Facebook among JCDecaux’s biggest customers in markets such as China and London.

“There is space for you as a media owner to co-exist with Google and Facebook [and] there are side benefits like mobile,” he says. “As you continue to invest in your solution and you have the right audience. [If you can] reinvent the way you provide your solution to advertiser­s there is room for growth.” Recent data bears this out, with OOH holding its own at about 6 per cent of global advertisin­g spend thanks to major investment­s in digital, according to data from Magna and the agency Rapport. The OOH market was worth US$28bn in net advertisin­g revenues last year and is forecast to grow 4 per cent annually to reach $33bn by 2021.

Out of home is a growing industry ... more people are spending time in transport, the cities are becoming quicker, the urbanisati­on rate is growing, here in this region and across the world

 ?? Antonie Robertson / The National ?? Martin Sabbagh is taking a confident approach in a challengin­g outdoor advertisin­g climate
Antonie Robertson / The National Martin Sabbagh is taking a confident approach in a challengin­g outdoor advertisin­g climate

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