Business a.m.

YouTube grows support for Africa’s creatives with #YouTubeBla­ck Voices cohorts

- Onome Amuge

YOUTUBE IS EXPAND ING EFFORTS TO SUPPORT CREATORS AND THE CREATIVE ECONOMY IN AFRICA through the 2023 #YouTubeBla­ck Voices creators and artist cohorts.

Currently in its third year, the initiative from the online video and social media network is a follow-up to a global, multi-year commitment establishe­d in 2020 to uplift and grow black creators, artists, songwriter­s, and producers on the platform.

Forty creators from sub-Saharan Africa will be part of the 135 #YouTubeBla­ck Voices creators selected globally who are enrolled into the cohort. The list also comprises 15 Nigerian YouTube content creators, including Egbor Osereme, Oluwafemi Olaniyan, Latifat Kilani, Korty EO, Dennis Akpan, Louis Ihuefo, Oluebube Belonwu, and Olatunbosu­n Gbenga.

Others are Tokoni Iderima, Kelechi Anyanwu, Ifeyinwa Mogekwu, Segun Oladapo-Ogunsanya, Izzi Boye, Maryam Apaokagi, and Gina Ehikodi-Ojo

Among the 23 #YouTubeBla­ck Voices artists selected for the programme are African fast-rising musical artists Gyakie from Ghana, Kamo Mphela from South Africa, Asake from Nigeria, and BNXN from Nigeria. The cohort will also include MashBeatz, a hip hop producer from South Africa, as well as Nairobi-based producer Ukweli, who will be joining 17 #YouTubeBla­ck Voices Songwriter­s and Producers globally.

As support from YouTube, grantees will receive $20,000 and $50,000 as seed funding, dedicated partner support for six months and have the opportunit­y to participat­e in programmes including bespoke training, workshops and networking programmes spread out across the year.

The artists, songwriter­s, and producers joining the #YouTubeBla­ck Voices Music Class of 2023 will be required to set goals, develop content strategy, and engage with their fans on YouTube, with the assistance of a YouTube partner manager. There will also be networking opportunit­ies with other artists, songwriter­s, and producers included in the #YouTubeBla­ck Voices Fund, and a chance to maximise the impact of their channels as they provide catalogue-developmen­t opportunit­ies.

Alex Okosi, managing director, emerging markets, YouTube EMEA, expressed excitement about the creators, musical artists and producers from Africa joining others from across the world in the 2023 #YouTubeBla­ck Voices Fund. He added that the initiative is dedicated to equipping up-andcoming Black creators and artists with the resources to succeed on the platform.

“We are seriously interested in the growth of the creative community in Africa. For the creators, artists, songwriter­s and producers that will be joining this third cohort, we will go beyond the initial training to measure our success with them over a long-term period, thereby ensuring that they achieve sustained success,” Okosi said.

Over the next few years, YouTube said it will directly invest in more than 500 creators and artists from across the world to support, grow, and fund their channels and content developmen­t through the #YouTubeBla­ck Voices Fund.

in use across countries posed a drawback for conversati­onal commerce vendors. To overcome these challenges, the digital market research firm urges conversati­onal commerce

vendors to onboard each messaging app individual­ly, while adhering strictly to varying financial regulation­s in each country. It also enlightene­d vendors on the need to account for global payment difference­s and support various digital wallets.

“This flexibilit­y will enable vendors to offer a complete omnichanne­l experience by providing payments across OTT apps, chatbots, voicebots and RCS business messaging,” the research stated.

To increase market share, Juniper said conversati­onal commerce platforms must also invest in value-added services to provide differenti­ation from existing conversati­onal services. Giving an example of this, it said digital loyalty programmes can be used to provide personalis­ed and incentivis­ed messages to achieve increases in digital engagement. In addition, it encouraged vendors to facilitate features such as link tracking and call-to-action support to monitor engagement.

Commenting on the impact of OTT on omnichanne­l, Elisha Sudlow-Poole, the research author, remarked that supporting a sufficient number of communicat­ion channels is no longer enough to ensure the success of omnichanne­l experience­s.

“Vendors must look to include additional value-added services into their business model to create depth within existing communicat­ion channels,” she advised.

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 ?? ?? Alex Okosi, managing director, emerging markets,YouTube EMEA
Alex Okosi, managing director, emerging markets,YouTube EMEA

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