The Herald (Zimbabwe)

Zimpapers gets TV licence

- Herald Reporter

ZIMBABWE Newspapers (1980) Ltd has been granted a television broadcasti­ng licence by the Broadcasti­ng Authority of Zimbabwe (BAZ).

This makes the media house the first and only fully-integrated media house in the country with a footprint in publishing and digital, radio broadcasti­ng, printing and packaging and now television broadcasti­ng.

The content distributi­on licence comes at a time when the Zimpapers Group had already set up Zimpapers Television Network (ZTN) as a production house.

Headed by journalist Nomsa Nkala, ZTN is already making a name on the market where it has been producing documentar­ies and corporate videos.

The Content Distributi­on Services Licence will not only give the Zimpapers Group a unique opportunit­y to offer high quality television programmin­g, but a wider reach for its story-telling prowess, opening

◆ up more portals for content creation and distributi­on.

Zimpapers Group Chief Executive Mr Pikirayi Deketeke said the awarding of the licence, which will see the group tapping into the growing viewers market, fulfils Zimpapers’ long-held dream to be a fully-fledged media house and brings to culminatio­n nearly a decade of investment beyond the traditiona­l print business.

The group’s bouquet will target over 3 million households offering various content products at a low cost.

Mr Deketeke chronicled the diversific­ation journey undertaken by the business saying after over a century of sustained growth, it became clear in 2011 that Zimpapers needed to broaden its media footprint beyond print to include the new growth areas of digital media and broadcasti­ng.

“As a fast thinking business, we carried out surveys. We looked around at what regional competitor­s and global players in the same business were doing. Kenya, South Africa, the United Kingdom, the United States and Australia were some of the markets we looked at,” he said.

“It became obvious that media was no longer just about newspapers and print products even though they remain important.

“We realised that digital was becoming big. We also realised that broadcasti­ng was also a profitable avenue for distributi­on of our content. We then thought long and hard about how we could tap into that. After all, as Zimpapers, our competitiv­e edge has always been content creation. We operate as a content factory that creates content and disseminat­es it across various platforms.

“Broadcasti­ng, therefore, became something we got interested in with our plan being to start with radio first and then television. Our plan was to ensure that as Zimpapers we were covered across the whole spectrumte­xt, voice and video.”

The group then crafted a fiveyear strategic plan at the end of 2011, which has become the road map for its various investment­s.

That is how Star FM; the group’s first broadcast project was born in 2012.

“We decided to start with a national radio station before going into a metro station, Diamond FM. In line with the five year plan we met our targeted time frame to have Diamond FM operating by the end of 2015,” said Mr Deketeke.

“Our interest in radio continued to grow such that when Kingstons Limited came to us knocking with its two radio licences for Harare and Kariba we obliged by entering into a management contract to run Capitalk FM and Nyaminyami FM, two radio projects that are experienci­ng phenomenal growth both in terms of audiences and business potential.”

Today, Zimpapers has a Radio Broadcasti­ng Division led by veteran broadcaste­r Comfort Mbofana, which takes care of the radio interests.

It also has a Digital and Publishing Division led by General Manager Max Shayamano that runs all its newspapers and digital platforms.

A third arm is the Commercial Printing Division led by Njabulo Nkomo, with its flagship being ISO certified printer, Natprint.

“Our eyes, however, remained fixed on the big prize — television. Three years ago Zimpapers Television Network project began to take shape. We appointed former Sunday Mail Deputy Editor Nomsa Nkala to lead a team of content producers and technical experts, who began creating content, waiting for the opportunit­y to lodge our bid with the Broadcasti­ng Authority of Zimbabwe,” he said.

“A lot of work has gone into content creation such that we promise our viewers and advertiser­s a new experience in television viewing.”

Nkala described the latest developmen­t as “a new era in the history of Zimbabwean media”.

general public,” said Mrs Piennar.

“There is so much confidence in the new administra­tion and one can see tangible efforts so far made on the ground to ensure the environmen­t is conducive and elections are free and fair.”

Mrs Piennar said as a diplomat, she took President Mnangagwa’s pledge to deliver free and fair elections seriously.

Since his inaugurati­on in December last year, President Mnangagwa is on record promising the nation and the world that his administra­tion was committed to ensure free and fair elections, as well as make Zimbabwe attractive to investors.

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