Yacoob
Abba Omar
Briefing to Portfolio Committee on Communications
6
November 2001
Submission during hearings
on racism in the advertising industry
1. Introduction
GCIS welcomes this
opportunity to make a presentation to the Parliamentary Portfolio
Committee on Communication. We are pleased with the spirit in which
the various invitees have responded to the invitations issued by the
Committee. In GCIS previous engagements we were left with no
doubt that your concern was at three levels:
- transformation in the industry
- the nature of decision-making processes
- patterns of government expenditure
on advertising.
Our presentation aims to address all
three concerns. We believe that these hearings mark an important
beginning in the dialogue around a set of practices, which play
an important role in the shaping of perceptions, the creation of
images and symbols, and possibly the instilling of values.
To enhance GCIS participation
in this dialogue, GCIS commissioned qualitative research to supplement
statistical data in order to clarify the underlying dynamics of
the media selection process. This we hope would help identify a
course of action that will inform the direction of change and transformation
in the advertising, media and marketing industries
This paper draws on both research directions
for discussion that focuses on:
- transformation in the industry>
- decision-making processes
- advertising expenditure in the private
media sector
- advertising expenditure by government
- segmentation tools.
The discussion leads to a section of
Recommendations and Conclusions, including a proposal for an Advertising
and Marketing Indaba.
We want, at the offset, to commend
a number of role-players who have been acknowledged here and internationally
for the quality of their work. When we, as government, public representatives
and members of the particular industry look at the way forward,
we must investigate as to how we carry these best practices into
the future.
1.1 Statistical data
The statistical data, contained in
the Appendices to the paper, deals with profiles of media ownership,
control and audiences in terms of race and Living Standards Measure
(LSM) bands, as well as patterns of expenditure on advertising by
government and the private sector.
The information was sourced from agencies,
reference books and individual companies.
1.2 Qualitative research
The objectives of the qualitative research
into the underlying dynamics of the media selection process were
to
- establish the belief systems of
those doing the selecting and their understanding of the value
of various market segments
- assess the criteria used and influences
operating in the placement of advertising
- determine knowledge levels of markets
and media among advertising, marketing and media personnel
- identify perceptions of existing
skills in the media placement arena and whether gaps exist in
institutional and on-the-job training
- determine the adequacy of available
research and data resources for media selection purposes.
Kuper Research an authoritative
voice in the media world conducted the research. A few copies
of the research have been made available to members of the Portfolio
Committee. It is obtainable on the GCIS website. We wish to emphasise
that this research is not the views of the GCIS, but has been released
to enrich the discussions around the advertising industry.
Six focus groups were conducted with:
- Advertising agencies
- Media directors
- Media planners
- Marketers
- Media owner representatives
2. Transformation in the Industry
2.1 Black media
Much hinges on the definition
of black media (apart from variation in use of the term black
to signify either Africans or black people more generally). The
marketing, advertising and media sectors define these media in terms
of readership, listenership or viewership, relative to the target
market, as well as perceived content of programmes or editorial.
The terminology is important because
some argue that black media are receiving less than their fair share
of spend because of the very definition of such media as black or
white. Media like The Citizen, for example, are seen by some
as a black newspaper (because of content and readership figures)
and by others as a white newspaper.
The difference in revenue between black
and white media seems to be exacerbated by the huge discounts black
media such as Sowetan offers. Some media may be receiving
a substantial amount of advertising but their rates are so low that
it appears that they are receiving less than their competitors.
We will return to the reason for such discounts under private sector
adspend.
2.2 Appearance of new titles
A substantial contribution to the problem
appears to be the fragmentation of the media into targeted
niche publications and the explosion of titles and newspapers causing
a declining readership for individual titles. Print media see themselves
struggling for an equitable share in the market. The research also
suggested a surprising amount of recognition between media sectors
of one anothers problems, with the exception of some radio
sales representatives who expressed resentment towards media planners.
2.3 Factors impacting on transformation
Like in many other sectors, transformation
in the advertising industry is impacted upon by the business environment
and the rate of growth. In terms of the media used for advertising
as well as the role-players involved, this appears to be an industry
dominated by whites.
The qualitative research indicates
that the marketing environment has come under immense pressure
to deliver effective responses and sales, even though budgets
have become restricted. The pressure has increased as organisations
are trading in unpredictable business cycles. Marketers appear to
have set their sights on short-term targets as they look for quick
wins without taking a long-term view in decision-making in order
to grow target markets.
The marketing industry is also pressurised
by static growth in advertising expenditure whilst both traditional
and new media (taxi, outdoor, internet, etc.) have proliferated,
resulting in smaller audiences per medium. This has impacted negatively
on both above and below-the-line advertising. Both marketers and
agencies are experiencing tougher trading environments characterised
by less resources and high staff turnover which are not conducive
to building relationships between clients, agencies and the media.
We will expand on transformation issues
when looking at the different role-players in advertising.
3. Segmentation Tools
The most widely used segmentation tool
in the industry is the LSM. LSMs are non-racial target market segmentation
procedures based on a range of variables like type of home, appliances
in the home, and consumption patterns derived from the All Media
and Products Survey (AMPS). AMPS is a large-scale, nationally representative
survey, conducted under the auspices of the South African Advertising
Foundation. It is funded by a 1% levy on advertising in above-the-line
media.
There are perceived shortcomings in
the LSM as a marketing tool, but they are used extensively in the
absence of a readily available better alternative. The lower LSMs
are economically disadvantaged while the higher LSMs are more affluent.
Both agencies and marketers claim that
they rarely use LSMs exclusively but also employ other pertinent
factors like demographics, psychographics and geographic area. Demographics
that are used extensively are age and gender, sometimes language.
Psychographics used include life stage, lifestyle, beliefs and values.
Some marketing organisations also conduct their own segmentation
studies that are expensive but can sometimes entirely replace LSMs.
The qualitative research commissioned
by GCIS also indicates misunderstanding of the methodology and sampling
for AMPS. For example, AMPS has a very large representative sample,
but is restricted by levy funding. Small titles and stations cannot
get large enough sub samples for accurate measurement. In addition
there is a misunderstanding of the basis of the LSM segmentation,
even among fairly senior people.
LSMs 7 and over are understood and
perceived to have the most disposable income. LSMs 1-3 are not seen
as viable marketing targets. LSMs 4-6 are seen as emerging
and account for a large number of the black population. These LSM
are not clearly understood and there are indications that they are
undervalued though highly populated. The research indicates that
it appears that the real revenue potential may not be known, although
marketers deny this.
4. Decision-Making Processes
There are three major players in the
decision-making process of the placement of advertising in the media.
These key players are marketers, who own the budgets and the brands,
media planners who generate media strategies and facilitate placement
of media and finally the media owners who offer the vehicle to reach
the identified target markets.
4.1 Marketers
4.1.1 Weaknesses
The qualitative research indicates
certain weaknesses in the approach of marketers to marketing
as many do not seem to have a clear definition and understanding
of their target markets: they do not spend enough time or money
on target market identification and analyses, they rely too much
on quantitative data and tend not to employ qualitative input in
their marketing efforts. We believe that data-driven approaches
can only indicate existing trends, not the possibilities of breakthroughs.
This industry requires very creative and insightful minds.
Equally marketers have less time
and resources to manage their brands due to the downsizing of
marketing departments. The research confirms that many struggled
to employ a long-term vision and therefore do not recognise the
value of what is referred to as emerging markets, a euphemism for
black consumers. This often results in marketers having a negative
or limited influence on media choice. Due to fierce competition,
marketers tend to concentrate on short-term results, via tried and
tested media, to the detriment of brand-building or exploring new
emerging media.
4.1.2 Opportunities
The research suggested and GCIS concurs
that:
- marketers should be encouraged to
initiate more research or interrogate existing research more thoroughly
to better understand their target markets
- the Association of Marketers (ASOM)
should encourage debate and education on the economic value and
the lifestyles of the emerging markets (LSM 1-6) and the exploration
of new channels.
4.2 Agencies
Within agencies there are three key
role-players:
- the creative staff who develop
advertising concepts;
- the media planners who develop
media schedules;
- the media buyers who buy the advertising space for the media schedules.
4.2.1 Weaknesses
The employment demographics
of advertising agencies indicate a lack of diversity and therefore
of transformation. Not only is there a lack of black professionals
in media planning but agencies are also characterised by a shortfall
of middle-level planners and minimal succession planning. Most media
planners are young, white, English-speaking females. According to
the research, agencies see themselves as making rational choices.
On the other hand, media owners say media planners are often led
by personal considerations and this is exacerbated by little time
and the unwillingness to learn new things. These demographic and
decision-making factors can result in media planning that is not
always to the benefit of building brands.
Those interviewed for the research
say that agencies are under huge pressure to deliver a return
on the clients investment while their resources are dwindling.
In the same vein, they are held accountable for such huge budgets
that they avoid risk-taking. The concern is also raised that the
agencies creative staff prefer television and that this sometimes
drives the choice of what media should be used, thereby putting
less value on the potential contribution of the media department.
This is also perpetuated by those interviewed in the research that
the reality is that agencies are generating most of their creative
ideas in English.
4.2.2 Opportunities
The research suggested and GCIS concurs
that:
- Agencies should invest more on salaries,
training (media research tools, understanding of unfamiliar markets
and media) and time in media departments.
- Agencies should come up with strategies
for attracting new people into the industry.
- In order to retain personnel, there
needs to be emphasis on training and development, succession planning,
mentoring and empowerment.
- Agencies should share information
about their clients brand and specific target market with
media owners so that they can prepare presentations that are more
relevant to these brands and clients.
- Media planners and buyers should
allocate time to attend media owner presentations as they can
play a big role in educating planners.
- Industry fora for training, briefings
and knowledge sharing for people below the level of media directors
should be rejuvenated.
If these issues are not addressed within
agencies, their clients will see their marketing becoming less relevant
to the majority of South Africans. Relevance may well emerge as
the next competitive advantage.
4.3 Media Sector
The research indicates that sales representatives
generally repeat known target market figures and do not tailor
presentations to the individual client or brand, or do enough
research to sell products or build their own brands. Print and radio
suffer from a lack of marketing their media type, unlike
television, which spends large amounts on self-promotion. For example,
the biggest advertiser in the country is M-Net. In the same vein,
rate cards need a new strategic look as media inflation seems to
be on a sharp rise. This particularly applies to SABC TV and Radio,
who are seen as pricing themselves out of the market, as they have
the power to set the overall pricing structure due to their ownership
of a wide portfolio of radio and television stations.
4.3.1 General Media Weaknesses
The research reflects that industry
bodies have indicated that the current trading conditions, resulting
in squeezed margins, concern their members. The pressure on margins
results in an inward focus, eroding the industry bodies generic
marketing budgets. Since the industry bodies are consensus-based
voluntary organisations, there is no way of forcing generic marketing
programs, which would require additional budget allocations over
and above membership subscriptions.
The research also indicates that media
representatives complain that agencies do not attend their presentations
and are often skeptical of educational presentations,
perceiving the media to be selling something. Due to this non-attendance,
clients are often denied new information as agencies control the
access to clients. Media representatives would like more access
to marketers, as they believe that they would communicate more enthusiastically,
and in more detail, and perceive that they are being denied this
access by the agencies. The research further shows that marketers
would like to have direct contact with media representatives. This
contact will help develop ongoing, longer-term relationships with
marketers.
- Print Media Weaknesses
Print media has suffered with the
advent of wider TV selection and alternative information sources
such as the Internet as well as the proliferation of print titles
(approximately 2 000 with a huge diversity of owners versus only
about 200 radio and TV stations). Television has bigger margins
to spend on promotions and trade marketing.
- Radio Barriers
Unlike television, the major stumbling
block for radio is not the cost of airing the advert, but the
cost implications of creative and linguistic translations of the
concept, resulting often in English-only adverts, which impact
on the choice of radio stations using languages other than English.
Radio is also often hampered by a bottom of the media heap
perception. There is also a greater focus in the use of radio
in Gauteng, with the exclusion of other metropolitan areas, thereby
often ignoring regional stations.
4.3.2 Opportunities
The research suggested and GCIS concurs
that:
- The media sector should undertake
research to promote cultural understanding and also bring LSM
4-6 alive by describing how people live, their needs and aspirations
(we will return to the issue of market segmentation).
- They should substantiate the value
of black spending power by target market category and demonstrate
what they spend their money on. For example, how many people in
LSM 4-6 have cheque accounts?
- They should develop a clear personality
of the audience or readers so that the client brand begins to
identify with their mediums, focusing on their values, beliefs,
feelings, and interests.
- It should be noted that marketers
are open to case history presentations from the new emerging media
who do not have other support to prove their usefulness as a medium.
- Print Opportunities
The research suggested and GCIS concurs
that:
- The print media could work together
to promote print.
- Radio Opportunities
The research suggested and GCIS concurs
that:
- Radio owners should focus on strong
branding for stations. Just like print, radio could band together
to promote radio as a medium to marketers and advertisers.
- There is a need to get marketers
to understand the market and their relationship to the medium.
Smaller radio stations should concentrate on attracting local
advertisers, tactical activities, joint promotions and programming
targeted specifically at attracting certain categories of advertising
and target markets.
- Television opportunities
The research suggested and GCIS concurs
that:
- there is a need for focused, strong
branding for particular programmes
- the qualitative research offered
differing views of the educational role to be played by the
media owners, but the prevailing call is that those who
know their medium back to front, are empowered to go out and
educate the market.
- Joint Opportunities
The research suggested and GCIS concurs
that:
- there is a huge potential to promote
the media and marketing industry as a career with special emphasis
on recruiting candidates from the previously disadvantaged communities
- Available Saarf and AC Nielsen
figures show that there appears to be a discrepancy between
advertising expenditure (adspend) on black-orientated media
and the industrys claim that adspend are made purely in
terms of scientific information embedded in segmentation tools,
in particular the widely-used LSM.
5. Advertising Expenditure by the
Private Media Sector
As the data shows in Tables and Graphs
in Appendices A-C, adspend goes mainly to white media or historically
white and increasingly crossover media, whether this
is characterised by ownership or audience. Crossover
media refers to media such as the Sunday Times and The
Star, which used to target white readers, but have in recent
years attracted a large number of black readers.
The industrys view is that audiences
(i.e. readers, listeners and viewers) falling into the 7-10 LSM
categories are targeted, as these people are regarded as having
the disposable income necessary to be of interest to most marketers.
Although this is changing, these categories are in the main populated
by white people, which, it is argued, explains the skewed pattern
of adspend.
However, as shown below, this is not
always a direct correlation between adspend and LSMs, and even where
there is, it is not a sufficient explanation for adspend patterns.
As indicated elsewhere, LSM categories 4-6, which concern mainly
black people, are poorly understood by the industry, and this must
be related, in part, to the racial and class composition of media
planners and other decision-makers in the advertising industry.
The following analysis looks at the
print media industry (weeklies and dailies) and radio (public and
private), and the information referred to is contained in Table
1 in Appendix A.
In all instances here black
refers to African, Coloured and Indian, unless otherwise indicated.
5.1 Print media
5.1.1. Weeklies
The weekly newspaper that receives
most adspend per reader (R87) is the Afrikaans Sunday paper Rapport.
Rapport is owned by Naspers, a white-owned company with a
readership that is 61% white. 71% of its readers fall into the 7-10
LSM categories.
Sunday Times, with the highest
readership in the country and by far the highest revenue, earns
R80 per reader. This newspaper, formerly part of the Anglo-American
stable and at that time oriented towards white readers at the upper
end of the LSM scale, now has a predominantly black readership (73%).
It is owned by Johnnic Publishing, which in turn is owned by a black
empowerment consortium. Senior management, however, remains largely
white and male. The Sunday Times editorial staff, however,
have changed significantly in recent years, particularly after the
appointment of a black (coloured) editor.
It seems, therefore, that Sunday
Times is no longer a white newspaper, and its LSM
profile is also mixed, with only 52% of its readers falling into
the LSM 7-10 categories.
By contrast Sowetan Sunday World,
a predominantly black-owned, managed and read (99%) newspaper, attracts
less than R10 per reader. While it may be argued that this is because
its LSM profile is predominantly within the 4-6 categories, the
point has already been made that these categories are ill-understood.
The case of Post newspaper,
however, more clearly contradicts the LSM argument. Owned by Independent
Newspapers but read (98%) and run by black people (mainly Indian),
Post receives only R9,24 per reader, despite having a readership
that falls predominantly within the LSM 7-10 categories (69%).
The second largest Sunday weekly, City
Press, is owned by Naspers, but has a 99% black readership falling
mainly into the LSM 4 6 categories, and earns only R20,38
per reader.
5.1.2 Dailies
The Star earns far more advertising
expenditure in total than any other newspaper (R320m per year) although
in terms of adspend per reader, at R715 per reader, Business
Day leads by a long stretch (The Star only earns R456
per reader). Both newspapers are former Anglo-American publications
targeted at white audiences, but now have predominantly black readers
(70% and 59% respectively).
Although the foreign-owned Independent
Newspaper Group owns The Star, it has a black (coloured)
editor, and an increasing number of editorial and management staff
are black. The LSM profile of its readers is only marginally in
the 7-10 category. (52%).
Business Day is owned by Johnnic,
but has a white editor with an editorial staff that, although predominantly
white, have in recent years increased the number of black staff
significantly. It is firmly in the 7- 10 LSM category.
Beeld, by contrast, while attracting
similar adspend per reader to The Star (R524), is overwhelmingly
white in terms of ownership, readership (87%) and editorial staff.
Sowetan, black read, run and
owned, occupies the bottom rung of the adspend per reader ladder,
but this can be explained by its LSMs falling mainly within the
1-6 categories (85%), with the bulk, 65%, falling within the 4-6
categories. Nevertheless, as stated earlier, this segment of the
market is little understood, and the argument of bias against Sowetan
because of its predominantly black profile does not necessarily
fall away.
5.2. Broadcast media
The most adspend per listener goes
to Classic FM (R310) with Highveld Stereo, Radio 702, 5FM, KFM and
Jacaranda following behind. All these stations target predominantly
white listeners, and all fall squarely within the LSM 7 - 10 bracket.
In terms of ownership, however, only Classic FM can be said to be
white-owned, although Highveld and 702 are owned by Primedia, they
only recently acquired a significant black empowerment presence
at ownership and management levels.
By contrast, Kaya FM, which targets
a black audience and is black-owned, earns only R7,35 per listener.
Its listeners fall predominantly within the 4 - 6 LSM categories.
YFM, also a black-oriented station with a similar LSM profile, attracted
R45 per listener.
Two stations with high LSM profiles,
Lotus and Good Hope, only attracted R31 and R94 per listener respectively.
They have predominantly Indian and Coloured listeners respectively.
As far as television is concerned,
M-Net attracts the most white viewers, and the lions share
of advertising (R1bn, or R379 per viewer). Most of its viewers fall
within the LSM 7-10 categories. A more complete analysis of television
Adspend would look at individual programmes, and this could be a
topic for further research.
6. Advertising Expenditure by Government
The Comtask Report of 1996 recommended
that government should centralise the buying of advertisements for
campaign purposes. Universal McCann/ HerdBuoys McCann-Erickson was
appointed as the media buying agency for electronic and print media.
The outdoor media is bought by Inca Media. It must be noted that
not all government departments are placing their advertising through
the Universal McCann/ HerdBuoys McCann-Erickson tender. Reluctance
to do so may have resulted from some of the teething problems the
GCIS has had in setting up the system. This tender also excludes
recruitment advertising.
6.1 Target market
The following analysis is based on
all races and the individual title or stations audience profile
by race. Generally, all government campaigns are aimed at all adults
who are defined as those aged 16 years and older.
However, when constructing individual
campaigns, depending on the Department, message, content, time frame
and funds available, a more specific focus has been required. In
many cases the primary target markets were the youth and females
and in particular those living in the rural areas. In others it
was motorists, farmers or influence groups including journalists,
NGOs, government departments, small business or large corporations.
Population distribution
AMPS 2000 Adults 16 years plus
|
Total |
White |
Black |
Coloured |
Indian |
|
000 |
28
488 |
4
114 |
21
235 |
2
420 |
720 |
| % |
100 |
14,4 |
74,5 |
8,6 |
2,5 |
6.2 Adspend
The figures below reflect the GCIS
expenditure placed through Universal McCann. They are made up of
a number of specific campaigns each with their own objectives, mandatories,
timing constraints and recommended media mix.
Adspend by Medium
| Medium |
Rand |
% |
| Radio |
11
417 163 |
43,7 |
| Print/
Newspapers |
10
180 909 |
39,0 |
| Television |
4
511 914 |
17,3 |
TOTAL |
26
109 986 |
100 |
Source: Universal McCann/ HerdBuoys McCann-Erickson
Adspend Distribution by Race
| Based
on Audience profiles |
|
Rand |
% |
| White |
5
608 168 |
21,5 |
| African |
16 460 985 |
63,0 |
| Coloured |
2 787 088 |
10,7 |
| Indian |
1 253 745 |
4,8 |
| Total |
26 109 986 |
100 |
Source: Universal McCann/ HerdBuoys McCann-Erickson
(See Appendix B for more detailed figures)
7. Recommendations and conclusion
The above discussion points to a number of steps that will promote and enable transformation in the advertising, media and marketing industries.
7.1 Advertising and Industry Indaba
GCIS would support an industry-wide
Indaba whose aim would be constructive dialogue and to strategise
around:
- transformation within the industry
- advertisings role in a democracy
- the use of media planning measurement tools such as LSMs in a changing society.
The bodies to be invited to the Indaba
could include:
- ASOM
- Media Directors Circle (MDC)
- Association of Advertising Agencies (AAA)
- South African Advertising Research Foundation (SAARF)
- Advertising Standards Association (ASA)
- AMASA
- Communications and Advertising Forum for Empowerment (CAFÉ)
- Design South Africa (DSA)
- THINK
- Creative Directors Circle (CDC)
- Advertising agency representatives.
7.2 Content
While noting concerns that have been
expressed regarding the content of adverts, government is not getting
involved in content but is approaching this issue on the basis of
the principle that taking care of the environment will create conditions
in which the industry, stakeholders and public can take care of content. In this instance,
government supports self-regulation and encourages the strengthening
of regulatory bodies such as the ASA, the Human Rights Commission,
etc.
7.3 Skills and knowledge development
Encouragement and feedback should be
given to industry bodies.
An audit of the training institutions
and the skills required for certain jobs are necessary. The Media
Directors Circle could enhance self-governing bodies, which
oversee skills and knowledge development of media planners, both
within the training institutions and on-the-job industry schools.
7.4 Decision making process
GCIS concurs with the overall consensus
that LSMs 4-6, and their value, are not generally well understood
by marketers, agencies or even the media and sees this as a sector
that reflects much of the future transformed South Africa and an
emerging mass market with aspirations and values that could change
the profile of future adspend. An independent body could be established
to employ a dedicated research analyst to focus on sourcing and
interrogating numerous existing research surveys like the Bureau
of Marketing Research, AMPS, Sociomonitor and Census with the objective
of quantifying the real value of currently undervalued
sectors of the market. This information could be fed into the industry,
bodies and schools and be incorporated into examinations. It can
also be shared with media owners to assist them in selling their
media.
7.5 Transformation in the industry
GCIS concurs that there should be dedication
to training among media owners and marketers. Agencies should be
asked to self-regulate, and set targets for recruiting planners
from more diverse backgrounds. Knowledge skilling will result in
an understanding of the black market and media, resulting
in an increased adspend so that when this does not happen in specific
instances, it will be due to the fact that it was not justified
by the commercial realities, rather than due to a lack of marketing
or branding, and/or prejudice.
7.6 Language
GCIS recognises the costs of translation
of creative concepts and production costs, but in that same vein
it must be recognised that advertising well done sells products,
stimulates the economy and celebrates diversity, in other words
it makes business sense. A good example of this is the recent Telkom
advert.
7.7 Government Adspend
The analysis of government adspend,
provisional as it is, does seem to indicate a need for government
to review its media selection processes, or at least to make a further
investigation. This should include recruitment advertising and media
selection. Government also needs to undertake further research to
assess adspend at a provincial and local level.
Presentation by Yacoob Abba Omar, DCEO, GCIS
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