26 Oct 2012

How African operators can stand out from their competitors..


How can operators make an impact on the African market?

Joao Manuel Faisca, Vice-President for Southern Europe,
 Middle East and Africa, WeDo Technologies
By Joao Manuel Faisca, Vice-President for Southern Europe, Middle East and Africa, WeDo Technologies

The past five years has been a time of great investment and growth in telecommunications across Africa.  Africa is still the fastest growing telecoms market in the world and mobile penetration levels in sub-Saharan Africa are estimated to reach 54% by the end of 2012 and 64% by 2015, compared to just 28% five years ago.

However, due to this accelerated growth, the African telecommunications industry has become much more challenging.  There is greater competition among operators as well as the need to fast-track infrastructure investment to grow capacity and offer new services.  However, with these new services and growth there is also great potential for leakages and fraud. In a report by Juniper Research, it was found that operators were "leaking" revenue because the complexity of networks made fraud and errors harder to spot.  It was confirmed that the problem is worst in Africa and the Middle East, where 15% of revenue is lost annually, compared with 1% in Europe and about 2.8% in North America.  

Similarly, one of the main challenges in the African market for operators is ensuring that they are profitable even with low average revenue per user (ARPU) – something that is common across the continent.  Despite a low ARPU, there is still a huge demand for operators to provide an exceptional customer services and implement coherent and large scale network to offer new services. 

But what does all this mean for the operators in this region?  How can they overcome these challenges and provide customers with a great service and remain profitable in this growing market?
Improving the P&L and ensuring that customers remain happy and are provided with the services they require is an essential focus for telecom operators. That makes identifying revenue leakage, a vital part of an operator’s business.  Similarly, operators need to ensure that they are continuing to optimise efficiency and therefore are bringing money to the bottom line.  In order to do so, operators should be aware of the concept of Business Assurance and use systems to improve operational effectiveness and manage risk.   It tries to quantify what really matters to organizations and their stakeholders, to show how they can improve their systems, and businesses, which ultimately leads to overall business performance improvement. 

Revenue Assurance and Fraud Management are examples of two different processes that operators will want to monitor to understand their business’ overall performance and overcome the challenges in the African region. Identifying a structured and relational approach between them and other areas ensures that your organization fully understands the interdependence between processes, systems, and data that impact performance. While Revenue Assurance and Fraud Management generate their own metrics, Business Assurance will correlate the metrics between the two areas to understand their impact on the business overall and how they relate to areas such as collections or billing.

In order to tackle these potential leakages and fraud losses, the operators should have or create a Revenue Assurance & Fraud department with specific tools such as, a Business Assurance system. Another option, is adopting a managed service approach.  This offers an alternative to operators’ in-house operational planning, implementation, staffing, training, and on-going operations.  Via managed services, telecom operators can reduce the guesswork and expense of business management technology by obtaining software, services and support through a single point of contact at an affordable monthly cost and most importantly the telecom operators can virtually expand their teams via external expertise that have access to global Business Assurance best practices.

In Egypt, for example, there is a particularly high level of competition.  There are three operators covering the entire market with 100 per cent penetration.  In order to differentiate itself from the competition and overcome the challenges within the African market, one of the key operators in Egypt has deployed WeDo Technologies’ Business Assurance system and comments, “The return on investment is very positive. I can remember that in the first phase when we just applied the system, we had a return on investment during the data acceptance test so it was very beneficial for us.”  

In order for operators in the African region to overcome these challenges they are facing and ensure that this period of growth does not turn sour, understanding the performance of their business is a critical aspect for improvement. In turn, this will assist them in improving their bottom line and ensure that their customers are happy – a win, win situation for all!
  
WeDo Technologies is an innovator in revenue and business assurance software with customers in eight countries in Middle East and Africa.  WeDo Technologies will be exhibiting at AfricaCom 2012.  Visit them at stand P39 or contact Joao Manuel Faisca (joao.faisca@wedotechnologies) or Pedro Teixeira (pedro.teixeira@wedotechnologies.com) to arrange a meeting.  


22 Oct 2012

"Convergence: features and benefits for African telecoms” is discussed with Mikhail Khomarov, VP of R&D of CBOSS


Today’s guest blog post is written by Mikhail Khomarov, the Vice President of CBOSS. They are proud sponsors of AfricaCom. 

CBOSS is one of the world leaders in the development of innovative convergent IT solutions for end-to-end automation of telecommunications companies, delivering a competitive edge to telecoms across the globe. The CBOSS products range is based on innovative standardized convergent IT solutions acknowledged by many operators and service providers in 24 countries of the world, including African telecom companies.  



What is convergence? What benefits will a telecom operator acquire by using convergent solution? Mikhail Khomarov, VP of R&D CBOSS answers these and other questions.

What exactly do you mean under the convergence of BSS solutions? 
Convergence as we define it - is a principle of unification and standardization of solutions to complex problems. Complex BSS systems could be assembled from many components from different vendors, or they can be complex and with that manufactured by single vendor on the basis of a unified concept.

Convergence is a base concept of the CBOSS BSS solution and it consists of several elements, which we call multi-dimensional convergence:

- Account types: prepaid, postpaid and mixed (hybrid)
- Services: solution ensures that provisioning/removal of all types of services is done based on unified rules and not depending of the type of service networks/infrastructure
- Payments: any supported payment type could be used to cover any services regardless of networks/infrastructure
- Platform: all convergent solution components run on a unified hardware platform from one vendor
- Support: our customers enjoy one point responsibility, namely technical support for the entire solution, all its components and integrations between them, including hardware, system and application software – is provided by our company, so that our customers don’t have to guess whom to talk to about any particular issue.

CBOSS convergent solution is an integrated and unified set of software and hardware components, used for automation of the telecom operator business processes, and provides real time billing, customer care, data charging (including PCRF), mediation, interconnect with dealers and partners, network control, analytical reporting, CRM, and some other components.

Why do you think convergent solutions will be demanded by African telecom operators? 
In a few words – convergence reduces IT costs while boosting usability and quality of the solution, and through that – subscriber satisfaction and operator ability to reduce time-to-market for new products and marketing initiatives. Market research shows that unified convergent solution can increase operator EBITDA by up to 4–5% a year.

African telecom market is very dynamic, shows rapid growth of subscribers, the necessity to cover new territories and tremendous demand for communication services, which makes the region attractive for many telecom operators.  At the same time, the market is already highly competitive and operators entering it have to make better offers to subscribers and, on top of that, must have lower costs. All these demands could be addressed by convergent BSS solutions.

The standard benefits of convergence – account type, payments, fix-mobile convergence, are well known and covered in the media. Let me briefly touch upon a less mentioned, but yet important aspect of a convergent solution from a single vendor – cost savings in the integration layer(s).

Convergence dictates that all components of a solution are integrated with each other. If the solution is assembled from several components from multiple vendors, it always runs the risk that some components will not work because of integration problems. In this case the operator has to, thoroughly test implementation of each component, code and/or configure the integration layer, thus spending money and resources.

In CBOSS convergent solution components are factory pre-integrated, the manufacturer is responsible for smooth inter-operation of components, testing, configuration, and implementation of the entire solution. This way the manufacturer distributes the cost of integrating components between many clients reducing the price per customer. And I did not even scratch the surface here, because we can talk about uniformity of BSS UIs, how it affects operator employee productivity, and if what is the cost of achieving such uniformity.

What operators will mostly benefit from use of convergent solutions?
Convergence is very efficient for start-ups and emerging operators. Moreover, a convergent solution has a shorter launching period due to pre-integration of its components and due to the fact that it’s rolled out by a single vendor.

Mature operators would appreciate CBOSS High End solution scalability, where solution scales to tens of millions of subscribers simply by hardware upgrades, and high availability, which allows component upgrades and even hardware replacement without any interruption to the subscriber service.

Replication of the same standard convergent solution is also very beneficial for operators of a telecommunication group, as it will allow reduction of the total cost of implementation, ownership and promotes sharing of operational experience and best business practices among the telecom operators of the group.

What methods, do you think, should be applied by African operators for making their businesses more efficient?In the process of selecting BSS solutions, telecom operators should consider subscriber facing surfaces of the solution, as well as conformity to the operator and industry requirements. Operators should strive to use more customer-oriented and standardized solutions and products, and we are ready to help them make the most effective selections.

I can illustrate it by a case of our customer in the Central Africa. They required a new method of collecting payments from subscribers, as the number of payment methods was limited in the country. We suggested a solution enabling organization of network of subscribers, and dealers, who collected the money on their accounts. Then dealers inform their subscribers of the balance top up by USSD or SMS notifications.

Application of this method has given convenient payment method to subscribers and higher consumption of services to the operator, as subscribers can promptly top up balances for the ongoing use of mobile services.

Another way of raising business efficiency ih marketing campaigns and provide mobile service discounts, depending on bases to use solutions enabling reduction of costs by optimizing usage of the existing infrastructure – as an example I can mention a successful project implemented by CBOSS for a subsidiary of a global telecommunications group. In this project we helped the operator to launch station load, location of subscriber and time of the day, thus helping them to optimize network utilization without additional investments into infrastructure.

The key feature of this product is the discount calculation and call rating practically in real time with change of actual load on base station used for the subscriber’s connection. The solution automatically regulates the demand-to-discount ratio; the higher demand is, the less the discount, thus reducing the traffic through the station, and vice versa. This principle can be used when the operator wants to reduce load on stations in the downtown and increase it on stations in sleeping suburbs.

What does CBOSS expect from participation in AfricaCom 2012?
We expect to meet interesting people, who are looking for robust yet economical BSS systems. We would like to inform them about CBOSS convergent, integrated, end-to-end solutions and show our experience and knowledge in implementing such solutions for our customers.

We would also like to welcome visitors to our stand B11 and of course, to the keynote speech “Convergence: buzzword or moneymaker?” by CBOSS. Don’t forget our famous dance show performing at our stand B11!

Visit the AfricaCom website for more information: www.comworldseries.com/africa



MoMo @ AfricaCom: Venue Announced


 

MoMo @ AfricaCom 2012

Monday, November 12, 2012 from 5:00 PM


Our partners, Mobile Monday, are excited that they can finally announce their venue for the MoMo @ AfricaCom event on the 12th November, this awesome event will be happening at Trinity Cape Town! Cape Town's state-of-the-art entertainment and eventing venue!

More details including the agenda for the evening, speakers and sponsors coming soon, you can be assured of a fun, informative and enjoyable evening of networking with live demo's of cutting edge mobile products and services in true Mobile Monday style!

Mobile Monday "Bringing the mobile community together!"

Time:           5.00 for 6pm start
Date:           12th November 2012
Venue:         Trinity Cape Town



Tell a friend about this event, click here

MoMo @ AfricaCom is a warm up event for the much anticipated AfricaCom conference, you can still get your FREE exhibition or African operator, developer, broadcaster or enterprise CIO pass to AfricaCom by clicking here




19 Oct 2012

Bringing SMS and the Mobile Web together


This week's guest blog post is written by Thorsten Trapp, the CTO of tyntec. They participating at AfricaCom



The incredible penetration of mobile technologies in Africa has seen an enormous rise in the use of mobile communication and social networking across the continent. Because the mobile is often the sole means of telecommunications access, users have turned to this channel to facilitate the sort of online social interactions that have become so popular in recent years. 

However, whilst the mobile web has been the engine of growth for social networking on the go in developed markets, the historic lack of consistent 3G coverage in much of Africa has meant that companies and end users have often had to look to other technologies to power these experiences. It is for this reason that Africa has long been a passionate adopter of one the original mobile technologies, SMS, for social networking and other interactive mobile experiences.

The growth of African mobile market and SMS

The African market is the fastest growing mobile market in the world, so it is no wonder that investment in telecommunications infrastructure is exploding, expected to reach USD 1.5 billion in 2015. In addition, more and more companies want to tackle the market: for example, Google plans to sell 200 million of its Android Smartphones in Africa and in some countries such as Nigeria, mobile Internet connections have overtaken fixed-line.

However, although the growth of mobile Internet and smartphone sales across the continent are skyrocketing, 3G coverage is still patchy and the smartphone is far from ubiquitous. In a region where for many the mobile device is the only communications tool available to network, share relevant information with peers and overcome isolation, only one tool has the power to reach anyone, on any device: SMS messaging.


The benefits of SMS as a mobile web tool

Not surprisingly, SMS brings many benefits to the African market, because: 
·         It works on any phone and nearly every mobile user understands how to send and receive it.  
·         The GSM coverage that supports it is near ubiquitous and SMS can work even in areas where network coverage won’t support voice calling.
·         SMS remains uniquely impactful. Users tend to read and respond to an SMS within minutes of its arrival, unlike email which can all too easily be ignored or overlooked amongst the flood of spam that nearly everyone receives.

Moreover, SMS can replace many of the functionalities one associates with the mobile web. Because it is a two-way communications channel users can request and receive information in near real-time. Most text communication on the web is short and snappy, so the 160 character format of SMS also fits well. Clearly SMS is primarily a text channel, but it can also be used to provide easy links to rich content via WAP-push, enabling a full web-like experience.

As a mobile Internet service provider, particularly in Africa, this means one thing.  If you want to provide a service that can be used by the widest possible customer base then at the very least you need to be providing an SMS alternative to your mobile Internet presence and you may even be better off with a pure SMS service.

SMS and web services
One great example of a mobile web service that has been SMS enabled is Google’s Gmail.  In July this year Google announced an SMS-powered iteration of Gmail targeted at African markets. It replaces the on-screen functionality of the email service with text based commands and enables users with a featurephone or no mobile Internet coverage to send and receive emails on the go.

Another example is FrontlineSMS, an SMS-based service that uses mobile technology to promote positive social change, powering communication in fields such as disaster response, human rights monitoring, community radio, health, education and agriculture, to name just a few. The company enables communities and NGOs (non-governmental organisations) to communicate with a ubiquitous communications platform that uses text messaging.

Looking to the future, there are more potential applications for SMS, even in areas and markets where mobile Internet is an option. For example, the recent rise of Over-the-Top (OTT) apps which enable free or low cost voice and messaging over the mobile web are increasingly looking to integrate traditional, ubiquitous SMS. 

Bringing together OTT and SMS can enable a new level of interoperability for these services, letting users send and receive messages outside of the ‘walled garden’ of the OTT app for the first time.

Which SMS to use?
Of course, as a mobile service provider your choice of SMS partner is key. There are many players at all levels of the value chain, each promising a different combination of price, quality and service levels.

tyntec is a leading company in the SMS industry offering high-quality SMS services across a portfolio of enterprise, mobile service provider, web business and mobile operator clients. The company has close relationships with more than 40 operators around the world, enabling it to offer an unparalleled degree of reliability in SMS transmission. 

tyntec works with more than 500 clients globally to help enable their SMS services. It offers a dynamic range of routing and service offerings, helping customers to build a business case for their SMS service in a number of ways.

With its established base in the African market, giving it reach to the continent’s 600 million+ mobile subscribers, tyntec is the SMS partner of choice for companies looking to deliver innovative, reliable mobile services at a competitive price.

For more information, please visit tyntec at AfricaCom - meeting room MR21 or contact info@tyntec.com.

17 Oct 2012

New speakers and presentations announced at AfricaCom




AfricaCom this year has over 200 speakers drawn from the entire digital ecosystem with over 25 presentations from new media disruptors and OTT challengers and 15 hours of content from the most innovative app developers and ICT start-ups.

We are very proud (justifiably so, we think) this year of our stellar keynote line-up - the below is a taster of the speaker titles confirmed and the new speakers that have joined this essential industry event:

=========================================================================
  
- Alan Knott-Craig, CEO, Cell C
Newly announced title:
THE ROAD FROM VODACOM TO CELL C; THE CHANGE IN THE INDUSTRY OVER THE YEARS AND CURRENT AND FUTURE PLANS FOR THE BUSINESS”
**Shortlisted for Industry Personality of the Year at AfricaCom Awards**
 
- Peter Vesterbacka, Mighty Eagle, Rovio Mobile
THE COMPANY BEHIND GAMING SENSATION ANGRY BIRD SHARES THOUGHTS ON NEW PLAYERS IN THE DIGITAL MARKET
 
- Nicola D’Elia, Growth Manager Africa, Facebook

THE BILLION MEMBER-STRONG SOCIAL MEDIA BRAND MAKES A MOVE ON THE AFRICAN MARKET
 
- Zunaid Bulbulia, CFO & Chief Enterprise Business Officer, MTN SA

PAN-AFRICAN OPERATOR MTN’S EVOLVING STRATEGY IN A DIGITAL AGE
 
- Marc Rennard, EVP Middle East, Africa & Asia, ORANGE GROUP
THE INNOVATIVE FRENCH GROUP’S TAKES ON NEW OPPORTUNITIES IN AFRICA
 

- Patrick Walker, Sr Director for Content Partnerships EMEA, YOUTUBE
THE DIGITAL CONTENT KING ON BRINGING ATTRACTIVE LOCAL CONTENT TO AFRICA
 
- Andile Ngaba, Chairman, CONVERGENCE PARTNERS
INDUSTRY LEADER AND SERIAL INVESTOR ON THE EVOLUTION OF CONVERGENCE IN AFRICA
**Shortlisted for Industry Personality of the Year at AfricaCom Awards**
 
- Dirk La Roux, MD Afrozaar, Android Evangelist, GOOGLE (Apps) **New speaker**
THE ROLE OF GOOGLE’S ANDROID PLATFORM IN AFRICA’S GROWING APP MARKET
 
- Alan Knott-Craig Jr, CEO, MXIT

SOUTH AFRICA’S HOME-GROWN SOCIAL NETWORK ON FACING COMPETITION FROM GLOBAL BRANDS
  
Richard Bell, CEO, WANANCHI GROUP
LEADING EAST AFRICAN TRIPLE PLAY COMPANY ON CONVERGENCE OPPORTUNITIES

Aniko Szigetvari, TMT Head, Africa and Latin America, INTERNATIONAL FINANCE CORPORATION (World Bank Group) **New speaker**
THE GLOBAL DEVELOPMENT INSTITUTION ON INVESTMENT STRATEGIES IN AFRICA

Wayne Gosling & Daniel Guasco, Co-CEOs, GROUPON SOUTH AFRICA
BE INSPIRED BY THE MEN BEHIND THE INNOVATIVE DIGITAL SHOPPING BRAND

Paul Lee, Senior Product Manager, GOOGLE (Apps) **New speaker**
GOOGLE’S VIEW ON MOBILE CONTENT & DATA OPPORTUNITIES

Derrick Kotzé, CEO, MLABS **New speaker**
SOUTH AFRICA’S DYNAMIC APP COMPANY AND INCUBATOR ON DEVELOPING EXCITING SERVICES

Sivan Pillay, Managing Director, South Africa, ENDEMOL
THE TV PRODUCTION COMPANY ON CONTENT FOR AFRICA

Peter Crosby, Global CSO, VIADEO **New speaker**

THE PROFESSIONAL NETWORKING SITE ON GROWING BUSINESS IN AFRICA
 
 PLUS NEW speakers from international broadcasters on bringing attractive content to African TV viewers:
 
- Alessandro Tucci, SVP and GM Africa, FOX INTERNATIONAL **New speaker**

- Kasia Kieli, President and Managing Director, DISCOVERY NETWORKS **New speaker**

- Solomon Mugera, Editor, World Service Africa, BBC **New speaker**

 
=========================================================================

It's not too late to register...

With only 4 weeks out to AfricaCom, the leading pan-African telecoms, media & ICT event. Make sure you register today to join 200+ speakers, 7000+ delegates and 300+ exhibitors. Everyone who’s anyone in Digital Africa & beyond will be there... don’t miss out.

To register for a FREE Exhibition only pass
http://bit.ly/OID4CX

To register for a
FREE platinum African Operator pass*
http://bit.ly/PG1Ct1

To register for other passes...
http://bit.ly/QH2T2A

Remember to quote your Booking Code “LIEMAF3” on the online booking registration form.

* Free conference passes are limited in supply and have restrictions. They apply only to African operators, broadcasters, enterprise CIOs and application developers - Informa Telecoms & Media's decision on qualification/award of free conference passes is final.

To see the full definition of who qualifies, please click here: http://africa.comworldseries.com/who-qualifies-as-an-operator/

We look forward to welcoming you to Cape Town in November

12 Oct 2012

2012 Africa Com Awards Shortlist: See who’s making waves in the African Digi-sphere…


Africa Com Awards

We are pleased to announce the eagerly anticipated shortlist of contenders for the 2012 Africa Com Awards.

With a record number of entries, this year has seen stiff competition resulting in a larger field of nominees than ever before..


AfricaCom Awards’ Emily Martyr commented that competition was fierce this year with a record number of entries, up 60% on last year, which itself was a bumper year.
“The quality and number of entries into these awards is testament to the importance of this sector across Africa” she says.

South African judge, Bradley Shaw, the editor of Africa Telecoms magazine, also confirmed that
the tech economy and digi-sphere on the African continent is an exciting space to play in.  All of this year’s entries were outstanding and it has been a difficult task to select only a few per category.”

Looking at the shortlist, digital music has made a significant breakthrough and mobile money applications and solutions continue to dominate the arena as does the Orange Group who are a force to be recognised on the continent as can be seen from the number of nominations in the list below.  The expansion of the categories which cover a diverse array of technological touchpoints, is a reminder of just how fast the digital communications landscape is growing and its impact on our every-day lives.

This year also sees the prestigious new Industry Personality of the Year Award – an accolade that will see the best of the best compete shoulder to shoulder and rise as the star of Africa’s telecoms & media industry for 2012. One definitely not to miss – so watch this space.

Judging of the entries is conducted via a panel of international judges who assess the entries independently of one another, ensuring the process is equitable and fair.


Very many congratulations and good luck ! to all the nominees below:


Best Network Improvement
Airtel Nigeria – Airtel Nigeria
Helios Towers Africa – Shared Telecoms Infrastructure
Liquid Telecom – FTTH in Zimbabwe
Orange Group – Orange Cote d’Ivoire
Orange Group – Internet for All
ZTE – Network & Services


Most Innovative Service
Afrique Telecom – VSAT Services
BWired – Open Access Fibre Based ICT Network
Comviva – Airtel MVAS
Econet Wireless – EcoCash
Emerging Market Communications (EMC)
Intersec – Loyalty Management Suite
Orange Group – Deezer
Orange Group – Internet for All
Safaricom – M-PESA Retail Distribution Service
Spice VAS Africa – Music Scorer


Best Quality User Experience sponsored by MTN
Airtel – Airtel MVAS
Orange Group – Enhanced Mobile Browser
Orange Group – Orange Voices
Prezence Digital – Ster Kinekor Smart-Phone App
Sicap – Mobile Money ATM
Safaricom – USSD Self Service Internet Kiosk


Best Cost Efficiency Initiative
ACME / Reime – Energy Management Unit
AfriGIS – Census Progress Watch
Airtel Nigeria – Airtel Nigeria
Conduct Telecom – Last Mile Open Access Fibre Optic Infrastructure
IHS – Cost Efficiency Technology
Orange Group – Low Cost WiFi Hotspots
Safaricom Business – Safaricom Business
ZTE – ZTE Solution


Rural Telecoms Award
Gateway Communication – Mauritius Island Connectivity through CellDirect
Orange Group – Internet for All
Rorotika – SIM Swap
Safaricom – Webbox & USSD Internet Self-Service
Orange Group – Birth Registration
Viettel – Movitel Rural Network


Best Backhaul Solution for Africa
BWired – High Speed Fibre Based Network
Comtech EF Data – Mobile Mackhaul Solution
Dark Fibre Africa – Open Access Infrastructure Provider
Isocel Telecom – Benin Backhaul Network


Best Marketing Campaign
Etisalat Misr – Etisalat Misr Marketing
Mobitainment – Monsta Pops Mega Music Giveaway
MTC – NetMan 4G
Orange Group – Deezer
Prezence Digital – #Mandelastory
Warid Telecom – Kiyitridde


Best Smart-Device for Africasponsored by Gateway
Etisalat Misr – Smart Device
Orange Group – Internet on TV


Best Pan African Initiative
AFRINIC – AFRINIC
Gateway Communications – SADC Terrestrial Rollout
Helios Towers Africa – Infrastructure Sharing Energy Storage System
Sky Vision – Skyvision
Orange Group – West African Cluster Architecture
WIOCC – Seamless, High-Capacity International Connectivity Ring around Africa


The 2012 Mobile Data and Social Media Award
biNu – biNu Social Content Platform
Bozza Mobile – The Bozza.mobi App
Eskimi – Eskimi Mobile Social Network
Motribe – Motribe Mobile Social Networks
Mxit – Mxit
Prezence Digital – #Mandelastory


Industry Personality of the Year
Adiel Akplogan, AFRINIC
Alan Knott-Craig, Cell C
Andile Ngcaba, Convergence Partners
Karel Pienaar, MTN
Ben Sira, Sky Vision
Cheikh Tidiane Mbaye, Orange Group


Changing Lives Award sponsored by Comviva
Etisalat Misr – CSR Initiative ‘Origin’
Orange Group – Mobile Birth Declaration
Orange Group – Tele Diagnostics
Praekelt Foundation – YoungAfricaLive
Safaricom – DAKTARI-1525
Safaricom – Safaricom Business KimMNCHip Project



About AfricaCom Awards
The AfricaCom Awards celebrate and reward excellence in the African Telcoms, Media and ICT Market.  Now in its 5th year, the Awards ceremony is the high-point of the AfricaCom conference and exhibition.  www.africacomawards.com
For more information on how to enter or any other aspect please contact Louisa Rogers, Marketing Director on Louisa.rogers@informa.com or +44 (0) 207 017 5157

Official Charity





With thanks to our 2012 Africa Com Awards Sponsors:










About AfricaCom 2012
AfricaCom is Africa’s largest communications conference & exhibition.  Now in its 15th year, this trailblazing event gathers together 7,000 senior decision-makers from the telecoms, media and ICT industries.  This year a record 200+ speakers will share their vision of Africa’s future communications landscape and the agenda has expanded to incorporate 14 co-located events which will attract new audiences from the apps development, broadcast and business sectors. For more info see: www.comworldseries.com/africa

For further information or to request an interview with any of the shortlisted nominees, please contact:

Elize Engel or Kaz Henderson at Wired Communications
elize@wiredcommunications.co.za Kaz@wiredcommunications.co.za
Tel: +27 21 461 6764

Read this week's Hot Stories in Africa and Middle East



Hot Stories in Emerging Markets

Egypt considering options to develop the mobile sector
http://www.ameinfo.com/egypt-considering-options-develop-mobile-sector-314827?n=industry_Telecoms

Omantel selects Ericsson to deploy 4G/LTE network
http://www.samenacouncil.org/samena_daily_news.php?news=31982

Mobile communications making a difference in South Africa to education, healthcare and farming
http://vodacom.digitalmag.co.za/issue/12/#2/2

Bridging the communication gap in Ghana
http://allafrica.com/stories/201210040954.html

ICASA view on the future of mobile in South Africa
http://blogs.terrapinn.com/mobile-apps/2012/10/03/icasa-regulator-south-african-communications-sector-future-mobile-africa/?utm_source=dlvr.it&utm_medium=twitter


Weekly Webinar

How LTE and High Speed Data will Change Billing
http://webinars.telecoms.com/webinar/mobile-data-billing/

The Com World Series team concentrates on emerging markets in Africa, the Middle East and Eurasia 24/7 – 365 days of the year. You can follow the news with us by joining our online communities.

10 Oct 2012

Fox International: “Africa is our key growth point going forwards”

Alessandro Tucci, SVP at Fox International
Alessandro Tuci,
SVP & General Manager Africa,
Fox International

Alessandro Tucci, SVP & General Manager Africa at Fox International, on how to successfully launch new channels and balanced bouquets in small emerging markets, and the unique potential he sees in Africa.


Can you give us a brief overview of which emerging markets Fox is involved in?
Fox has been actively working in emerging markets for the past 20 years. We started the business in Latin America with one channel, and today we are the leading pay-TV channel operator on the continent with 21 channels presently in market.
We have also had great success in Asia – our operation started in Japan but quickly moved into markets such as India, where we have very successfully learnt how to localise international TV brands to ensure that they have resonance within the market.
Eastern Europe and Africa have been our key focus over the last number of years, with Africa being our key growth point going forward. In both these regions we provide smart innovative programmes that entertain and educate audiences across all demographics and on all platforms.
Understanding our local markets and what their individual content requirements are is key to creating successful channel bouquets.

What are some of the key lessons you have taken away with regards to developing pay-TV channels in such markets?
Our strategy is very clear. Be opportunistic in even smaller emerging markets creating channels that are relevant for audiences and platforms: a mix of international brands and content with locally sourced relevant content.
We always leverage from our global Hubs to launch new channels, but the clear intention to move into local offices as soon as possible and to create bespoke channels for each region.
We believe in localisation and not in corporate central offices. In order to make good channels we need to be close and be relevant to our platforms, our audiences and our advertisers

What unique attributes do you think Africa possesses in this regard?
Africa leap-frogs when it comes to technology – the continent is a late market compared to the rest of the world (in terms of penetration of pay-TV, number of platforms, advertising and data measurement) but is surfing the technology divide to decrease the gap.
This means that as a company we need to be aware of the manner in which African audiences engage with content, and consistently ensure that our distribution methods are relevant for the market.
Further to this, the continent is also culturally very diverse, and we believe that we have the ability to localise our premium international brands and content to ensure that they satisfy local tastes and resonate with our viewers here.
An example of this is the creation of a new National Geographic channel brand, called Nat Geo Gold, which is bespoke to Africa and structured for an African audience.
As Africa is very often starved of positive content about its people and places, one of our core lessons from other emerging markets that we will use here is to ensure that we editorially deliver content that audiences see as culturally relevant and positive.

How do you plan to create balanced bouquets for the local market?
We have internationally developed a full bouquet, so key would be duplicate this bouquet ensuring that we deliver entertainment channels with our Fox-branded channels, factual programming delivered through the National Geographic portfolio of channels and lastly lifestyle content through 24 Kitchen. These content tentpoles serve to deliver a complete holistic offering for new platforms targeting African audiences.
In various markets such as LatAm we have also been cognisant of content requirements that are very specifically localised. We have created local channels with largely local content that speak specifically to these markets and serve to enhance our international bouquet.
Understanding that each territory is different is key to our business ethos – this means that even though we introduce international TV brands into the market, we ensure localisation through our programming strategies, our on-air communications and where feasible through the acquisition of local content.

Alessandro will be speaking at the AfricaCast 2012 event (co-located with AfricaCom the continent's largest telecoms, media & ICT event), taking place in Cape Town on 14th-15th November. For more information and to register please visit http://africacast-event.com/ or http://www.comworldseries.com/africa