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Why did True Love and Drum fail?
Djinn
#21 Posted : Wednesday, March 24, 2010 11:35:58 AM
Rank: Elder

Joined: 11/13/2008
Posts: 1,565
@muganda - I was not casting aspersions on Jacqui Thom - just the old guard. I recall reading drum as a kid and teen (yes). Those days they would have a sexy model on the cover but the content was so riveting and the written style akin to writings by Meja Mwangi and David Mailu - sex scandals, political intrigues, murder stories. I still recall the in depth stories of Idi Amin's peculiarities and the SRB, also the murder of Jackson Angaine's daughter and all the intrigues related to it (the case involved a famous criminal lawyer of those days, Byron Georgiadis)...and at some point one of its editors I think he was called Bundeh Garth, was arrested and tortured in those dark political days. It was a poor man's "weekly Review" complete with a sexy cover girl.

Anyway, I think Jacqui Thom did a good job, through the name Drum and the connotations behind DRUM (and drumbeat) would never have worked for the up market.

While we mourn that stable of magazines, and on the issue of media self regulation (or the glaring lack of it), there is another stable of magazines that prints drivel, though its flagship publication on motoring is well supported by motor dealerships....
Juma
#22 Posted : Wednesday, March 24, 2010 12:04:15 PM
Rank: Member

Joined: 10/12/2006
Posts: 24
@ DJINN - great insight. I too agree that Drum limited the readership by appealing to high society (who is interested in how an ambassador's wife spends her day?).

As the income reduced from lower sales consider the increased operating costs incurred for glossier and thicker pages, higher salaries due to promotions, et al.

I wonder who the failure can be pinned on... Would it be the local management (Carol Mandi and her team) for poor strategy or 24 Media? Food for thought.
mukiha
#23 Posted : Wednesday, March 24, 2010 12:48:22 PM
Rank: Elder

Joined: 6/27/2008
Posts: 4,114
The assumption that a magazine must have high circulation o be profitable is not valid! Thus you do not have to sell to the $2/day income group - they don't have the money to buy newspapers, let alone magazines!

I once did consultancy work for a Kenyan magazine which targeted senior corporate managers [and their wannabes!]. Circulation averaged 1,200 copies per month - one large Kenyan corporate had a subscription of 200 copies that it used to give to its key customers!]

Street sales were less than 100 copies per month, the rest was through subscription. Cover price was sh200 and this was ten years ago - no wonder street sales were so low.

This magazine had a gross turnover of between sh800k and 1m each month - from advertising. KQ used to book the back page in blocks of six months at a cost of sh180k each. DT Dobie would block the inside front cover for several months at sh230k.

Inside pages would get 3 - 4 full-page ads per month at sh150k each.

Printing cost for the magazine averaged sh250k per month and other production costs [writers' fees and administration would take another sh150k]

That would leave about sh500k for the owner per month....

That the magazine still went bankrupt! Couldn't pay printers; couldn't pay writers etc!!

Why?

Why?

Why?

Simple:- The ME (Managing Editor, for the uninitiated) kept withdrawing too much money from the business! Eventually, it had to fold - and that was quite a shame!

I tell this story to dispel the popular belief that you have to sell to all the economic groups to survive.

In a previous thread, I related the story of how DEACONS survived by up-scaling its target market and completely ignoring the lower income groups. Same happened to BATA. And both survived... and today they are very successful.

Why did EAM Close down? Give me time, I will find out
Nothing is real unless it can be named; nothing has value unless it can be sold; money is worthless unless you spend it.
anasazi
#24 Posted : Wednesday, March 24, 2010 12:59:36 PM
Rank: Veteran

Joined: 6/8/2007
Posts: 675
@mukiha, quite insightful.
Form is temporary, class is permanent
fantony
#25 Posted : Wednesday, March 24, 2010 1:00:53 PM
Rank: Member

Joined: 11/6/2006
Posts: 276
now we have an answer...

i used this phrase elsewhere... eating profits with a big spoon...
digitek1
#26 Posted : Wednesday, March 24, 2010 1:13:05 PM
Rank: Veteran

Joined: 2/3/2010
Posts: 1,797
Location: Kenya
Why did the closure come so soon after NMG was kicked/bought out? were they so vital...or could the magazines 'comeback' under fully owned NMG subsidiary?

Anyway I miss the Nightnurse and the casanova diaries..he could teach @magigi 1 or 2 things..
I may be wrong..but then I could be right
Djinn
#27 Posted : Wednesday, March 24, 2010 2:53:30 PM
Rank: Elder

Joined: 11/13/2008
Posts: 1,565
@mukiha - while on circulation - I believe many publishers exaggerate circulation figures to lure advertisers. I also believe subscriptions/sales are a thin revenue stream - the real money is in the adverts. As with the mag I mentioned above on motoring, given the thin competition in the market for such exclusive magazines (other than it, is the AA Published Autonews), local distributors (and therefore the principals they represent who fund advertising of different cars like Mercedes, Nissan, Toyota) on have two such channels - so this magazine gets 3-4 adverts per issue and I highly doubt circulation could be more than 2000 copies in Kenya.

At least with AutoNews, the content is rich, behind it is a REAL editorial board of suitably qualified persons....

In a different post I commented about a property magazine that was plagiarising left, right and centre and accruing huge revenues from adverts from banks, property developers, interior design houses, etc etc. I once asked at an outlet that stocked that magazine about how it was performing - rather than give sales figures, the shop attendant said that at the end of each month the publisher would send someone to collect the stock and replace with the new edition....so really its window dressing meant to assure advertisers that the magazine sells when in reality it does not...well, not as much as touted.

Just read a note from Hachette Livre - online content is eating into newspapers and magazines....non-fiction is also highly pirated and soon fiction too will be. Such is the environment that established publishers have to contend with and it perhaps explains the gradual departure of these foreign magazines from Kenya (East Africa).
smano
#28 Posted : Wednesday, March 24, 2010 4:27:53 PM
Rank: Elder

Joined: 12/13/2006
Posts: 2,589
I'm impressed by the insights behind Kusadikika's and Mukiha's posts (never mind if they don't agree), but I beleive that other than the reasons that Mukiha is going to dig up for our benefit, majority of the target market for the same magazines (well off college guys, the middle and upper income working class, etc) have so much access to info on the net (such ah this site) that there's really no point of buying a magazine for stale news!

Case in point - most of us read the story of Eric Wainaina's infidelity in a blog, spread the news on FB and other blogs ( e.g. Wazua) and before long everyone knew the whole story. If a magazine interviews Eric Wainaina after the whole debacle intending to publish the aftermath, insiders will tell the storo to a friend and before long the rumour mill will be on the net and the cycle continues!

We have to face the fact that technology has become so advanced, so cheap and so accessible that info on magazines is now just for keeps! One of the pastors at Mavuno gave a classic example - in our days, getting a porn VHS tape was like finding pink diamonds. Now, free porn is on the internet at the touch of a button and even kids in prima have internet enabled phones! So EAM folding up is no surprise, a shame by no means, but no surprise.

Adapt or die! Not only in business - even in your workplace!

P.S. Guess how I found out that EAM is/might be folding up? You guessed it!
BEER IS LIVING PROOF THAT GOD LOVES US AND WANTS US TO BE HAPPY!
slykat
#29 Posted : Wednesday, March 24, 2010 9:06:33 PM
Rank: Member

Joined: 2/20/2007
Posts: 359
Very very interesting perspectives....particularly, Kusadikika is the rule of thumb and Mukiha is the exception...and to think a close pal is now on her second issue of a new sports mag for the Kenyan mkt! Phew! I In my spare time I freelance for a Europe based 15 yr old magazine and the reason it does well is because content is in response to what readers ask for and competition for the niche mkt is minimal! But still my ME has adamantly refused to adopt online publication! I wonder how long this can go on without doing kamikaze.
Phaoro
#30 Posted : Wednesday, March 24, 2010 9:09:58 PM
Rank: Member

Joined: 10/6/2009
Posts: 164
The print media as a whole is in a declining phase, most of the management in the print media are of an older generation and are having a hard time coming to terms with the rise of web content. This new monster "Web" has brought new challenges to print media. These traditionaly all print companies have to come up with web content business models that are sustainable over the long term and can generate revenue.

Today people are quickly getting what they would traditionaly get from print publication on the web and at almost no cost. Plus you get video and sound and no clutter(paper)

Now are you likely to go out there and buy a magazine? The last few times I have bought magazines, it has sorely been to collect for sentimental value.
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