Title: SABC PRESENTATION TO PARLIAMENT
1SABCPRESENTATION TO PARLIAMENT
Robin Nicholson Chief Financial Officer
16 March 2007
2Introduction
- The SABC has formulated a starting point for a
revised funding model discussion over the last 2
years through its internal management and Board
process and through some Public participation in
the PBS colloquilliums. -
- The funding mix remains between Commercial and
Public funding sources but with a revitalised
strategy for growing Public funding and ensuring
a more accountable and transparent allocation of
the proceeds of Public funding. - New Commercial revenues will be sought but more
from non advertising sources including New Media - The SABC will also actively engage in
productivity growth initiatives and some direct
cost reduction activities - In seeking to revitalise its public funding and
grow the commercial elements the SABC will be
faced with even greater PBS requirements as
specified in the Act and as suggested under the
DTT announcements. - The SABC will require even greater support form
stakeholders to achieve its goals in the face of
increasing local and international competition.
These forces will drive competition for scarce
resources and fragment commercial revenues.
3FUNDING MODEL FOR SABC
4Summary Income Statement
5Key Issues and Trends Consolidated Income
Statement
- Revenue from all sources is under pressure from
internal dimensions and required changes in
trading policy. Classical advertising revenue in
particular will face increased competition from
new entrants - New revenue streams will show strong growth but
relative size of advertising based revenues
continue to dominate. Revenue mix is largely
unchanged - TV licence revenues requires a rate increase to
revitalise growth. New strategies are in lower
yielding areas such as licence inspection
services - Audience changes and schedule instability are
having a significant impact on revenue combined
with management instability has led to a 5 loss
of share worth R125m on budget R165m at rate card - The management team is at full strength but a
significant amount of work is required and
benefits can only be expected in the second half
of the next financial year. The TV fix will take
at least 18 months - Radio will continue to under perform relative to
its share and growth is mainly driven by
pricing. Regional splits are not available until
the Radio management system (Dalet) is stable
6Key Issues and Trends Content Costs
- 2008 will be the final year of the big content
investments to meet ICASA licence conditions.
This will continue to result in an unstable
schedule and line up changes. - Content Enterprises will continue to invest
heavily in improving the quality of content
including an allocation to Research and
Development of shows and formats. - Content sales to new channels and operators
offer a significant opportunity over the near
term but are unlikely in the current fiscal. - Certain projects that are housed in Content
Enterprises are transversal and increase the
overhead load on platforms. This model needs to
be investigated as significant overhead
duplication could arise in future. - The role clarity between Television and content
has been done but direction in ensuring
implementation is now required. - The performance of Sport will be key to revenue
and audience performance on all platforms with
two World Cup events in 2008 budget ICC Cricket
and Rugby World Cup. Sales needs to strengthen
performance in this area. In particular the use
of sales agents must be addressed. - News has requested significant increases in
Current affairs on Radio. Although the output is
required further work around the HCS strategy to
achieve the outputs is clearly required.
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8Funding
9Key funding issues mix between commercial
public
- The SABC needs to increase revenue from non
advertising sources to dilute advertising
influence on scheduling and content choice - Increase Public funding
- Increase funding from the sale of content
- Increase revenue from Brand exploitation and
consumer products - Improve the use of trade exchanges
- Launch new platforms to exploit content
10Key funding issues public funding
- Licence income remains a core element of the
funding strategy but needs to be more efficient
in collection and with transparent allocation to
Public Broadcasting
- In a converged space can we account for the
policy implications that Public money should not
fund/subsidise commercial activities? - Ring fenced income to support public services
funding - Revise the allocation model for services and
programmes to be based on programme and services
deliverables. This is more transparent with
greater public accountability - Rights ownership may vest in public entity and
needs further investigation - Tax exemption improves funding efficiency by 29
- Apply for VAT exemption as procures public
services 14 gain - Change the SAMRO contract as does not support
commercial activities 2,5 gain
11Key funding issues public funding
- Increase sources for licence income
- Multi channel television will enable better
collection - Enforce multi channel (Multichoice) subscriber
base payments - Deploy Mobile TV licence revenue strategy
- Introduce a Broadcast levy on all new TV
equipment - Enforcement through TV inspectorate
- Apply for a rate increase to counter effects of
inflation
12Key funding issues public funding
- Improving other sources of Public funding
- Develop funding relationships with International
foundations that fund PSB programming without
compromising editorial independence - Carnegie, Rockefeller foundation, SABC Foundation
for CSI, The Wellcome Trust UNESCO etc - Direct funding of Public programming by
Government departments and institutions - Technology recapitalisation
- Corporate social responsibility opportunities
13Key funding issues commercial funding
- Growth will come from improving efficiency in all
revenue streams in the short term
- TV Airtime exploitation will move to overnight
ratings and seek to remove discounts and achieve
average station pricing for all time channels - Introduce advertising Transmitter splits to
reduce free audiences and offer more choice to
advertisers. - All consumer product offerings will be
consolidated into one sales channel SABC Retail
to focus on channel management for brand and
content exploitation - New media offerings will focus on
- Mobile Content Offerings (WASP ring tones)
- Mobile Service offerings (WASP directories etc)
- Airtime exploitation with platforms (Win iKhaya)
- Content creation will move to Content
Enterprises as new unit - Consistent and policy based use of trade
exchanges
14Summary Balance Sheet
15Cash Flow Statement
16MTEF technology capital expenditure plan
17MTEF contingent capital expenditure
18Key Issues and Trends Capital Expenditure
- While a significant number of project are making
their way through the approval process the
execution of the projects is significantly behind
schedule. The BETPRO is intended to assist in
execution but the shortage of skilled
technicians, project managers and engineers
remains a stumbling block to execution. - Project implementation and monitoring is now key
to managing the risk of non delivery. The SABC
must be able to meet the broadcast requirements
for 2010 in 2009. 2008 must be a key year for
delivering the promised projects.
19MTEF funding plan impact
Note As such, the contingency capital spending
would reduce the cash holding and thus reduce the
net interest received as per the cash flow
statement.
20Universal service Low Power Transmitters
- Given short-term coverage constraints and that
high sites have almost run their course
consider alternative technology of low power
localised transmitters - Would provide coverage to a patchwork of
villages/communities relatively quickly and at no
cost to intended audiences - Lump sum of R50 million and annual social
investment of R5 million per year - R50 million will be paid over to Sentech an
additional request in terms of their MTEF
21Universal service Low Power Transmitters
22Universal service DTH
- Two opportunities were identified for the SABC
- Platform owner
- Subscription TV application with Sentech (option
to expand to cable) - Business plan due diligence exercise conducted
- Critical Business Risks
- Ability for market to sustain multiple new
players - New Free-to-air (DTT) channels services will
dilute the value proposition - Funding requirement R8bn
- Content supplier
- SABC biggest producer aggregator of content in
Africa - distinct advantage as a content
provider - Packaging of SABC branded channels
- Exploitation of sports and other rights
- Developing programming propositions for new
players - Increasing content sales through licensing of
content - Sale of archive content
- The following opportunities exist for
distribution of content - Partner with platform owners as a strategic
content supplier - Supply fully packaged channels to platform owners
23Universal service DTH recommendations
- Opportunity 1 Platform Owner
- Little to no public service value for SABC
- High level of investment over long period of time
making it a very high risk opportunity - Lack of a comprehensive investment and decision
making framework with criteria to evaluate from
both a public service and investment point of
view - Pursue only if SABC has strong partners that can
fund the rollout - Opportunity 2 Content Supplier
- Lower risk, although reliant on establishing
distribution partnerships - Does not require as much investment
- SABC has significant experience in content
- Not dependent on SABC owning a platform
- Pursue as it presents potential new revenue
opportunities
24Universal service DTH regulatory risks
- Issues were submitted to ICASA dated 31 January
2007 - The need for ICASA to develop regulations on
must-carry as per ECA - ICASA must determine the extent to which pay TV
operators must carry the television programmes of
the public broadcaster, subject to commercially
agreed terms - Suggested to ICASA that it should impose a
must-carry rule on pay TV operators and should
publish these rules before awarding licences - The need for ICASA to amend the regulations on
national sporting events - The ECA amended the law on national sporting
events and the regulations must now also be
amended in order to provide for a deadlock
breaking mechanism - Argued that ICASA should do this before issuing
licences - The need for ICASA to set public interest
programming obligations for pay TV operators - Argued that all tiers of broadcasters should make
public interest contributions such as for
instance the obligation to provide public access
channels. - The need for ICASA to ensure that SABC has access
to subscriber databases of subscription TV
licencees in order to verify TV licence holders
25Universal service DTT
- National policy to migrate from analogue
terrestrial broadcasting to digital broadcasting
by 2015 - Offers a platform for distribution of more
content both during and after switch-off on a
free-to-air basis - Two primary opportunities
- Platform owner
- Content Supplier
- However, alternative business models also present
themselves which impact on the funding model - Platform owner within a walled garden
- Content supplier in an open space
- Content supplier to a walled garden
26Universal service DTT new proposed frequency
plan
- Sentech and ICASA have developed a new frequency
plan for DTT roll-out which allows for four
national multiplexes, instead of the two allowed
for under the previous plan. - It is being suggested that the two additional
multiplexes be reserved for use by DVB-H
operators exclusively. - In this way, the new plan does not provide for
additional capacity for DTT. - The new plan would require extensive analogue to
analogue migration on all the free-to-air
channels. This would impact significantly on SABC
television audiences and may mean that up to
10.7m viewers would need to retune their
televisions or replace their antennas. - In addition, the new plan would severely curtail
further analogue migration which would impact on
the SABCs ability to meet universal access goals
before switchover occurs.
27Universal service DTT new proposed frequency
plan
- For these reasons, the SABC should not give its
support to the new proposed frequency plan - The plan will effectively result in a transfer of
social value from the 10.7 million viewers in the
lower LSMs to viewers in the higher LSMs who
would be able to afford the DVB-H devices to
access the DVB-H signal - The SABC finds this disturbing and cannot accept
or support such a plan - If it is decided that additional national
multiplexes are required for DTT, the possibility
of M-Net and CSN conducting a hard migration
should be investigated. - Any additional frequencies that are made
available must be made available for additional
public service delivery
28Universal service DTT - recommendations
- Opportunity 1 Platform owner
- Ownership of multiplex enables public service
delivery, including delivery of services such as
24 hour news - Control the platform on which SABC licenced
channels operate - Limited impact on cost and on current business of
SABC - Subject to final policy from DoC
- Remains a viable and lucrative opportunity
- Opportunity 2 Content Supplier
- Opportunity to exploit current and future content
on free-to-air - Supply new channels or individual programmes
- Offers new revenue opportunities within current
business model - Opportunities for subscription channels at a
later stage - Not dependent on DoC policy
- Remains a viable and lucrative opportunity
29Another key issue people and skills
- Your only as good as your people and the
decisions they make
- Introduce key elements of the SABC academy
through a centre of excellence that focuses on
commercial decision making and utilisation of
productivity tools. - Make sure that staff are competent to use new
systems - Motivation comes from an empowering workplace
where accountability is wanted not forced - A strong retention strategy is required
- Succession planning will ensure sustainability in
management and reduce risk - Remuneration must be market related
- Performance measurement and management is not a
negotiable
30Thank you
31GLOSSARY
- DTT Digital Terrestrial Television
- DTH Direct to Home (satellite)
- DVB-H Digital Video Broadcasting Handheld
- DRM Digital Radio Mondiale
- DAB Digital Audio Broadcasting
- WG Digital Broadcasting Migration Working Group
- ECA Electronic Communications Act No. 36 of 2006
- FTA Free- to-air
- ICASA Independent Communications Authority of SA
- IPTV Internet Protocol Television
- LSM Living Standards Measure