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Lose circ fast; build it 'damn slow' - Daily Sun GM Minette FerreiraAs the search for a new editor for the Daily Sun nears its conclusion (the final round of interviews is being held this week), Bizcommunity.com speaks to Minette Ferreira, GM of the Daily Sun, about the paper's circulation drop, how it's clawing back and where to from now sans the legendary publisher and founder, Deon du Plessis, and editor Themba Khumalo. ![]() Minette Ferreira, GM of the Daily Sun
Unfortunately, it's a step we're going to have to take without Deon but I think he taught us well and it's up to us to take it further without him. It [was] definitely... a year of upsets and turmoil. But at the end of the day, many of the senior staff members have been with the paper for five years plus. They've spent a lot of time with Deon and with Themba and really understand the brand and where we're going.
But let me just answer your first question. Our goal was always to reach 500 000 and to keep it there as an average. And, simply put, even at 500 000 it wasn't too economical because, as you say, it's expensive to print that many papers and to distribute them. But the goal was just to be the biggest - no one had ever got there as a daily in South Africa and we wanted to prove a point so that if anyone thinks of the Daily Sun, the first thing you think of is that they're big. And that goal was achieved but we were quite happy to maintain 460 000 plus. In any case, it was unachievable for us to maintain more than 500 000 due to printing restrictions. So we started to lose circulation and the main cause of it was when we switched over to the new distribution system.
Cycad really was not kind to us and it will take time to rebuild. Media24 has spent a huge amount of time and effort to stabilise the system and that's really what I've been spending a lot of my time and attention on since the beginning of last year: ensuring that our structures internally - our own circulation department - working in concert with On the Dot [Media24's logistics division] in terms of Cycad - are communicating with each other and working well together to ensure that these gaps, where we are still struggling, are closed. But is has taken longer than we anticipated. And it has taken its toll.
The way things are looking now, we're going to see an increase in ABCs for the first time [in the 2011 fourth quarter ABCs, which haven't been released yet]. I'm very excited about that and that's also on the back of a cover-price increase in October [from R2.30 to R2.50]. So I'm actually quite upbeat at this stage. Obviously Cycad had a huge influence but I did extensive research last year among readers to test other factors... You start doubting, [wondering] 'if there is something wrong with my product, have they abandoned us?' Deon and I sat through many conversations like this, trying to find the answers. Is it a price issue? Is the economy biting into readers' pockets? But what came back [from the research] was really positive. There was affirmation that the type of content we are carrying is still what they're after and the only criticism really was to give us more - more on how to improve our lives, how to make a difference in terms of my income. People were desperate for information on upliftment and making a change in their lives - and also a great call for more news about things that happens in their community. Not the stuff you get on Sapa [news agency] but the kind of stuff you get in the Daily Sun. News on the grassroots level in the townships that affects their lives... What we also noticed in terms of buyer frequency is there has been a drop-off - and it is because money is just very tight. Where a reader would buy every day of the week, it's now become: 'I can do Mondays, Wednesdays and Fridays. I'm going to have to skip Tuesdays and Thursdays. On Tuesdays and Thursdays, I'll read my brother's copy or my friends's copy'. So there's definitely large amounts of copy sharing and that shows in our [AMPS] readership figures as well. At the same time that our circulation dramatically dropped, our readership went back over 5 million for the first time in a couple of years. At our current circ, we're at a 14-pass-on rate - 14 people per paper - which is huge.
I think in terms of an editorial strategy we need to keep offering a value proposition - that what you buy for that R2.50 is absolutely worthwhile, that the package we offer is really, really good and it's bang for your buck. Compared to other newspapers, we are at the lowest price range but in terms of value, I think we offer the best.
When Sunday Sun [which was launched at the same time as the Daily Sun but within the same stable as Rapport and City Press) came over to Daily Sun [in 2008], I came back and then helped Deon in relaunching the Sunday. So I was away for about 20 months but, pretty much, I was with Deon more or less since launch... When I came back I was the managing editor and from January last year [2010] I was appointed as the general manager.
The first thing we have to ask ourselves before we make a decision - and this is something that Deon said over and over again at news conferences - is: "Will they be talking about this around the factory floor tomorrow morning?" If the answer is 'no', it's out the paper. If the answer is 'yes', it's in. It's such a simple but deep understanding of what makes or breaks a product in my mind...
Deon used to say that the Daily Sun is your friend, your playmate, your companion. And I want an editor who sees the Daily Sun in the same way and will continue that journey with our readers... I just want to add something on the Cycad saga, though. You know, I don't want to make too much of it. So much has been written about it. For me, it's clear and simple. Cycad had a negative impact on Daily Sun circulation and it's taken longer than we expected to realign and get our structures running again. And now it's about climbing back. The thing is that you lose circulation really quickly and you build it damn slow - and that's the phase that we're in now. For more
About Gill Moodie: @grubstreetSAGill Moodie (@grubstreetSA) is a freelance journalist, media commentator and the publisher of Grubstreet (www.grubstreet.co.za). She worked in the print industry in South Africa for titles such as the Sunday Times and Business Day, and in the UK for Guinness Publishing, before striking out on her own. Email Gill at gill@grubstreet.co.za and follow her on Twitter at @grubstreetSA. View my profile and articles... |