Young people who use digital media channels are not interested in identifying with their countries or even their ethnic groups- they are likely to fashion their own language of communication, African media bosses heard this week.

Young people who use digital media channels are not interested in identifying with their countries or even their ethnic groups- they are likely to fashion their own language of communication, African media bosses heard this week.

“The digital natives will not identify with their tribes, less with their country, but more with the interests of their virtual communities,” said Linus Gitahi, group chief executive officer of Nation Media Group which has multimedia operations in Kenya, Uganda and Tanzania.

Gitahi was speaking at the 2009 Africa Media Leadership Conference, which was held in the Ghanaian capital Accra and ended earlier this week.

The media summit, the eighth since the series was launched in 2002, brought together more than 100 chief executive officers and editors-in-chief of African media who debated how their companies could harness and monetise youthful audiences who are increasingly using mobile phones and social networks such as Facebook and Twitter to communicate and access news and information.

Referring to concerns expressed by some delegates that African languages were under threat because of new (informal) languages of communication being fashioned by today’s youth, Gitahi said the advent of digital channels of communication and the accompanying lifestyles were unstoppable and urged his peers to live and thrive in these conditions.

This was indeed the main thrust of the conference, which ran under the theme of “Learning from the future: Africa’s Media Map in 2029”.

The summit is hosted annually by Rhodes University’s Sol Plaatje Institute for Media Leadership (SPI) and Germany’s Konrad Adenauer Stiftung (KAS).

The conference is a platform for African media bosses to meet at the highest possible level to network and discuss key management and leadership challenges confronting the continent.

This year’s conference was attended for the first time by delegates from Egypt, completing the pan-African nature of the series.

Frank Windeck, head of KAS’s Media Programme for Sub-Sahara Africa, and SPI Director Francis Mdlongwa, urged the delegates to break away from conventional management thinking and practice which conditioned managers to lead organisations in conditions of stability, predictability and regularity.

“This is because our real world out there is no longer stable, certain or predictable,” they said in a joint statement, noting that “the usual business plans, business maps and strategies” used by firms were no longer adequate in dealing with today’s “frenetic, complex and ambiguous challenges of our era of profound and rapid change”.

They added: “The traditional solutions of trying to replicate and imitate successful companies and of hoping to learn from their ‘magic’ maps and strategies are dead.

This is because we live in an age increasingly bounded by chaos and some semblance of order. Today’s media leaders must therefore seek out novel maps, novel routes and novel destinations that mark business success by managing the unknowable.”

The four-day summit debated a range of topics crucial to the survival of Africa’s media in the digital age.

There was near unanimity that mobile phones are the media of the future and that African media companies need to find innovative ways of harnessing these to tap into the youth market.

Other major topics discussed at the conference included the growth of broadband in Africa; the challenges of running a social media network in Africa; the role of youth in the news generation process; how traditional media companies could embrace social media networks and leverage them for their businesses; how traditional media could handle user-generated content and the kinds of content that appeal to youths; and the educational role of traditional media in the digital media-scape.

 

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