
As Africa’s broadcasting and streaming ecosystems continue to evolve, the concept of affordable access is increasingly defined by how content is designed, delivered, and sustained rather than by data price reductions alone. This was the central message shared by Tapiwa Mudzamba, Chief Operating Officer of the Zimbabwe Broadcasting Corporation (ZBC), ahead of his participation at the OTT Content Streaming Summit – Africa 2026 in Cape Town, South Africa, from 24 – 25 February 2026.
Mudzamba explained that audience value preferences are time-dependent, with convenience, content, and affordability each playing distinct but interconnected roles. In the short term, convenience is the primary driver of adoption, content drives retention, and affordability enables continued use. Audiences, he noted, do not seek cheaper data first; they look for something worth watching or listening to, delivered effortlessly and at a cost that does not place undue financial strain on them.
While affordability and convenience may attract initial attention, Mudzamba emphasised that content becomes the non-negotiable foundation for long-term sustainability, particularly within broadcasting and digital platform ecosystems. Audiences may sample a service because it is easy to access or low-cost, but long-term loyalty is only achieved when content consistently resonates with their interests, identities, and lived experiences.
From an audience perspective, better content is defined by relevance, timeliness, emotional connection, and trust. Local languages, familiar voices, culturally grounded stories, live events, breaking news, and credible information all contribute to sustained engagement. Where content quality is poor, reduced data costs alone are insufficient to maintain audience loyalty.
Mudzamba further highlighted that convenience remains the strongest behavioural driver in daily media consumption, especially for mass audiences. Services that offer simple, reliable access, minimal friction, fast start-up, and compatibility with basic or low-end devices consistently outperform those with complex or unreliable user experiences, even when content quality is high.
Affordability, particularly in data pricing, primarily functions as an enabler rather than a motivator. While price reductions can remove barriers to entry, they do not, in and of themselves, generate loyalty. Audiences respond more positively to predictable, fair costs and low-risk trial models that allow them to engage without fear of wasting limited data resources.
Reflecting on ZBC’s own experience, Mudzamba acknowledged the recurring challenge of delivering high-quality, compelling content within tight affordability constraints, especially amid rising production costs and limited consumer spending power. Premium content, such as live sports and national events, often incurs high acquisition and transmission costs, while audiences expect content to remain freely accessible or at very low cost. ZBC navigated this tension by prioritising high-impact public value content, optimising production through shared resources and technology upgrades, leveraging partnerships to offset costs, maintaining free-to-air and low-data distribution, and phasing content investments to test audience response before scaling.
Looking across the African market, Mudzamba identified the greatest opportunity to expand access at the intersection of localised content, low-cost formats, and ecosystem partnerships. He noted that re-engineering content into lightweight, local-first formats, bundling content across free-to-air, digital, and telecom platforms, and pursuing strategic partnerships between broadcasters, telecom operators, creators, and public institutions offer the most scalable path to inclusive growth.
As he prepares to engage with industry leaders at the OTT Content Streaming Summit – Africa 2026, Mudzamba expressed hope for a collective shift in mindset. He stressed that Africa’s streaming future will not be built by technology alone or by price reductions in isolation, but by intentional design around access, relevance, and sustainability. Ultimately, he said, the goal is to build OTT ecosystems that reflect African realities, remain commercially viable, and deliver real, lasting value for audiences, creators, and the wider industry.
To join Mr Mudzamba and other industry leaders, visit the event website HERE.












