• Latest

Featured: Beyond The Spot Ad – Hybrid Revenue Models And The Commercial Logic of Radio Broadcasting In Africa

June 22, 2026

Nigeria: NBC’s Appeal To Reverse Penalties On Broadcast Stations Denied

June 22, 2026
Kenya: TikTok Says It Removed 600,000 “Unsafe” Videos In Commitment To User Safety

Nigeria: TikTok And ICC Launch Digital Commerce Labs To Boost Online Growth

June 22, 2026
TIFF: The Market 2026 Welcomes Six African Film Companies For Landmark Industry Collaboration

TIFF: The Market 2026 Welcomes Six African Film Companies For Landmark Industry Collaboration

June 22, 2026
Egyptian Film ‘El Sett’ Rises To The Top Of MBC Shahid Streaming Charts After Digital Launch

Egyptian Film ‘El Sett’ Rises To The Top Of MBC Shahid Streaming Charts After Digital Launch

June 22, 2026
Nigeria: Switchover To Digital Television Hailed As New Era For Broadcasting And Diver Of Economic Growth

Nigeria: Switchover To Digital Television Hailed As New Era For Broadcasting And Diver Of Economic Growth

June 19, 2026

“Hybrid-By-Design” Is The Future For Digital Broadcasting In Africa – Says Moses Kemibaro

June 19, 2026

On-Site Digitisation Emerging As Safer, More Sustainable Solution For Africa’s Audiovisual Archives – NOA Archives CEO Says

June 19, 2026
Enhancing Connectivity: Seacom Launches New Nairobi-Kampala Terrestrial Network

Enhancing Connectivity: Seacom Launches New Nairobi-Kampala Terrestrial Network

June 19, 2026
South Africa: Blue Label Telecoms Secures ICASA Approval For Cell C Licence Transfer

Nigeria’s NCC Launches Review Of Mobile Termination Rates To Adapt To Market Changes

June 19, 2026
BMA Feature: Demands for Reparatory Justice Intensify Ahead of Ghana’s Global Reparations Conference

BMA Feature: Demands for Reparatory Justice Intensify Ahead of Ghana’s Global Reparations Conference

June 19, 2026
BMA Feature: South Africa Ignites Nationwide E-Waste Campaign to Combat Environmental Risks

BMA Feature: South Africa Ignites Nationwide E-Waste Campaign to Combat Environmental Risks

June 19, 2026
BMA Feature: Zimbabwean Innovator Transforms Polystyrene Waste Into Sustainable Thermal Goods

BMA Feature: Zimbabwean Innovator Transforms Polystyrene Waste Into Sustainable Thermal Goods

June 19, 2026
Monday, June 22, 2026
Broadcast Media Africa
  • Home
  • News & Reports
  • Resources
  • Services
    • Promo: Spotlight Service
  • Events
  • Community
No Result
View All Result
BMA
  • Home
  • News & Reports
  • Resources
  • Services
    • Promo: Spotlight Service
  • Events
  • Community
BMA
Join BMA Network
No Result
View All Result
Home Spotlight

Featured: Beyond The Spot Ad – Hybrid Revenue Models And The Commercial Logic of Radio Broadcasting In Africa

June 22, 2026
Reading Time: 4 mins read
A A

Ask any commercial radio sales director in Africa what keeps them up at night and the answer is rarely about content. It is about the advertiser on the phone asking why they should renew a spot package when they can buy a hyper-targeted digital audio campaign through Spotify’s Audience Network at a fraction of the cost, with a dashboard full of attribution data to justify every cent. 

That conversation is happening in Abidjan, Kampala, Dar es Salaam, and Cape Town right now — and the stations winning it are not the ones defending the old model. They are the ones who have already built something more sophisticated in its place.

“The stations winning the revenue conversation are not defending the old model. They are the ones who have already built something more sophisticated in its place.”

The entry point for most is programmatic advertising. 

Rather than selling airtime in blunt 30-second blocks negotiated by a sales team, programmatic platforms such as AdsWizz, Triton Digital’s marketplace and the DAX (Digital Audio Exchange) network allow broadcasters to serve dynamically targeted audio ads against listener data in real time — by location, language, time of day and behavioural signals. 

The CPM yields are significant: well-targeted programmatic audio campaigns regularly return between US$18 and US$45 per thousand impressions on African digital radio inventory, compared with US$3 to US$8 per thousand impressions for traditional spot airtime. 

Nigeria’s Beat 99.9 FM was among the first in West Africa to layer AdsWizz across its streaming output, unlocking a new revenue tier from international advertisers who had previously considered the station’s digital footprint too thin to buy against. Within eighteen months, digital advertising had grown from under 8 per cent of total revenue to nearly 27 per cent.

The second pillar of the hybrid model is subscription. 

The instinct of many broadcasters is to resist this — radio, after all, has always been free. But the evidence from markets where tiered listening has been introduced is compelling. South Africa’s Primedia digital properties introduced an ad-light premium listening tier in 2024 at R49 per month, targeting the commuter audience that valued uninterrupted content above all else. 

Within a year, it had enrolled over 85,000 subscribers — not replacing advertising revenue, but sitting cleanly alongside it and delivering a predictable monthly income that the sales cycle never can. The lesson is not that listeners will pay for radio per se. They will pay for a version of it that respects their time, their inbox and their intelligence.

The third strand — and the one most stations are still leaving entirely on the table — is e-commerce integration. 

When a morning show presenter recommends a skincare brand, a local restaurant, or a festival ticket, the listener’s purchase intent peaks at that moment. Stations that have built shoppable links into their app experience, integrated affiliate partnerships with platforms such as Jumia and Takealot, or developed direct merchandise and events ticketing through their digital properties are converting that intent into immediate, trackable revenue. 

Ghana’s Adom FM has pioneered this model most effectively on the continent, building an events and e-commerce arm that now generates over 15 per cent of the group’s total revenue — income that would not exist within a traditional broadcast commercial model.

With the Radio Broadcasting Convention – Africa 2026 now days away, the revenue conversations at the event, which will take place at “The Venue Green Park in Johannesburg” on the 1st and 2nd of July 2026, will have an edge to them that earlier conventions did not. 

Budgets are tighter, advertiser expectations are higher, and the streaming platforms that once felt like distant competition are now sitting inside the same media plans. 

The broadcasters have a hybrid revenue strategy already in motion — one that stacks programmatic, subscription and commerce into a coherent commercial architecture — that will not just survive the next decade. They will define it. Those still relying on the spot ad alone should use the next few days to ask themselves, seriously, whether that is still a viable position to hold.

Written by Benjamin Pius (Publisher @ BMA) as part of the forthcoming Radio Broadcasting Convention – Africa 2026, 1–2 July 2026, The Venue Green Park, Johannesburg, South Africa.  Register and view the full programme →

RADIO BROADCASTING CONVENTION – AFRICA 2026  (RAD26)

●  Dates: 1–2 July 2026

●  Venue: The Venue, Green Park – Johannesburg, South Africa

●  Theme: Intelligent Radio and Audio for the Next Generation of Listeners

●  Register: radio.broadcastingandmedia.net

Share Tweet Post Email
Tags: Adom FMAudience NetworkBeat 99.9 FMBroadcast Media AfricaBroadcastingRadio BroadcastingSpotify
Share199Tweet125
Previous Post

Nigeria: NBC’s Appeal To Reverse Penalties On Broadcast Stations Denied

Publisher
-
Benjamin Pius
Publisher
-
Benjamin Pius

 About us

Our goal is always to keep industry stakeholders abreast of opportunities in technology and service innovations that are and will shape Africa’s broadcasting and media industry via quality news, information, intelligence and insight .

 Contact us

+44 (0) 207 712 1526
info@broadcastingandmedia.com
BSP Communications Limited
Level 37, One Canada Square
Canary Wharf
London, E14 5AB, United Kingdom

No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • News & Reports
  • Resources
  • Services
    • Promo: Spotlight Service
  • Events
  • Community
This website uses cookies. By continuing to use this website you are giving consent to cookies being used. Visit our Privacy Policy.