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BMA Feature: The Future Of Advertising And Subscription Revenue In African Broadcasting

July 13, 2026
Reading Time: 3 mins read
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Once upon a time, the commercial engine of broadcasters (in Africa and indeed across the globe) required little more than a rate card, a sales team and a strong evening schedule. That era is now truly and definitely over. 

Broadcast advertisers now demand the addressability, measurement and accountability – the likes of which they get from global digital platforms. Meanwhile, audiences are showing that they are ready and willing to pay for content – but only on terms that respect their wallets, their data bundles and their viewing habits. 

Good News With Advertising!

Now, the good news for Broadcasters across Africa is that the innovations needed to meet the demands of both advertisers and audiences are no longer imported luxuries. They are indeed within reach of broadcasters across the continent.

On the advertising side, the shift has to be from selling airtime to selling audiences. 

These days, dynamic and addressable ad insertion technologies and capabilities enable a single broadcast stream to carry different messages to different households, transforming inventory that was once sold in bulk into targeted, premium placements.  Also, programmatic pipes connect and carry broadcasters’ inventory to demand far beyond their own sales floors. And AI-powered analytics are finally giving broadcasters what they have long lacked in negotiations with media buyers: credible, granular proof of who is watching, and when. 

So now every view, every listen, and every associated ad impression can be measured and priced — and priced better.

And Why Not Subscribe To Free Content?

Yes. So, even free-to-air content can be subscribed to. Operators need to abandon the one-size-fits-all audience mentality and adopt models built around African market realities, i.e., buying that removes the card-payment barrier; daily and weekly passes designed to match income rhythms; and, more importantly, hybrid tiers that tie low subscription pricing to advertising. We should not forget FAST channels that convert those who cannot-or-will-not-pay viewers and listeners into monetisable, measured audiences rather than lost causes. 

Now, none of this happens without deliberate investment in unified customer data, audience trust building, and commercial teams retrained to sell outcomes rather than slots. 

The conversations we will have at the forthcoming Broadcasters Convention – West Africa 2026 in Accra, Ghana, on 22 – 23 September 2026 will be guided precisely by this. The convention, to my mind, is where broadcast leaders, advertisers and technology partners will examine, candidly and practically, which advertising and subscription innovations are actually producing revenue, and more importantly, how they can adopt and deploy them at scale.

We believe that advertising revenue has not left the African broadcast media sector because audiences are still here. What has changed is the sophistication required to convert both into sustainable income. 

“The tools to properly monetise broadcast audiences across Africa do now finally exist. The media house that moves first will set the market — the rest will rent space in it.”

This article is written by Benjamin Pius (Publisher @ BMA) as part of the forthcoming Broadcasters Convention – West Africa 2026, 22–23 September 2026, Labadi Beach Hotel, Accra, Ghana.

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