Here’s a very basic question: who is bigger, the station or
the stars?
KTN is clearly undergoing something of an attempted
renaissance, as reflected by the recent spate of double-page spreads trumpeting
their revised line-up of news anchors. Partially in reaction, I assume, Citizen
TV has been running exceptionally similar ads over the last couple of weeks in
the Nation.
Back to my question. The obvious problem with building your
stations’ brand around its’ stars’ brands is that said stars, as we have seen
in this market time and time again, are not fixed to any certain constellation.
Today KTN, then off to Citizen, then NTV, then K24, then back to KTN, then off
to Cartoon Network, and so on…
To me there is a certain ‘bi-polar-ish-ness’ to this ad. The
headline is kind of bold, though not prominent enough – “Your Authoritative
News Team” - which at least reflects an admirable attempt to position the KTN brand in a particular
territory, though whether said position is the correct one is a separate question.
On the other had, this ad is screaming “Look at the people
we have, look at our stars!!!” What
this ad says to me is that there is a certain lack of confidence at KTN, a
niggling belief that the station/brand is only as good as the line-up of people
that it has reading from their iPads in front of the camera.
I would say that KTN are very much falling into the trap of
abiding by the conventions of the
category. Essentially what happened is that Citizen TV disrupted the category some 5 to 7 years ago by building and
focusing upon their all-star cast, but what was disruptive has now become the convention…
Essentially what this ad says to me is that the reason that I should watch the KTN news
is the ensemble of people who present it. The glaring weakness with this
argument is that if said people were to leave does it therefore mean that I
should stop watching KTN News? Is there no deeper principle/philosophy that
drives KTN’s editorial and presentation style, and is it not this
principle/philosophy (brand position) that should actually be driving which
channel I choose to watch come 9pm and the onset of the desperate need to feed
myself with the latest gossip I mean news from Kenya’s political scene…
A useful analogy is drawn from the film business.
Undoubtedly stars have ‘pulling power’ – if you are a fan of Brad Pitt then no
doubt you will want to go and see his next film. However a better analogy from
the film business would be the ‘franchises’. James Bond is a brand, he/it has a position, a personality,
values, a mission, a vision, a ‘visual language’, a ‘tone of voice’ and so on.
We all went to see Skyfall because it was the latest offering from the James
Bond brand, not (primarily) because it starred Daniel Craig…
The point is that what KTN needs to be focusing on is its brand.
The key question for the people at the Standard Group is this: ‘How shall we
convincingly and competitively differentiate
or news offering from that of the other brands on the market?’ Truth be told
their ad here demonstrates zero
differentiation – in essence it says “we’re just like Citizen (and NTV for that matter) but with a
different set of faces/stars and we hope that you’ll prefer our set of
faces/stars to theirs.”
There is of course a wider game at play which is to do with
the relative positioning’s of the various TV station brands as a whole, with
Citizen being ‘of the people, for the people’, NTV and KTN appearing to battle
(it seems to me) for a similar ‘middle-class urban Kenyan’ audience, KBC being
I don’t know where, QTV looking like it’s got it’s guns aimed squarely at
Citizen and KISS making a genuine attempt to carve out a distinct niche for
themselves.
Back however to KTN News, which is a sub-brand of KTN,
bearing in mind though the need for the KTN ‘mother-brand’ to sort it’s mind
out about who it is and who it’s for.
What sort of steps could KTN be taking to begin building a
distinct and competitive brand identity and position for itself? My ideas as follows
are merely thought starters, but the questions raised are questions that have
to be answered if KTN News (and I am old enough to remember how KTN broke the
monotony of ‘Leo katika ikulu ya state house') is to survive and thrive.
Do the news anchors (men) have to wear suits? How about they drop the ties and go for the more casual approach? How about dress policy is
afro-centric? Do they have to stand in front of an animated graphic just
because everyone else does? How about sofas instead of black leather ‘executive’
chairs? What about the language? Should they start slipping in some sheng? Or should
they hire some professors and become Kenya’s home of the ‘Queens English?’
Set design? Graphics design? How about the opening theme
tune? Less dramatic? More dramatic (which would be hard)? More hip-hop, more
benga? It’s all part of the package…
It even comes down to the choice of anchors. All young and
pretty? All old and wise? Only left-handers? Do we really need a weather report?
How about we get a farmer to read the weather report, seeing after all it’s
farmers who really need to know if it’s going to rain or not…
These are just a few of the many questions that one would
have to answer in designing a distinct brand identity for KTN news. The ultimate
question as always though would have to be: what do you fundamentally stand
for? The answer give at present is ‘authoritative’, which essentially means ‘news
you can trust’, news which is objective, balanced and truthful. Now whilst I have
no argument in principle with this position, I do wonder how distinctive it is
in this market (it’s not), and until KTN News develops a distinctive position
it will continue to struggle for viewers. What the exact way forward for KTN is
I do not know right now, but I do know that essentially aping the way that
Citizen does it and hiding behind a no doubt expensively-assembled roster of
transient stars will only get them so far…
Tv and radio stations need to learn from print- it is not the personality that is big, rather it is the brand. Reason why the Standard, (part of the larger Standard group where KTN falls under) does not tout its editors- nor do the rest of the dailies.
ReplyDeleteI believe this showcase of the KTN team was a reaction to what Citizen TV did on the Nation newspaper. A common response by competitors in advertising- try and match them.
I agree, KTN and any other station or organization should not fall into the thinking that the personalities they have on board should define or stand for the larger brand. is a no-no