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Wabona
and the internet opportunity for pay-per-view video streaming in
Africa
L.S.M Kabweza, Technology Zimbabwe
March 04, 2013
View
this article on the Technology Zimbabwe website
We were recently in touch with Simukayi Mukuna, one of the two co-founders
of a new pay-per-view video streaming service called Wabona. The
service was launched in beta in November last year, and the Wabona
team has since been accepted into a 88mph startup incubator in South
Africa. it was great opportunity therefore for us to hear out their
perspectives and plans with the service. Mukuna is the Director
of Service & Operations at Wabona. This means he's in
charge of the tech, the platform that delivers the movies.
According to
Mukuna, their goal with Wabona is twofold - "to offer
Africans living abroad a service that allows them to connect with
home through movies, TV shows and documentaries that are made on
the continent; and, to offer African film makers a platform to tell
their stories online.
Our reaction
to this was twofold - Besides the content in West Africa,
just how much content is out there; and, what space is there in
the market and how much value beyond what's already offered
by similar services like iROKOtv and others. Mukuna's response
is that iROKOtv made clear what opportunity is there. "iROKOtv
have given visibility to the potential market for African content,"
he said "so we them opening doors to make it easier for us
to get our message out."
Mukuna acknowledged
that iROKO are competition but also explained that currently while
iROKOtv is primarily Nollywood, Wabona is focusing on a different
content market; content from the south and east of Africa. "At
the moment we have content from the south and east of Africa."
he said. The "at the moment" is something to take note
of.
Asked about
Wabona, iROKOtv are said to have indicated that more online movie
content players are actually healthy for their business. iROKOtv's
head of communications told TechMoran that competitors like Wabona
are helping popularise the internet "a key platform to access
awesome content."
On just how
much content is out there in Africa aside from that churned out
by Nollywood, Mukuna says there's increasingly more content
from east and southern Africa. This is because there's cheaper
shooting equipment now making it significantly easier for filmmakers
to produce content. "We certainly believe there is enough
content being produced right now to make the service viable,"
he said, adding that Wabona sees itself as a potential new media
platform for the distribution of that content. Mukuna also explained
that they already have content deals with South Africa's SABC,
Australian Broadcasting Corporation (ABC), some independent filmmakers
and content libraries.
We had a chance
to go over the site and click of some titles. While we ran into
a few quirks (like the account creation form not loading) we eventually
signed in using Facebook and were able to watch a few minutes of
the Zimbabwean classic, Yellow card.
The other co-founder,
the guy in charge of securing content deals, is Simbarashe Mabasha.
Wabona is Sotho for 'You See'.
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This work is licensed under a Creative Commons License unless stated otherwise.
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