|
 |
| Commercial distribution of VCDs in rural Cambodia, ILO 2003 |
| |
| |
| Country(ies) | Cambodia |
| Implementing agency(ies) | ILO |
| Funding agency(ies) | Ministry of Foreign Affairs, Dutch Govt. |
| Date completed | February 2004 |
| Issues/challenges | The aim of the project was to identify ways to reach Cambodians outside Phnom Penh with information, particularly in audio-visual format. A collaboration with one of the TV stations in PP had shown that the signal generally did not reach into the more rural parts of the country; sustainability was also a challenge, given the shallowness of the sponsorship market. Meanwhile, there was a sophisticated distribution network for audio-visual material in pre-recorded form (VCDs, VHS, DVD) which seemed to be reaching far into the rural areas; several distribution companies exist, each with a different speciality in terms of content (films, karaoke, etc.) and / or geographic coverage. Low-cost TVs and players from China are widely available, and many people in remote rural areas apparently have access to these, in communal viewing halls or bars, on buses etc. So the question was whether this network, ultimately funded by the end-purchaser, could also be used to disseminate useful information. |
| Contact person(s) | Mr. Jim Tanburn, Mr. Bas Rozemuller |
| |
Description Since the materials had to be immediately saleable, the project brought in some of the best-known Cambodian comedians, one of whom already had a stage persona as a businessman. With them, two comedy episodes were put together, featuring two competing restaurants - one very badly managed and the other better managed. In these episodes, a number of issues came up; for example, the badly-managed restaurant ran out of money, as all the customers went to the competition, so the owner refused to pay his workers. The scene where the workers protest, and the owner's daughter mediates in the dispute, for example, resonated with rural viewers. With the two episodes, several commercial distributors were approached, one of whom agreed to test-market them (the others are launching something similar now, as 'copycats'). This distributor paid for all copying and distribution costs, and made a small profit - but for the pilot, the ILO covered the initial production costs of the episodes. The distributor has a particularly strong network in the rural north-west of the country, which was a considerable advantage in the circumstances. The distributor initially made 3,000 copies, but these sold quickly and she had to make additional copies. At the time of writing, sales stand at around 10,000. The selling price is $0.80-1.50 each in urban markets, and $2.00 each in rural markets (there are more traders in the chain to reach rural areas). Piracy is a problem, both for profitability of the distributor and for tracking of sales, and therefore the price is kept as low as possible; also, distribution is being achieved as quickly as possible, to reach all potential customers first.
Summary of results A follow-up study (download below) has found that the material had indeed been seen by many people; of the small businesses approached, about 40% had seen it. The venue depended on their location; rural viewers were most likely to have seen it in a village cinema, in a restaurant or coffee shop, or on a bus, but the material was ultimately disseminated in many forms. For example, a taxi driver made an audio tape and played it to passengers. A cable operator in one small town put it out through his network.
Viewers had often retained ideas about management skills, but otherwise, perceptions of urban viewers were rather different to those of rural viewers. In particular, rural viewers preferred different media personalities, and more obvious humour; on the other hand, they were also much more interested than urban viewers in messages that would help them in their own business (urban viewers were in general more interested in simple entertainment).
The immediate plan is to produce additional episodes, featuring the same restaurants and bringing in other issues of concern to the ILO (such as child labour and HIV/AIDS). One challenge will be to raise awareness about these issues (and possible solutions) while remaining funny and indeed saleable. Another challenge will be to keep production costs low enough, so that the distributor can increasingly cover them, now that the saleability of the materials has been demonstrated.
Services Information - Media
|
|
|