Film and TV shows in Uganda have for the past two years marked tremendous improvement and growth in quality of the films and overall how best filmmakers can reap from this trade.
Sets have never been busier in Uganda. It all points to the fact that the filmmaking industry is only going to continue growing. Covid-19 drove the demand for content upwards resulting to the uptake in streaming services like Showmax. Pay-tv providers have also ramped up their spending on content, a good example being MultiChoice Uganda which launched three channels (Pearl Magic, Pearl Magic Prime and Pearl Magic Loko) completely dedicated to Ugandan content.
In the last 5 years, the company has commissioned and licensed over 40 shows and films and this number will only keep going up since sustaining three 24-hour channels can be demanding in terms of content.
According to Glen Marques, a South African-based specialist media consultant, there is huge appetite for African content and “it is a good time to be in the industry”.
While the Ugandan filmmaking industry has made steady strides in addressing the gaps in quality and compelling storytelling, producers still struggle with the business aspect – how to make money off their skill set. This is compounded by the lack of any distributing companies whose role is to take the finished product to the market.
Today, filmmaking is big business globally. It is this multi-billion global market that Uganda is looking to tap into.
In 2020, a record-breaking $220.2 billion was spent on making and acquiring new feature films and TV programming, a 16.5 percent increase compared to production spending in 2019. Over two-thirds of global spending in 2020 came from the U.S. and Canada. Some of the top spenders are Disney, Warner/Discovery, Netflix, Amazon/MGM, Fox and Comcast. In Africa and the Middle East, $2.8 billion was spent on producing content in 2020, representing a 46.3 percent surge compared to 2019 spending.
MultiChoice Group’s local content production grew by 32 percent in 2022 bringing its local content library close to 70,000 hours. Local content accounted for the company’s 47 percent of total general entertainment content spend. MultiChoice targets to achieve 50 percent by 2024.
As more platforms emerge and audience demand grows, spending on content production continues to ramp up as well.
Global spending on independent content increased by 25.3 percent in 2020, year-over-year. And this trend will continue as distributors and streaming giants rush to fill their content pipelines that have run dry because of production challenges and delays caused by COVID-19.
In a workshop with Ugandan filmmakers, Marques underscored the need for producers to be keen on the kind of agreements they enter, be it for financing, distribution or selling their content. Key in this is the tendency for distributors and buyers wanting to shortchange content owners.
Marques has worked with MultiChoice Group for over 30 years serving as Chief Operations Officer of SuperSport, chief executive of M-Net, chief operating officer of Showmax as well as overseeing all the entertainment programming and channel acquisitions.
Filmmaking is a capital-intensive venture. Unfortunately, filmmakers in Uganda have to independently mobilize resources for their productions. In a country where the cost of credit remains high with the average lending rate in commercial banks at 18 percent. Unlike other sectors like agriculture and manufacturing which get relatively cheaper credit, businesses in the creative arts are considered high risk to lend to.
The business side of filmmaking begins with the financing – a hurdle that most Ugandan producers still face. Especially since private investors have yet to find film a viable investment option and media companies have been hesitant to buy content.
In other markets, commissioning, pre-sales, grants (by film festivals), licensing, advertising and product placements, crowd sourcing and co-productions are some of the popular financing options. However, like the adage goes, he who pays the piper calls the tune.
“The problem with financiers is, they take control. Always strike a balance between having the artistic freedom and getting the money. Filmmakers tend to lose all the value of their work because they got financing from someone. Be careful and read contracts,” Marques says.
At the point of sourcing financing, it is important to draft a compelling business plan (or investment proposal) detailing the unique selling points, target audience and market potential of one’s film or TV show. This is the information upon which anyone – production companies or studios and investors – looking to finance a project bases their decision.
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