Wednesday, October 31, 2007

Adam Smith: starting where it matters because of our colonial legacy.

Adam Smith: starting where it matters because of our colonial legacy.


Adam Smith in a long-form called his book: An Inquiry Into the Nature and Causes of the Wealth of Nations. At that time many nations were poor and few rich. And the rich wanted to get rich by exploiting the poor. This was the beginning of real capitalism-where a few eat 80 per cent of a nation or world production and the poor gets only 20 per cent although they produce 80 per cent.

If he were to come back once again or if Africa is lucky to have its own Adam Smith today the title will definitely change to: "An Inquiry Into the Nature and Causes of the Poverty of African Nations.

This should also be a good starting point for our 'rational dialog.' or as I have called my blog: 'Keep on Talking Economics.'

Of course we are not interested in poverty, but rather interested to see it gradually disappear...forever! We are interested in prosperity, happiness and being a health continent in every manner of the word.

Mzee Adam Smith gave some ideas of how we could have a prosperous, healthy and happy Africa.

At this point of time let me say there is no way I am hinting that the list provided by Mzee Adam Smith covers all and everything. No. Actually, what he has done is to give us a point of departure in our inquiry. As we proceed along we may even be able to come up with a brand of economic theories called African Original Economic Theories, dare you?

According to Adam Smith we can say 'goodbye' to poverty and economic backwardness if we can:i. Increase the quantities of resources available;ii. Discover and apply new technologies iii. Increase the division of labor and specialization iv. Improve the allocation of existing resources v. Increase the rate of use of existing resources

Dear AEEN members we can learn economics in a variety of ways. However, since we are also supposed to be teachers of our readers and listeners and viewers-I suppose the best way could [am not saying must] be the practical approach to the study of economics. Because after all, no one of us does not belong to the economy and economics......

These five suggestions from Mzee Adam Smith can actually be used as FORUM TOPICS for the next five years, especially, if each member will tackle it at his or country's level and then we have opportunity to share and exchange ideas in the future:Could we, therefore, use that approach to look, for istance, how Africa has failed to utilize or increase quantity of resources available for production, distribution and consumption?

Perhaps having a schedule like this:
2008 How can African countries Increase the quantities of resources available;
2009 Discovery of new technologies and Africa's war against poverty
2010 Division of labor and specialization and Africa's economic development
2011 Improvement of the allocation of existing resources for further growth and development in Africa
2012 Increasing the rate of use of existing resources and Africa's development.

This work can start long before the conferences and by the time the forum are held African leaders and bureacrats should have read one or two things and apply them to change their nation's fortune. At the forum, therefore, some countries will be held as examples, congratulated and motivated to achieve even still more.

Since we shall work with China, Japan, Korea, India-the East in short; as well as US and EU we are bound to have a lot of helpful advice as well as tangible support too!

Can our H's and W's in investigative and research-oriented journalism be abpplied here: How, What, Where, When, Why and Who?-in a manner capable of ensuring that as we go along we are writing the future applied economics textbooks for Africa-that will be corrected, updated and edited by all those who want to contribute to PRO-AFRICAN POOR ECONOMICS - that is non-IMF/WB DRIVEN AFRICAN ECONOMICS?

Am also interested in fusing Adam Smith, Confucius and Original African Economics.....let see this may be the next article.

I am open to any approach but perhaps we could divide the discussions into three areas so that those who have material and like to talk in each of the areas do so with leisure:

i. PRE-INDEPENDENCE AFRICAN ECONOMICS:-historical analysis of the nature and causes of Africa's poverty-[may be our kindness, generosity, slavery,colonialism and the likes]

ii. POST-INDEPENDENCE AFRICAN ECONOMICS:-Fifty years of independence and our performance in tackling poverty and backwardness of Africa.[Debts of independence, gratitude to the father of the nation(s), overpoliticizatiion, overdecentralization, copycating, living above our means, mismanagement, nepotism, favoritism, cronnism,ignorance, greed,tribalism, racism, being used by former rulers and the likes].

iii. CONTEMPORARY AFRICAN OR POST-CHINESE SUCCESS AFRICAN ECONOMICS:-Globalization, Economic Integration, Rising new super powers and Africa war against poverty.[ As the situation reigns now-why relationship with former masters did not help us, market status, cultural factors, language factors, looking East?, playing the super powers against one another, where do we stand, what is our vision and mission as a continent?]


Sammy
Dar es salaam.


Sammy Makilla
P.O.Box 11337
Dar es Salaam.
TANZANIA
EAST AFRICA

Tel: +255-22-2807303
Mob: +255-732-928534
URL: www.teknohama.com

Friday, October 26, 2007

How the Coming Newspaper Industry Collapse Will Reinvigorate Journalism

Hi colleagues,

Here is what Gershom of UK urged us to read.
Its posted here for easy look.
You can submit your reactions by logging on http://www.newcommreview.com/?p=664

Enjoy reading,
Regards,
Blog Facilitator,
John
Zambia

Friday, October 26, 2007

How the Coming Newspaper Industry Collapse Will Reinvigorate Journalism

On New Media & Journalism

By Paul Gillin, Research Fellow and Advisory Board Member, Society for New Communications Research

Note: Society for New Communications Research Fellow and advisory board member Paul Gillin will present a session on new media and journalism at the upcoming New Communications Forum, March 7-9 in Las Vegas. If you haven't registered to attend yet, visit www.newcommforum.com to view the entire conference program and register online. Use the discount code 612SHN and save $200.

The near-total collapse of the American newspaper industry as we know it is inevitable. Anything newspapers could have done to stop it should have been done years ago. (Slate recently wrote that newspapers saw this coming in the mid-'70s.) All the social, demographic and economic trends are lined up against the industry. Over the next decade, there will be agonizing rounds of layoffs, consolidation and bankruptcies. It will be painful to watch, but it will be a necessary process for the industry to reinvent itself.

In this essay, I’ll outline the reasons I believe this and propose a new and very different model of publishing and journalism that will take hold as this cycle plays out. This will be a very exciting evolution, but it will be very painful, too.

A broken business model
First, some background and assumptions.

The business model of metropolitan daily newspapers was developed over 150 years ago to support a delivery method that is becoming irrelevant. Huge staffs of people were needed to create content, turn it into type, print it on paper and distribute it on a timely basis. It was very expensive, but it was necessary because there was no alternative way to deliver information on a daily basis.

Large editorial staffs were needed to create proprietary content. A few alternate sources of content were available, such as news wires, but there was almost nothing at the local level. In any case, running wire copy didn’t differentiate a newspaper from its competition, so staffs of salaried reporters were needed to turn up original news. At some newspapers, these staffs could run to several hundred people.

Newspapers had to maintain large circulation operations and massive subscriber lists in order to justify their ad rates. Circulation is expensive. While renewal rates for daily papers have always been high, it’s costly to acquire new subscribers through advertising and direct mail. For most papers, the cost of circulation didn’t come close to matching the small revenue it generated. Circulation revenue at newspapers has also been falling in recent years due to price cuts and competition, further squeezing margins.

Capital costs inherent in buildings, presses, paper, ink and people to run all those machines were astronomical. Labor unions added to those costs. In some cases, the unions have succeeded in preserving jobs that were automated out of existence years ago. People go to work and literally have nothing to do.

Add it all up and a metropolitan daily newspaper must employ several hundred people to produce the product. Newspaper advertising is very expensive because of the large fixed costs. The Chicago Tribune, for example, charges $755 per column inch in the daily paper ($1,135 on Sunday). That business works as long as advertisers are willing to pay for it and for many years they have. That’s because newspapers were one of the most effective means for businesses to reach consumers in certain geographies.

The upside, though, is that newspaper model has traditionally been profitable and predictable. Once a newspaper achieved dominance in its market, it was practically unassailable. As consolidation reduced the total number of daily newspapers (there are about 1,500 in the U.S. today), competitive pressure eased and the winning papers were able to drive their ad rates higher. Until the mid-1990s, this was a pretty nice state of affairs. Even the Internet didn’t put much pressure on newspapers, at least during its first decade.

That is all about to come to an end. The business model of metropolitan daily newspapers is poised for a collapse that will be stunning in its speed and scope. The cause is Web 2.0 and the vastly superior economics of that emerging business.

A new model

A recent story in Business 2.0 magazine revealed the income of some popular bloggers. Read this article if you want to understand the emerging economics of blogosphere. This new medium is far more cost-efficient than the ones it will replace.

“Blogs today benefit from what might be termed uneconomies of scale,” the Business 2.0 article says. “They are so cheap to create and operate that a lone blogger or a small team can, with the ever-expanding reach of the Internet, amass vast audiences and generate levels of profit on a per-employee basis that traditional media companies can only fantasize about.”

Take the Fark.com example. The site generates 40 million page views a month with a staff of one full-time person and two contractors. Its only real operating costs are bandwidth charges. It produces almost no original content and has no capital costs. Members contribute their own content, so no editors are needed. The site almost runs itself. Yet this could approach $10 million in revenue before long.

Another example is Craigslist.org. It’s is the fifth most popular site on the Internet, with global reach and an estimated four billion page views a month. It is absolutely killing the newspaper classified ad business. One study report estimated that Craigslist costs San Francisco newspapers $50 million in revenue each year. The entire staff is 23 people, all part-time. Google Blogoscoped, which is the best independent source of information about Google, is run by one person in his spare time. It’s averaging four million page views a month. Gizmodo grew to become one of the top five blogs on the Internet with only a single contributor. Digg.com, which is barely two years old, is already among the top 25 sites on the Web. Its traffic outstrips all the largest media sites. It has a staff of 15.

Outsourcing everything

None of these sites is making piles of money yet, but that’s only a matter of time. Michael Arrington is pulling in $60,000 a month writing TechCrunch. BoingBoing.net is on target to gross more than $1 million. Fark.com founder Drew Curtis says he’s on track to soon log sales of $600,000 to $800,000 per month.

Companies like John Battelle’s Federated Media and Nick Denton’s Gawker Media are figuring out the business side. And it’s not like these blogs have to make a lot of money to keep going. Adrants.com generates over $100,000 a year in advertising and that’s plenty to keep Steve Hall plugging away at his one-man operation. He’s got almost no costs and he’s getting paid to do something he's passionate about.

How do these new media outlets keep their overhead so low? They outsource everything.

· Editorial content is outsourced to an army of individual enthusiasts and bloggers who find interesting information on the Web and feed it to the site operators. Editorial expenses, which account for about a third of the operating costs of a daily newspaper, are practically zero.

· Circulation is outsourced to Google and links from other sites. In fact, there really is no concept of circulation in these new media because there’s no way to “own” the reader. This is a very different model from conventional publishing, which relies heavily on subscriber lists to validate advertising rates. The Web approach is much less controllable but also much cheaper.

· Production is outsourced to Typepad, Blogger or any number of other hosted services at minimal cost. There’s no need for designers because everything is templated. Some sites practically run themselves. Bandwidth costs can be steep for popular properties, but that’s true for newspaper Web sites as well.

· Sales is outsourced to Google Adwords, Federated Media or other sales agents. This may change in time, but for now, most Web 2.0 companies can’t be bothered with a captive sales force.

Marketing and promotion aren’t even done. In the new Web, your marketing is your content. People either link to you or they don’t. This creates a lot of pressure on the site operators to be fresh and innovative, but that’s not a bad thing.

This model is so compelling that it will almost completely upend the existing mainstream media model.

Newspaper death spiral

New competition from Web 2.0 companies along with continuing demographic shifts are about to send metropolitan daily newspapers into a spiral of decline from which few will emerge intact. Why now? People have been wrongly forecasting the death of newspapers for years. Why is this time different?

The first decade of the consumer Internet was very different from that which we're now entering. Web 1.0 was the display Internet. It was a decade when organizations put their brochures online and users got comfortable with the idea of a global network. Search tools were rudimentary, Web content was difficult to create and interactivity was limited. The brands that dominated the pre-Web days were able to extend their brands online. While a few important new sources of information did emerge, media giants like CNN, The New York Times, The Washington Post and the Associated Press continued to dominate online media. There was little threat to their underlying businesses.

That's all changed. It's now easy for individuals to create Web content. Computing power, storage and bandwidth costs are declining rapidly. The open-source software movement has dropped the price of software to near zero. Search engines have become a more effective marketing channel than e-mail. Google AdSense and affiliate marketing networks can generate income for Web site operators, even at low traffic levels. Today, a small group of people with a few thousand dollars and a good idea can build a self-sustaining Web franchise in a matter of months. You couldn't have done that five years ago.

Layered on top of that is a demographic shift that is about to move a large new group of Web-savvy consumers into the economic mainstream. This new generation simply doesn't have the loyalty to established media that their parents do. And they don't read newspapers at all.

The spiral begins

So here's where the spiral begins. Newspapers' profitable classified advertising business will be all but gone in 10 years, a victim of the vastly superior results and economics of search-driven online advertising. Display advertising will be under intense pressure from alternative media, including not just Web sites but an emerging class of small print publications and supermarket advertisers that serve local audiences (print publishing is getting cheaper, too). The department stores and cell phone companies that sustain newspapers' display advertising business will apply intense pressure on papers to bring down their prices.

Newspapers will be forced to lay off staff in order to maintain margins. Cuts in services will lead to cuts in editorial coverage, making papers less relevant to subscribers. As circulation declines, advertising rates will have to come down to remain competitive. This will put more pressure on margins, leading to more layoffs, more cost cuts, more circulation declines and more pressure on margins. Once this spiral begins, it will accelerate with breathtaking speed. And it has already begun.

Experience has shown us again and again that business models based on vertically integrated, proprietary products quickly collapse when confronted with competition that is open, standardized and much less expensive. It's happened in consumer electronics, telecommunications, computers and household appliances and there's no reason it won't happen in media. Advertisers will rebel at having to pay newspapers' high fixed costs when they can get the same audience through other channels at a fraction of the cost.

History has also demonstrated that business models based on scarcity collapse in the face of abundance. The whole newspaper model is predicated on the idea that timely, local information is hard to come by. Newspapers built very expensive infrastructures to deliver that information in the days of print. But information is now cheap and abundant. As the body of information grows and people become more comfortable with the tools to access it, the newspaper value proposition withers away.

The sole advantage that newspapers still have is their reach in local markets. Small businesses that sell aluminum siding, flowers and cleaning services have few alternatives to newspapers for their ad dollars. But that, too, is changing. The declining cost of electronic composition and offset printing is leading to a resurgence of local newspapers, and Web 2.0 technology is making it cheap for citizens to launch their own community Web sites. Search engine makers are figuring out how to provide value in local search. These forces are converging to attack newspapers' last refuge.

In 10 years, probably a third of metropolitan daily print newspapers will be gone. Some will go entirely online, while others will merge with regional competitors. What will replace them? And what will the new journalism look like?

REBIRTH

What emerges from the rubble of the newspaper industry will be a fresh, vibrant and very different kind of journalism. It will make a lot of traditionalists uncomfortable. It will force us to re-examine our assumptions about everything from readership to libel law. But it will ultimately be an evolution of the profession into something that is richer, more inclusive and much more dynamic than anything we have ever known.

Print newspapers are modeled on assumptions that were defined by physical constraints, but which are outmoded and irrelevant online. Basically, information is scarce and publishing is archival. In most metropolitan areas, the newspaper has been the principal or only source of news for many years. This required editors and publishers to take a very serious view of everything they set into type. Layout, headline selection, story lengths, story placement and design were critical considerations in a space-constrained world. The importance of a story was reflected by its location in the paper or on a page, the weight of the headline and the number of column inches dedicated to it.

Once a story was in print, it was permanent. This necessitated an almost obsessive attention to detail and fact-checking. All facts had to be assembled before the story was written. Often, multiple editors were assigned to review and challenge information in the article. If information wasn’t verified, it wasn’t published.

Structure was critical. Because stories were cut from the bottom, newspapers invented the “inverted pyramid” style of writing, in which more important information was placed higher in the story. Good information was omitted because there wasn’t enough space.

Online publishing changes all the rules

Of course, all that is irrelevant online, and the new journalism will be based on an entirely different set of assumptions. Any report may be quickly and easily updated and corrected. Search engine results and referral links are the principal drivers of readership. Layout is almost irrelevant to a Web site. Blogs have no hierarchy at all. Stories can be as long or as short as they need to be, or can even be composed of many links to other content. Stories may appear in many places at once and even in many forms, depending on how they are tagged. Readers are able to comment upon and contribute to articles. Graphics, audio and video illustrations are easily linked to text. If something is wrong, you can always go back and correct it.

In short, the online world challenges nearly every assumption of conventional newspapering. It will dictate a very different approach to journalism.

For one thing, the craft of journalism will evolve to include far more aggregation and organization than it has in the past. Editors will assemble their reports from a vast library of resources located across the Internet. Some information will come from paid staff writers, others from freelancers and still more from reports and opinions published by independent third parties and even competitors. Editors will still have a critical role, but their value will increasingly be in assembling and organizing information for readers who don’t have the time to sort through the vast Web.

The craft of reporting will become faster and more iterative. Rumor, speculation and incomplete information will be published far more readily, on the assumption that errors can be corrected. Stories will, in essence, be built in real time and in full public view. Reporters will file copy directly to the Web, often without a review by an editor. Readers will be a central part of the process, correcting and commenting upon articles as they are taking shape. Reporting will become, in effect, a community process.

This new model will be very disruptive and very controversial. The idea that a news organization would publish information it did not know to be true flies in the face of all of our expectations. The concept of actively involving readers -– who have no formal relationship with the news organization –- in the reporting process will be too much for some editors to accept. There will be hand-wringing over fears of libel suits and other litigation. It is going to be an unholy brawl.

But this is where journalism will go, and it is happening now, every day, on blogs and community media sites across the world. There, authors knowingly publish information that is unverified and unreliable. They do so with the expectation that their readers will set them straight and that the truth will be arrived at through a process of publishing and correction. More than half a million blog posts are logged every day, yet there has not been a single successful libel suit resulting from any of them. Libel law, after all, is based on the expectation of archival permanence. Nothing is permanent online.

The future is taking shape

New models are already being tested at community-journalism sites like Backfence, iBrattleboro.com, Northwest Voice and Korea’s OhMyNews.com. The Washington Post recently reported on a Gannett experiment to reinvent news journalism in Fort Myers, Fla. More will follow. Many more.

Journalism will become much more local. As the cost of publishing falls to near zero and citizens become more comfortable with the tools of publishing, thousands of mini “newspapers” will form around different geographies and topics. Aggregation sites will emerge to sift through and organize the reports and conversations going on in these small communities. Many of these sites will involve human editors who understand the needs of their audience and monitor online activity on their behalf.

This will be nothing less than a complete rebirth of journalism around the concept that information is plentiful and cheap. Instead of 1,500 print newspapers, there will be perhaps five to 10 national “super-papers” and many thousands of regional and special interest community news sites. The process of getting there will be wrenching and controversial, but the new model will create a more dynamic and diverse information landscape than we have ever known. It will be incredibly exciting. I hope to be around for the ride.

Paul Gillin is a research fellow and advisory board member of the Society for New Communications Research. A writer, content marketing consultant and author, his book, The New Influencers: A Marketer’s Guide to Social Media, will be published by Quill Driver Books in the spring of 2007. His blog is at http://www.paulgillin.com/.

TALKING ECONOMICS AND MANAGEMENT

Hi colleagues,
Below is Comrade Sammy's piece which really is a must read for us all.
Your enjoying will be appreciated by way of contributing or responding to it.
Regards,
Blog Facilitator,
John
Zambia.


TALKING ECONOMICS AND MANAGEMENT
I had wanted to post this on ECONOMIC EDITORS blog but it seems our institution here just like many other in Tanzania is not Blog friendly, Guess you understand!

Sammy

KEEP ON TALKING ECONOMICS

Sammy Makilla

This is the first article in the series I shall call -KEEP ON TALKING ECONOMICS- Here I just want you to recall that actually Economics is 'a reasonable talk.' I am not going to teach you anything. My idea is to talk to you-so you can talk back to me. Because of the circumstances am forced to make this the initial item but also using the opportunity as S.O.S for AEEN rebirth. Because this cannot be done unless AEEN continue not only to exist but fulfilling its objectives too.

We may not have money like Mohammed [Mo] Ibrahim and his foundation but in our small ways I believe we can talk a number of things that can make it possible for more people like Mo to surface
and help Africa get its economic and social development formula right.

Development is a process of talking. Knowing this, our tribe- a small one in Tanzania believes a lot in talking-at home, in drinking places, at work and in the church or mosque as well as in the wider community. This is because we believe that the origins of all our development lies in talking, meeting, exchanging ideas and starting projects to implement what we have been talking about.

Do we really need to get consultancy from the West to know that-unless we talk and talk and talk there shall be nothing doing in our midst?

The beautiful thing about the thing called mind and the other called tongue is that they are so tinny but can move mountains and empty oceans.

By the way did you know that this thing called 'reasonable talk' or 'reasonable dialog' according to the Ancient Mexicans, Arabs, Greeks, Jews, Japanese, Africans and Chinese started thousand of years ago. For instance, Mansa Mussa of Mali and Askia Mohammed of Songhay had experts who taught their people about trade and international economics. These experts were both local and foreign.

But according to Europeans it started only 200 years ago. In other words, Europeans say it started when they had their eyes opened during the seafaring and Industrialization era, while others say it did start long, long ago even before Europe was baptized by the Romans.

As an African is it really not the right time to start digging our own past for lessons in trrade, resource exploitation, economics, m anagement and governance rather than just continue to copy [talking politely] or swallow everything pushed into our throats by the West [talking harshly] ?

I sincerely believe that we as African journalists, among other things, need to talk to our academics and challenge them to design and implement courses and programmes that seek to have subjects like:

-History of European Economics
-History of American Economics
-Contemporaty Western Economics
-Pre-Coloanial African Economics
-Post-Colonial African Economics
-Chinese and Japanese Economics
-Market economies and human de velopment
-Human Resource Development and Economics
-The undervaluing of African human and natural resources
-Exploitation and development
-Capitalism, multinationals and African resources
-New Economic Cooperation strategies
-ICT and African Economics
-Alternatives to IMF and World Bank
-Globalization and African Development
-Wars, Conflict and Development,
-Ibrahim Index of African Governance and African Economics
-MDGs and African Development
-HDI and African Economics

and we may not have anything to write about:
-HISTORY OF AFRICAN ECONOMIC JOURNALISM
if we don't talk now and use AEEN as our central archiving institution.

FIFTY years after independence why should we have such a narrow base for academic and general discussions? Why remain in this strait jacket? Let us deepen and expand the talk ...... as the elasticity here is infinite dear coallegues....! And the more we talk, the more ideas generated, African original and unique ideas though-that may be better ten times than the misguided ideas and biases of thinkers from the West like the most esteemed Dr. James Watson-the true incarnation of the European man and woman who deep in their hearts say we are inferior to them.....but never utter it. But should we be afraid? Indeed, we may be inferior to them----but we are what we are because of their plundering, raping, steraling from us, abusing us, making us sub-humans, slavery, colonialism and excessive exploitation, degradation, oppression, humiliation and discrimination.

Interesting indeed, someone forcing you to fast or is it starving you.... eating up 90 per cent of what you produce and leaving you with less than 10 per cent -saying you are not mentally and physically healthy like him-'Kudadadeki!'

And it is for this reason, that perhaps that Europe and America's embrace [if not asphyxiation] of Africa shall be replaced by Chinese hand-shake and hugging.

I have set the ball rolling. Next can you talk to the Economics Professor or Lecturer in your vicinity or better still at the usual extended living-room or alias the 'waterhole!'

But did I tell you- I love Dr. James Watson and his Nazi's grandparents!

Under Africa's Blue Sky, Loving Sun and Romantic Clouds and, of course, Economic and Social Development Issues-there are so many things one can talk about-and each of us has something to say-we don't usually do it because we are shy or we believe our efforts are wasted. With this revival effort I am sure that I will not be wrong to say-if we love Africa then we must be interested in Africa; we must be willing to serve Africa in whicher possible way; and we must develop the right attitude- and to me that is doing good to benefit the greatest number of Africans possible. It can be done, play your part. Talk and we shall talk back to you.........and the time is now!

But the above are not enough if we really want to bequath a respectable and admired Africa to our progeny. We need an original mission and vision for Africans.

Should I propose the MISSION:
'Using our people, information, communication and all other resources [on land, air and sea] to solve our social, economic and technological problems.'

VISION
Racing economically to catch East Asia, India and China.

STRATEGIES
1. Looking East-in terms of education, technology and markets.
2. Pitting the West against their rivals
3. Putting a fullstop to AFRICOM and establishing an AFRICAN ARMY to DEFEND AFRICA and AFRICANS. [ No American armies on Africa-should be our motto?]
4. Collaborating with the East and Latin America to develop sea and naval power.
5. Making Africa a peaceful continent.
6. Seeing Intra-Africa trade growing by leaps and bounds.
7. Consolidating the achievements of Mo Ibrahim and ibn Makhtoum and getting more of their likes to awaken the URGE TO ACHIEVE and SUCCEED in AFRICA.
8. Working HARDER than the CHINESE!

At times, some of us will try their hand on this or that. And sometimes these things will work. But the moment the founders are too busy or 'the internet is down'- those given the opportunity to continue with the relay unknowingly or deliberately mess up. We then kill hte mind and spirit of the founding fathers. We all know how Nixon loves Africa. We know how much the guy sacrificed for us and the continent. The only way we can pay him back is to ensure AEEN lives! Of course, If i will have my way-I will die a happy man when I leave behind me- 'PROF. NIXON KARIITHI CENTRE FOR ECONOMIC JOURNALISM IN AFRICA!


My late Grandfather once told me: 'Grandson, if you live for yourself, you live half a man [woman], but if you live for others, you die a complete man!'


Sammy in Keep on Talkking Economics

Sammy Makilla
P.O.Box 11337
Dar es Salaam.
TANZANIA
EAST AFRICA

Tel: +255-22-2807303
Mob: +255-732-928534
URL: www.teknohama.com

Monday, October 22, 2007

Prof. Nixon Kariithi is still keen with AEEN!!

Silver Bugingo of Rwanda appears to have exchanged some correspondence with Prof Kariithi.
Read below:
Chao
John Zambia


Dear Silver,

Thanks for the message below. I do not know what happened to the EU magazine. I was only sending through a message, but was not responsible for anything about the publication.

But I am interested in discussing with you the fate of AEEN. I founded AEEN in 1999, and run it pretty much as a personal project for six years. When I got extremely busy and was having problems keeping everything going (to the point that even my personal affairs were affected) I turned to AEEN members to assist but we didn't get anywhere with that. Worse, we tried to get members to keep talking so that we could show their activities to potential funders but got nowhere with this either. I personally do not remember reading any contribution from you at all..

The death of AEEN does not concern me. I did what I did for six years to show that it is possible to get African journalists to work together. Not one journalist ever paid to come down for the annual conference and pre-conference training that we carried out.

I am interested in finding African journalists who are still committed to this cause and are willing to commit themselves to actively contributing to the discussions and other activities. Are you willing?

Let's keep talking.

Nixon
___________________________________________________
Professor Nixon K. Kariithi
Associate Professor of Journalism and Media Studies
Media Studies Discipline
School of Literature and Language Studies
University of the Witwatersrand
Private Bag 3, Wits 2050, South Africa
Tel: +27 11 717-4112
Fax: +27 11 717-4149
Cell: +27 82 806-7688
Email: nixon.kariithi@wits.ac.za or nixonkk@yahoo.com




Good afternoon comrade Chola and all,
I honestly wish to advise each and every member of the great AEEN to desist from aportioning blame to any third paties but rather to our entire team becuase if we do not look at it as joint venture, well may not move any step forward!! I agree with some of the members like comrade Jeff Kabembwa that the initial organisational structure was tempolary, the mamagement team were volunteers without any remunerations e.t.c which technically made a seasonal event that relied on sponsors.
So these are the organisational weaknesses that we should carefully review and amicably agree on the practicable way forward for I personally believe that making an error is human but repeating an error should be viewed as a crime. I totally agree with the view of some serious comrades that we should solicit sponsorship after making a foundation in form of membership fee and after rejuvenating the organisationall structures.
For those who sound like blaming Prof. Nixon Kariithi, he is a founder member, has done all he could ever since its birth in 1999 until he got extremely busy with official duties as a lecturer. He indeed turned to us members to rlender a hand to no avail, so who is to blame?
Below is the most recent e-mail I got from him. Please read carefully and think about the solution.
Good bless you all.
Silver Bugingo
Rwanda News Agency
CELL.:+250-08760723
Kigali-Rwanda

Jeff--Membership Fee?/leadership and operations (Zambia)

Hi all,
Jeff from Zambia wrote:



I have closely followed the debate on the future of
AEEN and agree totally with most of the sentiments
expressed by many of my fellow members with 'a heart
for the once vibrant AEEN'.
Before we dwell much into debate, let's identify what
the type of leadership we had was before the crunch
came after the Rosebank Hotel 2004 meeting and whether
we had prepared for this Tsunami that followed
thereafter.
No! we did not apparently look through it in event of
Professor Karithi getting busy with his professorial
duties. We instead sat back while the sun shone
instead of making hay for tomorrow and the generation
to come.
During the meeting of 2004, for those of us who were
there, I raised the issue concerning sustainability of
the AEEN and I asked Professor Nixon Karithi as to
what the future of the grouping was and what would
happen in the event of donors withdrawing their
"Development Aid" to the AEEN and no tangible
alternative came out until we closed the meeting.
The question was, were we expecting to continue
operating when we as members, were not contributing
anything to the running of the AEEN affairs? the
answer was No!!.
Now that all is done and not lost, we seriously need
to agree on membership fees and other contributions
which can be submitted to a secretariat to be
established soon or later as a show of interest and
commitment to the cause for the would be sponsors to
adduce from.
I have a few names of potential sponsors like Siemens,
Sasol, Anglo American Corp., Telcom, Cell C, NEPAD,
Standard Bank, Shevron and other players that showed
interest in discussing Africa and its future
economically who I feel if talked to "nicely" can be
"excited" to come and help.
It will be unfair if I forgot to mention Guy Berger
and his pool of intellectuals at Rhodes University
whose hearts for the AEEN remains unmatched, let alone
professor Karithi, professor Tawana Kupe among others.
Looking at the countless number of corporate
organisations and individuals like Berger, Kupe and
Karithi, the AEEN still has a future which if we
revisit it, through such internet debates and it
definitely can be resucitated without much problems.
Personally, I don't know about other colleagues, I
greatly benefited from the debates at Rosebank Hotel
(what with the 'Happy Hours'. I would take the first
step to contribute towards the revival of the AEEN,
even if it meant contributing material or financial
resources, particularly now that we have an "invasion
of China" into Africa over our raw materials--does the
continent stand to benefit? It's a big question mark.
I beg to move--waiting to hear from other big brains
in the Forum.
Jeff Kapembwa
(Bloomberg News)
Zambia Correspondent.