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MultiChoice tariffs: View from Canada

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BY SEUN BISUGA

I moved to Canada three years ago and encountered many surprises. One of the biggest was the high cost of pay television services and their billing models.During my time as a journalist at TheNEWS Magazine, I consistently advocated for the implementation of a pay-per-view billing model. I frequently expressed my frustration with price increases by MultiChoice, the service to which I subscribe. I believed I had the right to watch only what I wanted, whenever I wanted. Choosing what to watch and when sounds like a good option until that option is actually available to you.Living in Canada now, I’ve found it frustrating that I don’t have access to the wide variety of channels that MultiChoice provides without paying a hefty price. To watch major sports events like the Premier League, Serie A, La Liga, Bundesliga, Champions League, and significant boxing matches, you need to subscribe to three different providers: Fubo, DAZN, and TSN. However, even your subscriptions do not necessarily cover the biggest fights.To clarify, after paying your monthly or yearly subscription for DAZN, you would need to pay an additional $79 (Canadian) to watch the Usyk vs. Fury fight. This bout is available exclusively on pay-per-view and is not included in your regular subscription. In Nigeria, I was able to watch many big fights live on DStv at no extra charge, but that option is not available in my current location.Many people have to rely on alternative methods to watch major fights, and these options often come with costs that may be a little less steep, but steep all the same. When I moved to Canada, I started to realize that in Nigeria, I had access to live sports at a much lower fraction of the price I currently pay. Here’s why: I had two active MultiChoice subscriptions and believed I didn’t need a local subscription in Canada. I was informed when I arrived that the cost of watching soccer matches (as North Americans refer to football) could be financially overwhelming.As a savvy Nigerian, I told my friends that I would avoid their expensive subscriptions by continuing to watch DStv. However, I soon realized that I couldn’t access DStv due to geolocation restrictions. You might suggest using a VPN, but I tried that, and it’s easier said than done. While chatting online is manageable, streaming satellite TV is a different story. I also experimented with IPTV, but I’m not a fan of the lag. There are times when a goal would have been scored or a red card shown before the live TV feed is restored. Additionally, I would to keep Livescore handy to stay updated on everything happening in the game. That was not the way I wanted to watch football.I had no choice but to rely on match highlights, but I wasn’t satisfied because watching live football is what I grew up with. Did I mention how much it costs to subscribe to Fubo, DAZN, and TSN? Fubo is about $85 per month, DAZN costs $30, and TSN is $10. It’s not always better on the other side, as you can see. And before you start asking how much the minimum wage is here, the television service providers here do not ask how much.Even with monthly or yearly subscriptions, there’s no guarantee that you’ll get access to major matches or fights. For instance, to watch the English FA Cup matches, you will need a monthly subscription with Rogers that costs $108. If you’re not a dedicated football fan, you might wonder why you should pay such a high price. That’s a valid question, but the same applies to those who enjoy movies or shows.I realized that it’s more convenient to have everything in one place and at an affordable price. It’s important to note that the prices mentioned are not fixed. If inflation occurs, many businesses, including pay television service providers, tend to raise their prices.I realized that my perspective was unrealistic while I was at home. Whenever fuel prices rose or the naira depreciated, leading other businesses to increase their prices, I found myself joining in the criticism of MultiChoice if they raised their prices. I don’t understand how I became so misinformed to believe that adverse economic conditions affecting the prices of groceries and food would not similarly impact pay television prices. I have participated in mocking and complaining about MultiChoice’s price increases, but I now see that they are an easy target.Many people living abroad often reach out to friends and family to ask how they plan to watch major fights because their subscriptions do not cover them. The tradition of watching games and fights in pubs and bars is not solely about wanting to socialize; it’s also financially motivated. Spending $50 to enjoy a match with others who share a passion for the sport can be a more economical choice than paying $79 to watch it alone at home with no additional perks.In a bar or pub, you can buy a beer or two and enjoy some chicken wings for around $50 while watching the game. Although this adds an extra expense, many people are willing to pay for the experience. Comfort comes at a price. I once told a friend that traveling abroad for a visit is completely different from living abroad and having to manage the bills.MultiChoice offers many channels for free; take CNN as an example. While it comes with most bouquets in Nigeria, it is not included here. Unless you’re okay with watching outdated news, old shows, and old movies, you won’t be able to watch CNN or Fox News on your regular bouquet.Consider Amazon Prime. There are movies and shows available on Prime that require a separate subscription, even if you already have a Prime membership. The same applies to Disney+. To access Paramount, AMC, Apple TV+, Crave, Starz, and others, you need additional subscriptions.When I was at home, I found pay television much easier to navigate compared to my current situation. Many Nigerians abroad would agree that MultiChoice provided us with the most convenient and relatively affordable options to access hundreds of channels in one place.Looking back at what I paid then versus what I pay now, I appreciate the value of the services MultiChoice offers at their price point. I’ve gained a better understanding of this. Sometimes, when we have easy access to these things, we tend to take them for granted until we try something different. The idea that “it’s greener on the other side” is often misleading.As for the content posted on social media, I choose not to comment; people are entitled to portray their lifestyles however they wish.This is my opinion, but a poll among Nigerians living abroad would likely reveal that many share the same view about MultiChoice and its pricing. Where I am, I following, through traditional and social media, how Nigerians are yearning for pay-per-view, which they do not understand, and telling themselves that pay television services abroad cost the same as three bottles of beer back in Nigeria. It is not so. Ask around, as Mr. Macaroni would say.Bisuga, a former correspondent of The NEWS Magazine, writes from St John’s, Newfoundland and Labrador, Canada

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Opinion

50,000 Users Is Not Traction. It’s a Warning.

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“The number that gets you celebrated is often the number that should make you nervous.”Somewhere in African tech right now, a founder just crossed 50,000 users.They screenshot it. They post it. The reactions come quickly; congratulations, fire emojis, “next stop 500k.”It looks like progress. It feels like traction.But most times, it’s neither.It’s acquisition doing its job, not your product.The number that liesUser count is the easiest metric to celebrate — and the easiest to misread.It only goes up. It creates the illusion of momentum even when nothing underneath is working.Because user count doesn’t measure behaviour.It doesn’t tell you who came back after day 7. Who completed a second transaction by choice. Who is still active three months later. Who only showed up because of an incentive that will never repeat.So what looks like 50,000 users is often something else entirely:12,000 retained. 8,000 occasional. 30,000 gone.That is not traction. That is a dataset. And a dataset only has value if you’re willing to read it honestly.What 50,000 users actually is50,000 users is not validation. It’s exposure.It’s the point where your product has been used enough that the patterns are no longer noise, and the truth becomes visible whether you want to see it or not.Your retention curve is already telling a story. Your best acquisition channels are already clear. Your weakest product moments are already exposed.The signal is there. The only question is whether your team is looking at it or celebrating over it.In the words of my CEO: “We need to understand the numbers before making any decision.”It sounds simple. Most teams skip it anyway.Because growth at this stage does one of two things — it amplifies something that works, or it scales something that is already broken. Most teams don’t know which one they’re doing. And they won’t find out until scale makes the problem impossible to ignore.The ecosystem problemThis isn’t just a founder issue. The ecosystem rewards the wrong numbers.Investors ask for user counts. Media platforms publish them. Accelerators highlight them.Because they are simple. They are impressive. They travel well.”50,000 users” sounds better than “12,000 retained users with consistent repeat behaviour”, even though the second number is worth ten times more.So founders optimise for visibility. And in doing that, they move further away from the truth that would actually help them build something lasting.What to do instead?If you’ve just crossed 50,000 users, don’t rush to post. Interrogate the number.Pull your cohort data. Who is still here? Who came back without being pushed? What behaviour repeats naturally without a promo propping it up? Find your real users, not your total users. Then build for the ones who stayed.Because growth without retention isn’t growth. It’s leakage with a good-looking dashboard.The part most teams avoidAt 50,000 users, you are no longer guessing.You have enough data to know whether your product is actually working. What most teams avoid is not the data, it’s what the data implies.That the product may not be as strong as the numbers suggest. That acquisition may be masking weak retention. That growth may be happening in exactly the wrong direction.Looking at that honestly is harder than screenshotting a milestone. But it’s the only thing that separates founders who scale something real from founders who scale something fragile.50,000 users doesn’t mean you’ve found product-market fit. It means your product can no longer hide.The question is no longer “are we growing?” It’s “Is this worth growing?”

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Opinion

The Reality of Aligning Product, Growth, and Brand – Ememobong Udofot

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Inside most companies, product, growth, and brand exist as separate functions with shared goals but different incentives. Product is focused on building, Growth is focused on scaling and Brand is focused on perception. In theory, they should reinforce each other. In practice, they often operate in tension.Product optimizes for functionality and delivery timelines. Growth optimizes for acquisition and conversion. Brand attempts to create coherence across both, often after key decisions have already been made. The result is misalignment that is subtle at first but compounds over time.The product promises one thing through design and capability; growth amplifies another through messaging and campaigns, brand tries to reconcile both into a narrative that feels consistent, and users experience the gaps. This is not a communication failure. It is a systems failure.Alignment does not happen at the level of messaging. It happens at the level of decision-making. To understand this, it helps to reframe what each function is actually responsible for. Product is not just building features. It is defining what the system does, how it behaves, and what users can reliably expect. Growth is not just acquiring users. It is setting expectations at scale. Every campaign, every headline, every incentive communicates a version of reality that users will later validate against their experience. Brand is not decoration. It is the governance layer that ensures what is said, what is built, and what is experienced are in sync. When these roles are not clearly understood, misalignment becomes inevitable.A common pattern looks like this. Growth identifies a compelling angle that drives acquisition. Speed, for example. Instant payouts. Fast transactions. Seamless experience. The message performs well, acquisition increases, but the product, constrained by infrastructure or operational realities, cannot consistently deliver on that promise under all conditions. Delays happen, edge cases emerge and exceptions increase as scale grows. Brand is then forced into a reactive position of managing perception, adjusting language and explaining gaps, and trying to maintain trust while the underlying system is still stabilizing. This is where most companies begin to erode credibility without realizing it, not because they intended to mislead, but because their system allowed expectation to outpace reliability.True alignment requires a different approach. It starts with a shared definition of truth within the company. What can the product consistently deliver today, not occasionally or under ideal conditions, but reliably across real use cases. This becomes the foundation. Growth does not amplify the best-case scenario. It amplifies the most dependable reality. This may feel less exciting, but it creates a stable feedback loop where user expectations are consistently met or exceeded. Brand then encodes this into clear, repeatable signals, language that reflects reality, positioning that users can verify through experience and a narrative that does not need to be defended because it is continuously proven.As the product improves, the ceiling of what can be communicated expands. Growth scales what is already working and Brand evolves the narrative without breaking continuity. This creates compounding trust.The alternative is far more common. Growth leads with aspiration. Product catches up under pressure, and Brand manages the gap. While this can drive short-term metrics, it introduces long-term instability. Users learn to discount messaging; internal teams begin to operate with different versions of truth and decision-making becomes fragmented.The alignment, then, is not about collaboration meetings or shared documents. It is about sequencing and discipline. Product defines reality, Growth scales reality, and Brand ensures reality is understood the same way everywhere. Anything outside this order creates distortion.The companies that sustain trust over time are not the ones with the most aggressive growth strategies or the most creative campaigns. They are the ones where what is promised, what is built, and what is experienced are tightly coupled. Because in the end, users do not evaluate functions. They evaluate outcomes. And alignment is what makes those outcomes feel intentional, not accidental.About the authorEmemobong Udofot E. is a branding and communications executive specialising in strategy, systems thinking, and trust design within financial technology. She currently leads Branding and Communications at FlashChange, a digital value exchange platform focused on enabling reliable, efficient movement of digital assets.Her work sits at the intersection of brand, product, and growth, where she focuses on building coherent systems that align what companies promise with what users consistently experience. With a strong grounding in behavioural insight and market dynamics, she brings a structured, operator-led perspective to how trust is built, communicated, and sustained in low-trust environments.Through her writing, Ememobong explores the deeper mechanics of user behaviour, credibility, and execution in emerging markets, offering clear models and practical thinking shaped by real-world application

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Opinion

Are Stablecoins Replacing Traditional Banking in Africa? – Bidemi Oke

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For years, Africa’s financial story has been told through one statistic: millions of people remain unbanked. But that framing may already be outdated. The more interesting question today is not whether Africans have bank accounts. It is whether banking itself is quietly becoming optional.Across parts of Africa, people are beginning to interact with money without ever touching a traditional bank in the way previous generations did, and stablecoins are at the centre of that shift.Most people still think stablecoins are “crypto” that is the wrong framework. Speculation is not the real story here. Infrastructure is.A stablecoin is simply a digital asset tied to a stable currency, usually the US dollar. Unlike Bitcoin, its value is designed not to fluctuate wildly. But what makes stablecoins important is not the technology itself. It is what they remove.They remove waiting, they remove borders, and they remove conversion friction. And increasingly, they remove dependence on local banking limitations.That changes everything in places where financial inefficiency is expensive.In many African countries, people are not running toward stablecoins because they are fascinated by blockchain technology. They are running toward predictability.A freelancer in Lagos working for a client in London does not want a seven-day transfer process with multiple deductions. A business owner importing goods does not want to lose value between currency conversion windows. A family receiving money from abroad does not want remittance fees eating into already stretched income.Stablecoins solve a very different problem than traditional banks were originally built to solve.Banks were designed around geography. Stablecoins operate around connectivity. That distinction matters more than most people realize.Traditional banking assumes you are financially tied to where you live. Stablecoins assume you are connected to wherever value is moving globally. One system is location-based. The other is internet-based.That is why this shift feels bigger than fintech. What many people call “crypto adoption” in Africa is actually a redesign of financial behaviour. People are choosing speed over institution, access over paperwork and utility over legacy trust systems.Here is what some analysis miss:Stablecoins are not replacing banks because banks are failing completely. They are replacing specific banking functions that no longer justify their friction.That is an important distinction.People still need lending, they still need compliance, they still need financial protection. And they still need identity verification and business financing. But they may no longer need banks to move value from Point A to Point B.That layer is becoming modular. The smartest way to understand this is through what I call the “three-layer money framework.”- Layer one is storage.Where money sits.- Layer two is movement.How money travels.- Layer three is trust.Who legitimacy is verified, and security guaranteedFor decades, banks controlled all three layers simultaneously.Stablecoins are dismantling them.Now, money can be stored in one place, moved through another system entirely and verified by a different network altogether. That unbundling is the real disruption.Africa may become one of the fastest adopters of this model because necessity accelerates innovation faster than convenience ever will.In regions with stable banking systems, people tolerate friction because the system already works reasonably well. In emerging markets, inefficiency creates pressure for alternatives much faster.This is why some African users understand the practical value of stablecoins more clearly than people in wealthier economies do.To them, this is not theory. It is operational. But there is also a danger in oversimplifying what comes next.Stablecoins are not a magic replacement for financial systems. They introduce new risks: regulatory uncertainty, fraud exposure, platform dependency and digital literacy gaps. A financial system cannot scale sustainably without governance.That means the future probably does not belong entirely to banks or entirely to decentralized systems, it belongs to hybrids.Banks that understand this early will survive differently. Instead of competing against stablecoins, they will integrate them. The winners may not be the institutions with the largest branches, but the ones that reduce friction fastest because the future of finance in Africa may not be about who holds the money.It may be about who makes money move most intelligently and that is a very different game from traditional banking.

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