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Osun: Newspaper vendors lament impacts of online outlets on livelihood

Newspaper vendors and sales representatives in Osun say their businesses are no longer lucrative due to the prevalence of online media outlets.

• August 8, 2024
newspaper vendor
Photo of a newspaper vendor used to illustrate the story

Newspaper vendors and sales representatives in Osun say their businesses are no longer lucrative due to the prevalence of online media outlets.

On Thursday in Osogbo, some vendors and sales representatives said that online media had reduced sales of hard copies. They said it was affecting their means of livelihood and survival.

Oladayo Salau, a newspaper vendor at Old Garage, Osogbo, said there was little to no sales due to online media.

Mr Salau said he had been in the business for over 15 years. He said the only patronage he now enjoyed was from those who placed adverts announcements of change of names and needed hard copies for reference.

“The patronage of newspapers these days is very bad, and it is because the news that will come out in the newspaper the next day is already online a day before. People now see the news in hard copies newspapers as stale or old news.

“For vendors like me, we are not making money again, except for a few who want to effect a change of their names in the dailies,” he said.

Mr Salau said the vendors also got occasional patronage from people without internet-enabled mobile phones and those who need to read the newspapers for vacancies and pay a token afterwards.

“But generally, the sales are very poor and can no longer sustain my livelihood.

“We have appealed to the publishers countless times to stop providing their news online, but they insisted that they cannot stop it,” he said.

Kasim Madamudola, a newspaper sales representative, said that he had stopped selling newspapers for some months due to low patronage by his buyers.

Mr Madamudola, who sells newspapers at Baruwa junction in Osogbo, said that people now prefer to use their mobile phones to get the needed information to buy newspapers.

He said that the situation had led to the collapse of his vendor business.

Another newspaper vendor, Shola Akiolu, said people did not buy newspapers again since the advent of online media.

Mr Akiolu said newspaper readers preferred buying data on their phones to get the needed news and information. He, however, said small sales from sports newspapers were what he was using for survival.

“I have reduced the number of newspapers I now collect to avoid debt and loss of profits,” he said.

Deborah Akinloye, a newspaper vendor at Iyana Offa in Osogbo, said the newspaper business was no longer how it used to be.

Ms Akinloye, who said she trained two of her children with the profits from the sales of newspapers, said that the online media was making things difficult for her.

“Things are very bad now. People no longer come to buy newspapers again due to the online version. Even some private organisations that I used to supply newspapers no longer patronise me.

“Before now, the profits I made from the newspaper sales were what I  used to cater for my family, but I have to look for something else to support my family due to poor sales,” she said.

(NAN)

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