BUSINESSMEDIA

Why Uhuru Kenyatta Has Shut Down 32-Year-Old People Daily Newspaper

Share
People Daily goes digital
The People Daily newspaper printed its last issue on Friday 29th November, 2024.
Share

The People Daily, the ad-supported free newspaper for 10 years, has been shut down, as effects of low advertising continue to pummel the media industry. The newspaper, part of Mediamax Network Ltd owned by former Kenyan President Uhuru Kenyatta family, printed its last issue on Friday 29th November 2024, a sort of anti-climax for a newspaper that has been on the streets for three decades.

To cut costs and survive in the current digital market, the People Daily has gone fully digital in the face of decreasing circulation and changing media consumption preferences. “Journalism insiders have known for a long time that the generation of newspaper readers who loved the smell of ink in a freshly published newspaper that they held in their hands are fading out and we must serve younger generations on the platforms where they hang out,” said Mr Mayaka Gekara, People Daily Managing Editor, said in the goodbye-to-print editorial.

Mr Mayaka said as the People Daily turns a new page to digital media platforms, it will continue to serve readers with content on how politics affects their lives, current affairs, personal finance, health, lifestyle, sports, culture, science, technology, and innovation, education, the environment, mental health and awareness. It was not immediately clear if this move will result in job losses.

Founded in 1992, The People weekly quickly became an influential newspaper in Kenya. During its weekly days, it was the go-to newspaper for political analysis and exclusives for its boldness, touching on stories that The Standard and Nation feared to. The newspaper’s legacy can be felt all over the industry having trained some of the big names in the media today.

> For Ex Standard Employees, Nothing to Show After Meeting With CEO

On July 1, 2014, The People Daily entered the unchartered market of a free-circulating newspapers, hoping to turn the high circulation from free copies into an advertising binge. It worked for some time – as Uhuru Kenyatta propped it up while serving as President, throwing it goodies through his influencers.

The going became bumpy last year when the government, in a decision that hurt most main stream newspapers, decided to direct all its advertising to The Star newspaper. Initially, government advertising was shared among the main newspapers. Without this stream, revenues dunked and printing became an unbearable expense for the free newspaper.

The People was founded and owned by politician Kenneth Matiba, started as a weekly, as it were, but turned daily with a Sunday edition in December 1998. In 2002 it had a daily circulation of 60,000, but steadily dropped as it could not sustain the quality and punch it had with the weekly newspaper. It was later sold to the Kenyatta family.

> Trump’s First Tv Interview: Why it is Being Closely Watched By the World

Written by
BT Reporter -

editor [at] businesstoday.co.ke

Leave a comment

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

PAST ARTICLES AND INSIGHTS

Related Articles
SACCO Societies Regulatory Authority Acting CEO, David Sandagi
BUSINESSECONOMYFEATURED STORYMARKETS

SACCO to Have Heated Annual Gatherings As Dividends Fall

SACCO (Savings and Credit Cooperative Societies) members are likely to turn noisy,...

Safaricom fixed business director Sylvia Anampiu
BUSINESS

Safaricom to Roll Out New Pricing Model For Internet Services

Safaricom has appointed Sylvia Anampiu as director of fixed business as Kenya’s...

A section of KRA office. PHOTO/@KRACorporate/X
BUSINESS

KRA Hits All-Time High as December Tax Revenue Reaches Ksh251.5B

Kenya’s tax collections closed 2025 on a historic high, with the Kenya...

Image showing man herding in extreme hot weather and drought in Northern Kenya
BUSINESS

Government Injects Ksh870M to Drought-Affected Households

Families in the driest regions are getting a lifeline as the Government...