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Felix Erken

Felix Erken

Felix Erken is the MD and Co-owner of Junk Mail, the largest local classifieds exchange in South Africa. He was involved in the launch of Auto Trader and ran it as MD a year later and from that propelled on as MD of Junk Mail Publishing Group. His agility and tenacity ensured Junk Mail's early adoption from purely traditional print to include digital and mobile platforms to ensure his customers were best served, no matter where they were or how demanding the digital rules. Junk Mail launched mobile offerings as early as 1999.

The Junk Mail stable includes the flagship sites JunkMail and JobMail, as well as AutoMart, TruckandTrailer, FreePropertyAds, Lovemail and machinery sales site Mascus. It recently extended its digital footprint into East and West Africa. In print, there are three regional editions of Junk Mail, Cape Ads, JobMail and four vehicle sales publications,

A member of SA's cellular networks WASPA (Wireless Applications Service Provider Association), a recognised and valued member of the ICMA (International Classified Media Association) and the INMA (International Newsmedia Marketing Association) Junk Mail consistently ranks 5th largest South African mobisite publisher in the DMMA rankings.

Junk Mail today is unquestionably the leading digital classifieds portal in South Africa and is committed to pioneering the future of classifieds.

Website URL: http://www.junkmail.co.za

Classified advertising gets a boost from the mobile generation

The classified advertising business is busier than ever before, with new mobile channels bringing a younger audience to a well-established marketplace.

 

Offering users their choice of print, web or mobile access to the same large database of classfied ads has boosted traffic substantially. Ten years ago we thought we were doing well running 35,000 ads a month. Now we’re easily doing double that number.

 

There’s a generational shift in the media that people prefer. The 20-somethings who enjoyed Junk Mail in print when it launched in the 1990s have now partly moved to the web, but their grown-up children prefer to buy and sell via their mobile phones. It’s still the same experience at heart, just through a different medium.

 

South Africa is a very classifieds-friendly market. In some wealthier countries people tend to give their old stuff away. Here we have a large middle class of people who on the one hand want to make some extra cash from stuff they don’t need or want anymore, and on the other hand really enjoy a bargain. Classified ads fill a real need.

 

It’s in some ways a form of entertainment. There’s a strong community around Junk Mail and people are very loyal to the brand. There’s a certain element of trust built up. Here’s a typical story: A friend bought a used dartboard on Junk Mail from someone in another town and accidentally overpaid by R50. He told the seller to include the change with the dartboard when he mailed it – and sure enough, the dartboard arrived with a R50 note taped to the back. There’s a feelgood element to these interactions that keeps people coming back.

 

The popularity of classified advertising and the relative ease of setting up an online platform also means there is lots of competition. A lot of entrepreneurs look at it and think it will be easy to do. Fortunately size really does count in this business: The bigger your user base, the more likely it is that each advertiser will make a successful sale, and the more attractive your community is. At Junk Mail we plan to make the most of our advantage.

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Inaccurate CVs are a perennial problem for recruiters -- but, savvy HR practitioners and recruitment consultants are increasingly turning to social media for a solution.

15 years, 5 key lessons in entrepreneurship

Wednesday, 24 October 2012 16:28 Published in Media & Marketing
15 years, 5 key lessons in entrepreneurship

Junk Mail started life as a weekly print publication, a solidly old-school business – but in the 15 years since I joined the business in 1998 it’s also become South Africa’s largest online classified advertising site, with a huge mobile reach as well thanks to our custom-developed mobile site.

 

These are the top five things I’ve learned in the past 15 years:

1. Never think you’re ahead of the game

We went through a phase a few years ago where everything we touched made money. I thought I was so good: And then the competitors came. I watched them, of course, but not nearly seriously enough - I made exactly the same mistake the newspapers had made with Junk Mail a decade earlier.

If I’d been a bit more smart, and a bit less complacent, I would have realised a lot earlier than I did that my business as I had known it would never be the same again.  Because these things sneak up on you – your numbers keep looking good, and you keep feeling successful, for quite a long time while the ground is being cut out from under you.

We survived, of course, but it was tough going for a while. If I’d known then what I know now, I would have moved to respond a lot earlier. Which brings me to the second lesson:

2. You can’t bar the door against a tsunami

Change happens, and you can’t stop it – you can only try to ride it.  With hindsight, we tried to protect the print side of our business against the Internet onslaught for far too long. I’ve learned that it’s always better to embrace than to defend – the more tightly you cling to what you know, the more you lose the essence of what you are trying to do. Ultimately we had to recognise that our business was fundamentally about helping people buy and sell things, not publishing newspapers – the medium our customers choose should make no difference to us.

There’s always going to be a new disruption around the corner – I’ve learned now to go out and pursue partnerships and collaborations, not view every new thing as a potential threat.

3. Trust your instincts and stand up for them

This goes along with the old line about it being easier to ask for forgiveness than permission. I’ve always had the best results when I’ve trusted my own experience and instincts. At one point we lost two years of growth, I believe, because I wasn’t confident enough in my own judgement to argue my position.

4. Look after your body

Running a business takes a lot of energy, and it’s a long-term commitment. Working 18-hour days fuelled by junk food and caffeine might work for a short time, but if you don’t look after your own resources they will fail you at a critical point. Looking after your body, taking holidays, looking after your relationships – these are important investments in your business as well as your own happiness and well-being.

5. Invest in your management

This is the hardest lesson of all, for most of us: At some point, we have to let go. It will always be agonising to hand a portion of the business over to someone else and then watch them make mistakes – but if you don’t do it, they will never learn and the business will never grow.  And if you fall ill, or fall under a bus next week, the business will collapse without you unless you’ve shared the vision and the competence that will enable other people to run things.

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