Sundays Are for Love Covers: How Absa and Ukhozi FM Are Turning Dedications into Protection
In Mzansi, love isn’t just said ngomlomo. Love is practical. It is something you can see. It has intention. It has a plan.
That cultural truth sits at the heart of Absa
Life’s latest campaign, a bold radio activation that reframes life cover as love
cover. At the centre of it all is the Absa
Eyenu Nonke Funeral Plan, a product designed to cover up to 16 dependants,
because in South Africa, love rarely stops at the nuclear family.
Reframing Insurance as a Love Language
For many, taking out insurance can feel like a
grudge purchase. Something you do because you have to. Absa is shifting that
narrative. The message is simple but powerful: you do not take out cover
because you are obligated to; you take it out because you love.
An Absa Eyenu Nonke Funeral Plan becomes more
than a policy. It becomes a declaration. A practical act of care. A commitment
to ensure that when the time comes, your people are protected and dignified.
This activation launched and is underway on
Ukhozi FM, a station with a loyal, mature, and influential audience. The
demographic is spot on; AmaGrootman nosisi abadala, families and
breadwinners, those who understand that real love is responsibility.
From Dedication to Song to Love Cover
This is not a prize competition. It is not a
gimmick. It is a live radio call in experience powered by Absa.
Here is how it works.
Listeners call in on Sundays and dedicate songs
and messages to the people they love. It could be a partner/ spouse, a parent,
a child, or even an extended family member. The words are raw, personal, and
real.
Then something unexpected happens.
Using AI, those exact words are transformed
into a fully produced song and played live on air just 30 minutes later. A
dedication becomes a melody. A voice note becomes a love anthem.
But it does not end there.
The caller receives the song created from their
own words, along with a quote for the Absa Eyenu Nonke Funeral Plan. The
dependants mentioned in the dedication can be reflected in the cover
conversation. What began as a romantic or heartfelt gesture becomes a practical
next step.
Instead of cold calls, Absa is fanning the
flames of Mzansi’s love language.

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