Let me start
by saying that there are terrible lies about starting a business in Nigeria.
One of the dumbest lies is that business is for people who didn’t go to school.
Jeeez! That’s pathetic. Another fat lie is that you need really huge amount of
capitals. Another lie from the pit of……….ignorance!
Now, i want
to debunk those lies by sharing this short stories of 5 Entrepreneurs in Africa
Who Started a Successful Business with $100 or Less in hand. Guess what? They
are smiling to the banks after just having started a few years ago.
Let's meet them...
Henshan de Silva |
Heshan de Silva (Kenya):
In 2007,
Heshan de Silva dropped out of school and as things got worse for him in the
US, he joined his parents back in Kenya to get his life back together.
Aged only 18
at the time, his parents gave him 10,000 Kenyan Shillings (US$116), which he
used to start a new business. He targeted the bus travel sector in the country
by selling insurance bundled with the bus ticket purchase. And it is widely
reported in the media that by the end of the year, the business had made 90m
Kenyan Shillings (US$1.05m). Isn’t that amazing!? Heshan has since invested
that money in his new business, De Silva
Group, a venture capital firm.
With an
incomplete education, no capital, not even a great deal of life experience and
yet Heshan made it in a short period of time. He was featured in CNN and Forbes
Magazine as one of Africa’s most successful young.
Abasiama Idaresit |
2. Abasiama Idaresit (Nigeria):
Abasiama
Idaresit graduated with an MBA at Manchester Business School and moved back to
Nigeria in 2010 to start his own business. Today, he is the Founder and CEO of Wild Fusion, a digital marketing
company.
Guess what?
He started his company in 2010 with a gift of $250 from his mother and it took
him 8 months to make the first deal. Just three years later, Visa, Vodafone,
Samsung and Unilever as well as several large Pan-African corporations are his
clients and his company is valued at over $6 million in revenue. Yes, you heard
that indeed right; $6 million! And yes, he started in 2010. Wild Fusion has now
become Google’s certified partner in Africa!
3. Axel Fourie (South Africa):
Take Axel
Fourie from South Africa. By the time he was 27, he had tried unsuccessfully to
set up several businesses. When his iPod was faulty and he was told by
specialists that nothing could be done about it, he searched for a YouTube
video online and learned how to fix the iPod himself!
He then put
an advert into a local newspaper and offered to fix faulty iPhones and iPads.
The response he got exceeded his expectations as he was flooded with calls and
requests from potential customers. He knew he was onto something!
Axel Fourie |
Axel opened
his company iFix and started fixing
iPods and iPhones from his university dorm. This was in 2007. Today, Alex runs
a chain of 8 stores and employs 85 people. He has since expanded his business
into manufacturing mobile phone accessories which he exports into 12 countries
across Africa. Oh, we forgot to mention the amount of his starting capital.
Here it is: Zero! (unless he paid a little for that newspaper ad).
4. Anna Phosa (South Africa):
Anna Phosa
started her pig farm venture in 2004 in Soweto with about $100 in hand. She
bought four pigs with that money after she was introduced to pig farming by a
close friend.
Anna Phosa |
A little
less than four years later, in 2008, Anna was contracted by Pick ‘n Pay, the
South African supermarket and retail giant to supply its stores with 10 pigs
per week. This was a first breakthrough and the request by the retailer grew
quickly to 20 pigs per week.
But the
really amazing bit happened in 2010 when Anna signed a breathtaking contract
with Pick ‘n Pay to supply 100 pigs over the next five years under a 25 million
Rand deal – that’s nearly 2.5 million US Dollars! She did not even have so much
land or enough pigs! With a contract in hand, Anna received funding from ABSA
Bank and USAID to buy a 350-hectare farm property.
Anna started
with 4 pigs in 2004, today her farm employs about 20 staff rearing 4,000 pigs
at a time. Her perseverance has made her a millionaire!
5. Jacky Goliath and Elton Jefthas
(South Africa):
Jacky Goliath |
The venture
(De Fynne Nursery) started in 2001
by South African entrepreneurs, Jacky Goliath and Elton Jefthas, in Jeftah’s
home backyard. Market demand grew fast and steadily which meant that they moved
the nursery to a 0.5 hectare land in 2005, and in 2008 had to move again to a
1.5 hectare area outside Cape Town where they hosted 600,000 plants!
Today, the De Fynne Nursery supplies its products
to retailers such as Woolworths, Massmart and Spar in South Africa and it was
reported that they since moved to a whopping 22-hectare commercial property.
This is a simple start up idea on a shoe string budget anywhere in Africa where
you have a booming housing & hotel sector and expanding city areas!
Source: maverickexcel.com
No comments:
Post a Comment