By SIMON CIURI, sciuri@ke.nationmedia.com
In Summary
- Sweet reward for former pastry chef as enterprise bug breeds success.
When Obado Obadoh was hired by Norfolk Hotel as an
apprentice chef in 1990, he had no idea that the job would plant in him
an entrepreneurship bug that would sprout into a multi-million shilling
business two decades later.
“I had just turned 18 and I needed a job to take care of my
struggling family. I started off as an apprentice chef since I had no
formal training and by the time I left (employment) in 2004, I was the
pastry chef,” Mr Obadoh, the founder of Nairobi-based coffee house Café
Deli, said in an interview on Friday.
Mr Obadoh’s plan was not to stay on the job for long.
He wanted to gain exposure to the hospitality
industry, get to know how it works, and then decide what to do with his
life. His stay in the hotel industry however lasted nearly 15 years,
before he finally gained the courage to plunge into the entrepreneurial
world.
After working at Norfolk for five years, he left
for his second job with Safari Park Hotel, where he worked for four
years before leaving for Nyali Beach.
Two-and-a-half years later he joined Sarova Panafric as a Pastry Chef until 2004 when he resigned from formal employment.
In the same year, he set up a pastry shop in
Westlands, Nairobi, and incorporated two of his business partners to
fund the young business.
“When the business started doing well,
disagreements emerged and I opted to leave,’’ says Mr Obadoh, reflecting
on an experience that almost pushed him into depression.
He was bought off from the business.
In 2006 he opened a pastry kitchen that focused on delivering to homes and supplying restaurants.
He registered Nanjala Limited, a start-up that took
nearly six months to break-even, surviving mainly on a few
trader-clients who would buy from him and re-sell at a small profit.
He later employed sales people to sell some of his merchandise at bus terminuses, paying them on commission.
As the business grew steadily, Mr Obadoh learned
that a coffee shop by the name Coffee World located along Nairobi’s Moi
Avenue was being sold off. He put in a bid for the business but lost
since he did not have Sh18 million needed to acquire the firm.
The banks told him that his asset value of Sh2
million at the time was too little to cover the financing that he
required to buy out the firm.
Unbowed, he approached a venture fund that loaned
him the cash to expand his business, which he re-named Coffee Deli. He
renovated the premises that had a capacity for 60 people and expanded it
to accommodate 80. This was in 2011.
No comments:
Post a Comment