AfriServ — Company Overview & Business Model
The company profile, the foodservice distribution value chain, the revenue architecture, the business model canvas and the unit economics underpinning AfriServ.
Section 3 · Business Plan
Company Overview & Business Model
The company profile, the foodservice distribution value chain, the revenue architecture, the business model canvas and the unit economics underpinning AfriServ.
3.1 Company Profile
AfriServ Food Distribution Group (Pty) Ltd is being incorporated as a
private holding company in the Republic of South Africa, with operating
subsidiaries to be established in each market of operation. The Group
will adopt a federated structure: a lean Group HQ (treasury, capital
allocation, audit, technology, group procurement, ESG) supported by
autonomous regional and country-level operating businesses, each with
their own managing director, full P&L accountability, and locally
rooted commercial teams.
This structure is deliberately modelled on Bidcorp’s “decentralised
entrepreneurship” framework, which in two decades of execution has
produced the world’s third-largest foodservice distributor (FY24 revenue
USD ~13 bn) without losing the local responsiveness of independent
operators. The architecture allows AfriServ to capture the procurement
and capital-allocation advantages of scale while preserving the customer
intimacy that generates retention.
3.2 The Foodservice Distribution Value Chain
AfriServ operates across four interconnected stages of the
foodservice distribution value chain. Each stage is a distinct profit
centre with its own margin profile and capital intensity, but the value
of the platform comes from running them together — and from customers
paying for the integrated bundle.
| Value-chain stage | Activities | Margin profile | Capital intensity |
|---|---|---|---|
| Procurement | Local & international sourcing; supplier credit; private-label development | 5–8% (volume rebates) | Low |
| Processing | Butchery, portioning, fresh produce packing, custom value-added | 15–25% | Medium |
| Warehousing | Multi-temperature DCs (ambient / chilled / frozen), inventory management | 8–12% | High |
| Distribution | Refrigerated fleet, last-mile delivery, route optimisation, returns | 10–15% | High |
Across the four stages, AfriServ targets a blended gross margin of
22–24% at maturity, in line with global best-in-class peers. The
trajectory from 18% in Year 1 to 24% by Year 7 (Section 12) is driven by
three contributors: (i) procurement scale unlocking volume rebates; (ii)
growing share of value-added processing in revenue mix; (iii) better
fleet and warehouse utilisation as anchor customers scale.
3.3 Revenue Architecture
AfriServ’s revenue is built on five complementary streams. Customers
buy an integrated solution but the revenue is tracked separately for
management and benchmarking purposes.
| Revenue stream | Description | Y5 share | Margin |
|---|---|---|---|
| Product sales | Sale of food and non-food products to customers (core) | 78% | 20–22% |
| Value-added processing | Butchery, portioning, packing, private-label margin uplift | 9% | 24–28% |
| Logistics fees | Dedicated delivery, time-window premium, rural surcharges | 6% | 20–25% |
| Private-label brands | AfriServ-branded ambient & frozen lines (Year 3+) | 5% | 28–32% |
| Digital platform fees | B2B platform commissions, data services (Year 4+) | 2% | 60%+ |
3.4 Business Model Canvas
The following one-page synthesis captures the AfriServ business
model.
| Building block | AfriServ approach | Source of advantage |
|---|---|---|
| Customer segments | Hotels, QSR/FSR, schools, hospitals, mining, catering, retail | Diversified — no segment >30% of revenue |
| Value propositions | One-stop multi-temp; reliability; price; digital ordering | Address fragmentation pain-point directly |
| Channels | Direct field sales + B2B e-commerce + dedicated key-account | Hybrid covers the long tail and the apex |
| Customer relationships | Dedicated account managers + 24/7 customer service centre | Retention >90% target by Year 4 |
| Revenue streams | Product sales; processing; logistics fees; private label | Five streams reduce single-line risk |
| Key resources | DCs; fleet; tech stack; supplier contracts; people | High replication cost = moat |
| Key activities | Procurement; cold-chain logistics; processing; tech ops | Each compounds with scale |
| Key partnerships | Producers, importers, fleet OEMs, ERP vendor, financiers | Long-term strategic, not transactional |
| Cost structure | COGS (~78%); logistics & WH (~10%); SG&A (~7%); D&A (~3%) | Fixed-cost leverage as volumes scale |
3.5 Unit Economics
AfriServ’s unit economics are most easily understood at the level of
a typical mid-sized customer. The illustrative case below is a 4-star
hotel kitchen ordering ZAR 280,000 per month across all categories.
| Metric (per customer, ZAR/month) | Year 1 | Year 5 |
|---|---|---|
| Average monthly revenue | 180,000 | 320,000 |
| Cost of goods sold | 147,600 | 243,200 |
| Gross profit | 32,400 | 76,800 |
| Gross margin % | 18% | 24% |
| Direct logistics cost | 14,400 | 22,400 |
| Customer EBITDA contribution | 18,000 | 54,400 |
| Customer acquisition cost | 24,000 (one-off) | — (retained) |
| Payback period | ~14 months | n/a (already paid back) |
| Lifetime value (5-year) | 900,000 | 1.6 million+ |
The table illustrates the operating leverage of the model: a customer
that contributes ZAR 18,000 of EBITDA in Year 1 grows to ZAR 54,400 by
Year 5 without proportionate increase in cost-to-serve, because the
incremental volume rides on already-paid-for warehouse and fleet
capacity.
Confidential — this business plan is provided to prospective investors and lenders for evaluation purposes only and may not be reproduced or distributed without the written consent of AfriServ (Pty) Ltd.