AfriServ — Go-to-Market Strategy

The phased geographic expansion across South Africa, SADC, East and West Africa, the customer-acquisition engine and the pricing strategy.

AfriServ Business PlanSection 7 › Go-to-Market Strategy

Section 7 · Business Plan

Go-to-Market Strategy

The phased geographic expansion across South Africa, SADC, East and West Africa, the customer-acquisition engine and the pricing strategy.

AfriServ’s go-to-market strategy is sequenced in three phases over 7
years. The phasing reflects the operational reality that a
multi-temperature distributor cannot scale geographically until the
home-market operating model has been proven, financial discipline
embedded, and the management bench deepened.

7.1 Phase 1 (Years 1–2): South Africa Beachhead

In the first two years, AfriServ concentrates on three provinces —
Gauteng, Western Cape and KwaZulu-Natal — that together represent ~78%
of South African foodservice spend. Each province is anchored by a
multi-temperature distribution centre, supported by a regional sales
team and dedicated key-account managers for the largest customers.
Initial customer acquisition focuses on 30–40 anchor accounts in
hospitality and QSR, supplemented by 200+ SME accounts onboarded through
the digital platform.

Activity Specifics Y2 target
DC roll-out Gauteng (Month 9), Western Cape (Month 14), KZN (Month 18) 3 DCs, ~32,000 m² total
Fleet acquisition Refrigerated trucks (16t and 7.5t mix), branded 38 vehicles
Customer acquisition Field sales + key-account; B2B platform onboarding 750 active customers
Anchor contracts Hotel groups; regional QSR franchisees; mining contractors 25 multi-year contracts
Revenue target Build to ZAR 1.48 bn run-rate by end Y2 ZAR 1.48 bn

7.2 Phase 2 (Years 3–5): SADC & East Africa Expansion

From Year 3, AfriServ extends into adjacent markets where the
operating model can be re-applied with limited adaptation. The
sequencing — Botswana and Namibia first, then Zambia, then Kenya and
Tanzania — is calibrated to currency stability, hospitality-sector size,
infrastructure readiness, and the proximity of South African suppliers
(most products will continue to be sourced from SA into early-stage
Phase 2 markets).

Figure 9.
Figure 9. Cumulative distribution-centre rollout by region, Years 1–7.
Country Year of entry Initial DC Anchor segment Entry strategy
Botswana Y3 Gaborone Mining + lodging Greenfield + supply from JHB
Namibia Y3 Windhoek Tourism + lodging Greenfield + supply from JHB/CT
Zambia Y4 Lusaka Mining + QSR Acquisition of regional player
Kenya Y4 Nairobi Hotels + QSR + cloud JV with regional foodservice
Tanzania Y5 Dar es Salaam Tourism + hospitality Bolt-on to Kenyan operations
Mozambique Y5 Maputo Lodging + retail Greenfield, leveraging KZN DC

7.3 Phase 3 (Years 6–7): West Africa & Densification

From Year 6, AfriServ extends into West Africa through a combination
of greenfield in Ghana and acquisition in Côte d’Ivoire. In parallel,
the company increases density in established markets through bolt-on
acquisitions of regional distributors that bring customer relationships,
last-mile coverage and local supplier networks. The acquisition-led
densification is the principal driver of the Year 6–7 revenue
acceleration in our base case.

7.4 Customer Acquisition Engine

AfriServ’s customer acquisition engine combines four channels, each
tuned to a different customer segment.

  • Field sales (key accounts). Dedicated account
    managers for the top 100 customers per region; multi-year contract
    focus; menu and pricing co-design.
  • Inside sales (mid-market). Centralised
    inside-sales team converting inbound digital leads and outbound
    prospecting against a curated list of 5,000 mid-market hospitality and
    institutional accounts.
  • Digital onboarding (long tail). Self-service
    onboarding via the B2B platform for SME customers under ZAR 50k/month
    spend — unit economics depend on minimising acquisition cost in this
    segment.
  • Trade marketing & events. Presence at Hostex
    (Africa’s largest hospitality trade show), regional tourism conferences,
    and bi-annual customer Open Days at each DC.

7.5 Pricing Strategy

Foodservice distribution pricing is built up from a cost base
(acquisition cost + freight + duties) plus a category-level margin
envelope. AfriServ’s pricing strategy combines transparency (line-item
visibility for major customers), volume-tiered rebates (rewarding
customer growth), category-led pricing (different margins on commodity
vs specialty), and dynamic adjustment for currency and commodity moves.
Discount discipline is enforced centrally through an approval matrix to
prevent margin erosion.

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.