Vulcan Flame Grill — Industry & Competitive Analysis
The South African fast-food and online food-delivery industry, market size and growth, the competitive landscape and the structural trends shaping the QSR sector.
Section 5 · Business Plan
Industry & Competitive Analysis
The South African fast-food and online food-delivery industry, market size and growth, the competitive landscape and the structural trends shaping the QSR sector.
South Africa’s QSR market is mature, chain-dominated and intensely
competitive. Success is decided less by category creation than by site
quality, operating execution, value perception and channel reach. Vulcan
competes within the burger and flame-grilled segment, leveraging the
Steers brand and the Famous Brands supply chain.
The Famous Brands ecosystem
Steers is the flagship quick-service brand of Famous Brands Limited
(JSE: FBR), a vertically integrated restaurant group founded in 1960 and
listed since 1994. Famous Brands operates roughly 3,000 restaurants
across South Africa, the SADC region, the rest of Africa, the Middle
East and the United Kingdom, and reported group revenue of approximately
R8.3 billion for its 2025 financial year, with operating profit of
around R0.9 billion. The group is a leading B-BBEE contributor and
combines a franchised restaurant network with its own logistics and
food-manufacturing operations — a structure that gives franchisees
access to centralised procurement, national marketing, product
innovation and supply-chain scale that independents cannot
replicate.
| Famous Brands metric (FY2025) | Value | Relevance to Vulcan |
|---|---|---|
| Group revenue | ~R8.3bn | Scale of the supporting ecosystem |
| Operating profit | ~R0.9bn | Franchisor financial stability |
| Total restaurants (all regions) | ~3,000 | Proven, scalable systems |
| Steers outlets (national) | ~600–700 | Established brand footprint |
| Leading-brands restaurant revenue (SA) | ~R1.0bn | Depth of the franchise base |
| B-BBEE status | Leading contributor | Supports Vulcan’s own B-BBEE posture |
Table 7. Famous Brands group indicators relevant to the franchise
environment.
Competitive landscape
The South African burger and flame-grilled segment is contested by a
mix of multinational and homegrown brands. Steers’ flame-grilled
positioning differentiates it from the fried-chicken-led leaders, while
value-led disruptors have intensified price competition across the
sector.
| Competitor | Positioning | Implication for Vulcan |
|---|---|---|
| KFC | Fried chicken, scale leader | Largest QSR footprint; sets value benchmarks Vulcan must meet |
| McDonald’s | Global burger systems | Drive-thru and digital sophistication to match |
| Burger King | Flame-grilled burgers | Closest format competitor on grilling positioning |
| Nando’s | Flame-grilled chicken | Competes for the flame-grilled occasion and premium value |
| Pedros / Chicken Licken | Value chicken, fast expansion | Aggressive value pricing pressures margins |
| RocoMamas (Famous Brands) | Smash-burger casual | Adjacent brand within the same ecosystem |
Table 8. Principal competitors and strategic
implications.
Delivery and digital channels
Off-premise consumption is the fastest-growing part of the market.
South Africa’s online food-delivery market reached roughly US$1.0
billion in 2024 and is forecast toward US$2.2 billion by 2033. The
channel is effectively a duopoly: Mr D and Uber Eats together command
the overwhelming majority of orders, with Mr D alone partnering more
than 11,000 restaurants and processing over three million orders
monthly. For a multi-unit operator, delivery expands the effective
catchment of every site and supports incremental dark-kitchen formats
without proportional fixed-cost growth.
Vulcan will treat delivery as a core revenue channel from day one —
multi-homing across Mr D and Uber Eats, optimising menu engineering for
delivery economics (which carry platform commissions of roughly 15–30%),
and piloting a delivery-only dark kitchen in Phase 3 to monetise demand
density without a full-format build.
Porter’s five forces — summary view
| Force | Intensity | Assessment |
|---|---|---|
| Competitive rivalry | High | Mature, chain-dominated, price- and promotion-led |
| Buyer power | High | Low switching costs; consumers highly value- and convenience-sensitive |
| Supplier power | Low–Med | Mitigated by Famous Brands centralised procurement scale |
| Threat of entry | Medium | Brand, capital and site access raise barriers for credible scale entrants |
| Substitutes | Medium | Home cooking, groceries-to-go, other cuisines and dark kitchens |
Table 9. Five-forces summary for the SA flame-grilled QSR
segment.
The competitive intensity of this market is the principal external
risk. Value-led disruptors have demonstrated that share can shift
quickly on price. Vulcan’s defence is brand, site quality and the cost
advantage of the Famous Brands supply chain — not price leadership. The
Plan’s margin assumptions presuppose Vulcan does not have to chase the
deepest discounters to the bottom; that assumption should be tested
against current promotional intensity during diligence.
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 Vulcan Flame Grill Holdings (Pty) Ltd.