FireStone Artisan Pizza — Financial Plan
Figure 9: Five-Year Revenue and EBITDA Projections
Section 10 · Business Plan
Financial Plan
Figure 9: Five-Year Revenue and EBITDA Projections
Building to a ZAR 3.24 million Year-3 EBITDA at a 20% margin, with a Year-5 net profit after tax of ZAR 4.92 million.
10.1 Key Financial Assumptions
| Assumption | Value | Basis |
|---|---|---|
| Average Order Value (AOV) | ZAR 140 | Menu pricing at premium-accessible tier |
| Year 1 Daily Orders (Avg) | 150 | Conservative ramp-up from 100 to 200 |
| Year 2 Daily Orders (Avg) | 180 | Brand maturation + delivery growth |
| Year 3 Daily Orders (per outlet) | 150 | Two outlets operational from Q3 |
| Food Cost % | 28%–32% | Industry benchmark for premium QSR |
| Labour Cost % | 28%–32% | Scaling with revenue growth |
| Rent (Monthly) | ZAR 90,000 | Prime urban location, 120–180 sqm |
| Annual Revenue Growth | 30%–50% | Organic + outlet expansion |
| Annual Food Inflation | 6%–8% | SA CPI food component trend |
| Delivery Commission Rate | 20%–25% | Blended Mr D / Uber Eats rates |
| VAT Rate | 15% | Standard SA rate (all figures ex-VAT) |
| Corporate Tax Rate | 27% | Standard SA company tax rate |
10.2 Startup Capital Expenditure
| Capital Item | Amount (ZAR) | % of Total |
|---|---|---|
| Leasehold Improvements (fit-out, plumbing, electrical) | 1,200,000 | 28.6% |
| Kitchen Equipment (wood-fired ovens, prep stations, refrigeration) | 1,500,000 | 35.7% |
| Furniture, Fixtures, and Fittings | 500,000 | 11.9% |
| Technology (POS, KDS, online ordering, generator) | 300,000 | 7.1% |
| Initial Inventory and Supplies | 100,000 | 2.4% |
| Marketing, Branding, and Pre-Launch Campaigns | 200,000 | 4.8% |
| Professional Fees (legal, accounting, licensing) | 100,000 | 2.4% |
| Working Capital Reserve (6 months operating buffer) | 300,000 | 7.1% |
| TOTAL | 4,200,000 | 100% |
10.3 Five-Year Revenue Projections
| Metric | Year 1 | Year 2 | Year 3 | Year 4 | Year 5 |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Outlets Operating | 1 | 1 | 2 | 3 | 5 |
| Avg Daily Orders (per outlet) | 150 | 180 | 150 | 155 | 160 |
| Average Order Value (ZAR) | 140 | 150 | 155 | 160 | 165 |
| Operating Days | 360 | 360 | 360 | 360 | 360 |
| Total Revenue (ZAR M) | 7.56 | 9.72 | 16.74 | 22.32 | 47.52 |
| COGS (ZAR M) | 3.18 | 3.89 | 6.36 | 8.26 | 17.10 |
| Gross Profit (ZAR M) | 4.38 | 5.83 | 10.38 | 14.06 | 30.42 |
| Operating Expenses (ZAR M) | 3.85 | 4.43 | 7.14 | 8.84 | 22.86 |
| EBITDA (ZAR M) | 0.53 | 1.40 | 3.24 | 5.22 | 7.56 |
| EBITDA Margin | 7.0% | 14.4% | 19.4% | 23.4% | 15.9% |
| Net Profit After Tax (ZAR M) | 0.15 | 0.73 | 2.04 | 3.44 | 4.92 |
Figure 9: Five-Year Revenue and EBITDA Projections
10.4 Profitability Trajectory
The profitability trajectory reflects the natural maturation curve of a restaurant business. Year 1 focuses on brand establishment and operational optimisation, yielding modest margins. By Year 2, economies of scale in procurement, increased brand recognition, and delivery growth drive meaningful margin expansion. Year 3 marks a critical inflection point as the second outlet opens, distributing central overhead costs across a larger revenue base and pushing EBITDA margins toward the 20 percent benchmark. By Year 5, with five outlets operational, the business achieves network effects in purchasing, marketing, and brand equity.
Figure 10: Profitability Margin Trajectory (Five-Year)
10.5 Monthly Cash Flow Analysis — Year 1
The Year 1 cash flow model reflects the pre-opening investment phase (Months 1 to 4) followed by the revenue ramp-up phase (Months 5 to 12). Cash outflows during the pre-opening period cover lease deposits, fit-out costs, equipment procurement, staff recruitment and training, and pre-launch marketing. Revenue generation commences in Month 5 with a soft launch at approximately 50 percent capacity, ramping to full capacity by Month 8 to 9. The cumulative cash position reaches its lowest point at approximately negative ZAR 4.9 million in Month 4 before recovering as revenue stabilises.
Figure 11: Year 1 Monthly Cash Flow Analysis
10.6 Break-Even Analysis
Break-even analysis demonstrates that the flagship outlet requires approximately 138 orders per day at an average order value of ZAR 140 to cover all fixed and variable costs. This translates to monthly revenue of approximately ZAR 580,000. Given the projected ramp-up to 150 to 200 daily orders within the first eight to ten months, the business is expected to achieve operational break-even within 14 to 18 months of opening, with cash break-even (recovering the total initial investment) projected within 30 to 36 months.
Figure 12: Break-Even Analysis
10.7 Sensitivity Analysis
Sensitivity analysis evaluates the impact of key variable changes on EBITDA. The tornado chart below illustrates the percentage impact on EBITDA resulting from a positive or negative 10 percent change in each variable. Daily order volume and average order value are the most impactful drivers, while rent and staff costs, as largely fixed expenses, have comparatively moderate impact. This analysis reinforces the strategic importance of marketing investment (to drive order volume) and menu engineering (to optimise average order value) as the primary levers for profitability improvement.
Figure 13: EBITDA Sensitivity Analysis (Tornado Chart)
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