Success stories
South Africa's shoe-shine king
Shoe-shine
king Lere Mgayiya: a home-grown success story http://t.co/fA3p8DM4kg pic.twitter.com/ceQakIJIC3
—
Destiny Man (@Destiny_Man) July 14,
2015
But starting a business wasn't easy, Mgayiya says. A former South African
Airways employee, he is a serial entrepreneur who started up several small
businesses that were unsuccessful. In his life, Mgayiya has sold produce – he sold
eggs to the Parliament canteen –
as well as worked with livestock; he has also had
a public mobile phone business and dabbled in stock market investment.
Ultimately, those efforts proved fruitless. "I was considered a loser by my
peers and family because I resigned from SAA and the money I invested was gone.
That created a lot of pressure for me to look for a job. But I did not want to do that
because it is not who I am at all," Mgayiya says.
In 2002, inspired by an article about a local shoe shiner, he invested in the
man's business. He also added its unique selling point – the airport locations.
Lere's
Shoe Shine at OR Tambo are fantastic! Love these guys. Please support them they
do a fantastic job! @pavlobiz pic.twitter.com/L222P8ufAL
— Aki
Anastasiou (@AkiAnastasiou) November
11, 2014
Having worked in airports before, he understood that passenger traffic passing
through would make it a strategic location for his service. He used his connections
to negotiate a deal to operate at Cape Town International Airport. The company,
initially named Airport Shoe Shine, started off slow but steady. Mgayiya sold most
of his valuables to invest in his first luxury shiner's chair and the company's single
employee.
"We worked 18 hours a day, six days a week," he remembers, with the hard
work paying off in a substantial profit in the first two months, money he invested
back into the company. With two more chairs and more shiners, the business
soared.
The
company's biggest break was when it received authorisation to open at OR
Tambo International, South Africa's largest airport, where the shiners became a
popular feature for travelling businesspeople.
Mgayiya partnered with Airports Company South Africa (Acsa), which operates
the airports in the country, in his inevitable, unconventional way.
"I had read about Acsa looking to encourage businesses within the airport and
one day saw the chief executive walking around the Cape Town terminal. I walked
up and told her how well she was doing; how I could see how she had turned the
business around because I was at the airport every day. And she was so impressed
that she asked me why I had not expanded to Johannesburg."
The rest is history.
In 2008, the business expanded to OR Tambo and Durban's King Shake airports
and soon after into five other airports around South Africa. However, the stress of
running eight detached locations on a limited budget led
Mgayiya to close some and
focus on the major airports in Cape Town, Johannesburg and Durban.
"We learnt our lesson. We expanded too quickly to inappropriate places, which
almost killed our business. We had to kill those operations fast before they killed
us," Mgayiya says.
But as these three continue to gain more customers, Lere's Shoe Shine is now
eyeing expansion again. This time, though, the business is looking to go global, with
plans for partnerships in the US and UK, as well as in the rest of Africa.
@pavlobiz @Radio702 staff treated to shoe shine
from Elliot for Lere's Shoe Shine @BDO_SA for the 1st #CEOSleepoutZA pic.twitter.com/wvfFQvTxt7
—
mich
(@michalentweet) May 5,
2015
Mgayiya's business philosophy is simple: passion and clever thinking are more
important to entrepreneurs than just money. The business's customers – be they
tourists arriving in South Africa for the first time or seasoned business travellers –
always enjoy having someone to talk to. "They enjoy the experience of interacting
with (the shoe shiner), (so all my) employees have extrovert personalities
"They're someone to connect with, talk to, when you're far from home in a
hard, cold place like an airport, it's nice to find a quiet, relaxed space for a chance
to stop and relax for a moment and maybe engage meaningfully with someone that
you might not have met in any other situation. That's what this business is really
about, everything else will follow if
you engage with the client."
Today, Mgayiya has 45 employees and he estimates his company shines the
shoes of between 120 000 and 130 000 customers a year.
His advice to budding entrepreneurs is to be prepared to commit themselves
completely to their business, even if it means facing greater risks. "If you are not
invested in that business, it changes the chances of success."
He firmly believes that good businesses are made from good ideas, from your
head and heart. "It is the driving force which is generated from the love and
passion for those ideas that makes it successful – it is not just the money," Mgayiya
says.
"No matter how poor you are, no matter where you come from in life… it is
your brain that makes you successful and your heart that drives you."
Source: AFKInsider

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