The Kenyan woman who became took on beer monopoly
As chief executive of
Keroche Breweries, Tabitha Karanja has paved the way for many other
female entrepreneurs in Kenya, a country where women are traditionally
scarce in the boardrooms, and even rarer in million-dollar startups.
"People thought it was
not possible to break the monopoly of the existing company that was
there, because it has been there for 80 years," says Karanja, who
launched her company's first beer product, called Summit, in 2008.
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"People thought it was
normal for us to have only one company in this country," she adds. "I
was too determined and said 'no' -- I have traveled many other parts of
the world and I saw there is no country that had only one brewery;
people had many choices so I said that I have to go forward and let the
people decide."
Karanja's journey in
Kenya's drinks industry started in 1997, when she started a fortified
wine business aimed at the lower end of the market. For the next 10
years she came up against big names in Kenya's wine industry, but in
2007, taxes imposed on alcohol manufacturing made it difficult to keep
prices low.
Karanja says the hikes made her product too expensive for her target customers, forcing her to stop producing fortified wine.
But instead of bowing out of the industry, Karanja came up with a new product.
"So there I thought
again and said, 'what do we do for this same market?' And that is how we
came up with ready-to-drink vodka. We make it ready-mixed to precision
for moderate drinking," she says. "Since then the market has always been
opening up and has been growing into this new drink."
Today, the company's
brand new, state-of-the-art factory produces 10,000 bottles of gin and
ready-to-drink vodka, as well as 15,000 bottles of beer, per hour.
Although the company only holds about 5% of the country's market share,
Karanja says the demand for Keroche's products outweighs the supply.
"Before the end of this year we laid a foundation stone of expanding the brewery to ten-fold of whatever we have now," she says.
"The support of the
Kenyans has kept me going all this time because I think that without
their support it would have been very hard for anybody to continue doing
the business," adds Karanja. "If we support one another, we Kenyans, we
Africans, we'll be able to do even bigger than what the multinationals
can do."
If we support one another, we Kenyans, we Africans, we'll be able to do even bigger than what the multinationals can do.
Tabitha Karanja, Keroche Breweries, CEO
Tabitha Karanja, Keroche Breweries, CEO
Karanja, a mother of
four, says that startups are common in Kenya, but few survive the harsh
business environment. She adds that it takes too long to start a
business in Kenya, giving international competitors an advantage in the
marketplace.
"There is a problem because they have not created an enabling environment to do business in this country," she says.'
As a successful
entrepreneur in a typically male-dominated world, Karanja says the lack
of female executives in her country and beyond is rooted in the way
girls are often brought up.
"Even for a young girl
all she thinks is to get married, get children take care of the
husband," she says. "But if our culture can change that -- 'yes, you'll
get married, get your children, but also there is something else that
you need to do: you need to develop your country in one way or the
other.
"Women have always
believed that it is men who are supposed to do that ... so for me what
we can do is challenge the women to think further and to believe that we
can do even better than men."
A model for aspiring
young entrepreneurs across Kenya, Karanja's business skills and efforts
to liberalize the country's industry were recognized in 2010 with an
award from the president of Kenya.
"I felt good, not
because of me, but because of our people here," she explains. "I thought
it would motivate the people, the Kenyans, and show them that even if
you work very hard, struggle, meet all those challenges, at the end of
it there'll be somebody who will recognize you."
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