.At
the age of 38, Mohammed Dewji employs 24,000 people and claims to
contribute 3.5% to Tanzania's GDP. Within the next 5 years, he plans to
build a $5 billion empire out of Dar es Salaam.
by Kristin Palitza
What
most entrepreneurs don’t achieve in a lifetime, he did in just over a
decade. Mohammed Dewji single-handedly turned his father’s trading
business into Tanzania’s largest import-export group. He grew Mohammed
Enterprises Tanzania (MeTL) 30-fold and increased revenues from $30
million to $1.1 billion by diversifying into a multitude of sectors,
including manufacturing, distribution, logistics, financial services,
real estate, cement, energy and mobile telephony.
It’s
not surprising that many people have a hard time imagining the humble
beginnings Dewji comes from. His family, which stems from Gujarat state
in western India and was blown in the proverbial dhow across the Indian
Ocean, started out with very little. His grandmother opened a small
trading shop, which she runs out of their home in Singida, a
poverty-stricken town in central Tanzania. In this simple house, built
from sand and mud, Dewji was born with the help of a traditional
midwife.
“That
wasn’t very smart. My mother and I almost died because I had the
umbilical cord wrapped around my neck,” he recalls. But from then on,
his fortunes changed.
His
father, Gulam Dewji, who had by the mid-70s turned his mother’s shop
into a flourishing import-export business, was able to sent his six
children to good schools, first in Tanzania’s third-largest city Arusha
and later in capital Dar es Salam. In their free time, Dewji and his
siblings played tennis and golf.
“My
father spent a lot of money educating us. He also believed sport
creates discipline. He didn’t want us to just play a sport for fun. He
wanted us to push ourselves. We probably have a thousand trophies at
home that we won,” he says.
Until
this day, there is almost nothing Dewji undertakes purely as a hobby.
He either aims for success, or he doesn’t bother with it. And so he
ploughs millions of Dollars into Tanzania’s national soccer team, the
Taifa Stars instead of being content watching the odd game or kicking
around a ball on a Sunday.
“I
have no moderation. My wife always complains. She says, ‘Mohammed, why
don’t you do things in the middle?’ It’s either very much or nothing at
all,” he laughs.
His
favorite sport has always been golf. Dewji spent many afternoons on Dar
es Salaam’s golf course, not only because he was good it – he had 3
handicap – but also because he realized from early on that many
high-profile business deals are concluded on the world’s 18-hole-lawns.
“I
already liked to network as a very young guy. I was told that the golf
course is a good place to meet important people. So I started playing
golf. At one time, I even wanted to become a golf professional,” he
says.
When
his father saw that his son showed potential, he enrolled him at the
legendary Arnold Palmer Golf Academy in Orlando, Florida, where Dewji
also attended Saddlebrook High School. A few years later, when it became
clear that Dewji wasn’t going to make the cut as a professional golfer,
he decided to study international business and finance with a minor in
theology at Georgetown University, an elite tertiary institution in
Washington D.C., which has a long list of notable alumni, including
former US president Bill Clinton, former Philippines president Gloria
Arroyo and Jordan's King Abdullah.
During
his time at Georgetown, Dewji learned what he says were key lessons in
leadership. “Georgetown really molded me. It took me a step forward. I
understood that you need to be dreaming, but not daydreaming. You need
to try to dream a reality. Then you have vision,” he explains.
Pietra
Rivoli, deputy dean of Georgetown University’s school of business, who
taught Dewji in international finance, remembers him as a student whose
energy was boundless and whose positive enthusiasm was contagious.
“While
other students tried to stay awake through discussions of exchange
rates, Mohammed would stay after class to talk about how the readings
might pertain to the Tanzanian Schilling, and how Tanzania could address
its economic challenges. Even at the age of 20 or so, he was thinking
about how to improve life in his country,” she remembers.
Dewji
never questioned if he should return to Africa after his graduation in
1998. He joined his father’s business, which had by then become a
million Dollar trade and transport group, as chief financial controller.
Five years later, at the age of 29, he was promoted to managing
director, expanding his father’s business hard and fast. “I went into
manufacturing and value-addition. I built a distribution system and
created branches,” he says.
Today,
MeTL Group is buying and selling more than 200 commodities in east,
central and southern Africa, from sugar to rice, salt, fertilizer,
second-hand clothing, motorcycles, bubblegum, yeast and ballpoint pens.
The group also distributes 50 of its own brands, taking advantage of the
fact that Tanzania borders on eight countries and is thereby an ideal
import-export gateway.
“The
goods that I am mainly dealing in are FMCGs [fast moving consumable
goods]. It’s goods that touch people’s lives, that are needed by the
common man,” he says.
The
distribution of FMCGs is not an easy task in a vast country like
Tanzania, which measures a million square kilometers and where 80% of
the population lives in remote, rural areas. But with more than a
hundred trade outlets countrywide, MeTL Group has managed to undercut
multi-national consumer goods giants like Unilever and drive them out of
the east African nation.
“I
have a big basket of goods. I have warehousing and logistics. I have
over a thousand trucks. It’s all complimenting each other. It’s very
difficult for people to come from the outside and compete with me,”
Dewji explains.
He
invests in whatever sector he sees opportunity and growth potential. Or
to say it differently: the only two industries Dewji is not involved in
are beer and tobacco.
Agriculture
is another key sector for MeTL Group, which with a workforce of 24,000
people is also the country’s biggest employer, and with 50,000 hectares
of arable land, the largest private landowner. Dewji’s sisal farms, tea
gardens and cashew fields are the drivers of his FMCG export business. A
good 99% of the cashew kernels he produces, for example, are shipped to
the United States.
Always
thinking two steps ahead, Dewji has been making plans for how to profit
most from his land, while helping to solve the challenges of Dar es
Salaam’s rapid urbanization, a city of 4.4 million people. He is busy
turning a 17,000 acre plot he bought cheaply several years ago, just 25
kilometers outside of the capital, into a dry-port with an internal
container depot and a railway connection that will feed into Dar es
Salaam’s massive, natural harbor, which is slowly but surely running out
of space. It will, of course, also generate huge profits.
Since MeTL Group already contributes 3.5% of Tanzania’s GDP, it is fast outgrowing national boundaries.
“If
you compare, for example, Tata and the MeTL Group, we are like Mickey
Mouse. But if you look at their contribution to India, vis-à-vis my
contribution to Tanzania, mine is bigger. You end up competing with
everybody in your own country, and I don’t think that’s healthy. It’s a
risk area. It’s a good time for us to replicate what we are doing in
Tanzania in other countries,” he explains his expansion plans.
A
workaholic at heart, Dewji never thinks small. “Slowly, slowly, I am
planning to take on the whole continent. I am very bullish,” he says
about himself. His five-year-plan is to turn MeTL Group into a $5
billion empire.
“We
have to constantly revisit our visions, because we are outgrowing them
so quickly. Who would have thought we could turn our business from $30
million to $1.1 billion in only 12 years? I believe that by 2018, we
will be a $5bn business. Easy. It’s a no-brainer. If you look at the
business we are in and the growth potential that there is, it’s amazing.
My philosophy as a businessman is not to be satisfied with what I have
got, but to always work harder to achieve more,” he says.
It’s
been quite some years now that MeTL Group, under Dewji’s helm, has
expanded so drastically that it has outgrown the loan potential of
Tanzania’s banks. Dewji has found a solution to this problem, too. He
goes to one of the continent’s powerhouses, South Africa, to finance new
ventures. Most recently, he secured a $100 million syndicated loan
through a grouping of banks.
“If
I think of a top African businessman, Mohammed comes to mind. He works
very long hours, is always on the move, has an eye for opportunity and a
very good business sense. He is levelheaded and pays extremely close
attention to detail,” says Helmut Engelbrecht, head of Investment
banking in Africa at Standard Bank, one of the financial institutions
that has been working closely with MeTL Group.
Whatever
venture Dewji pursues links closely into his country’s national policy
framework. When Tanzania’s government launched a national strategy for
economic growth and poverty reduction in 2005 that was geared, among
other things, towards boosting entrepreneurship to achieve value
addition and employment creation, Dewji immediately saw opportunity.
“I
bought a lot of sick industries, including soap production, grain
milling, rice and sugar blending. I also went into the edible oil
business and the textile industry,” he says.
He
first expanded MeTL Group’s edible oil refining capacity from 60 to 600
tons. This year, Dewji almost quadrupled the business when he purchased
an additional 1,650-ton refinery, increasing his total output to 2,250
tons of edible oil. It comes as little surprise that he has caught the
attention of some of Africa’s wealthiest investors.
“I
am being approached by many big boys, by multi-national companies that
want to partner with me or buy me out. But I am not ready to sell yet. I
can see so much more opportunity for growth. I don’t want to be paid
based on what I am earning today, because I can see the tremendous
potential. I am always looking five, ten years ahead,” he explains.
Another
ailing sector Dewji rescued is Tanzania’s textile industry. Knowing
that the east African nation is the continent’s third largest cotton
producer, he decided to buy and refurbish four run-down mills, three in
Tanzania and one in Mozambique. His next step will be to move into
Zambia and Malawi, he says, considering Ethiopia as a potential fifth
standpoint.
“We
were quite lucky. Tanzania’s previous, socialist government had
invested hundreds of millions of Dollars in infrastructure to build
textile mills. But under socialism everything collapsed. So we were able
to acquire these industries very cheaply. Obviously the machinery was
all run-down, the technology obsolete. We had to rehabilitate the mills
by investing in top European and American machinery,” says Dewji.
He
has turned MeTL Group into sub-Sahara Africa’s largest textile player,
integrating the entire value-addition chain from ginning to spinning,
weaving, processing and printing.
“This
year, we are going to produce more than a hundred million meters of
cloth. That is more than 2,500 times the circumference of the earth,”
Dewji says with pride.
Due
to his entrepreneurial vigor, Tanzania is able to compete with the
world’s largest and cheapest textile producer, China – at least within
its own borders where government policies, including import tariffs on
textiles and a standard value added tax (VAT) of 18% help protect the
industry.
“Today,
overall textile production is cheaper in Tanzania than in China. Labor
is competitive in terms of pricing. Tanzania’s big advantage is that we
have cotton, while China has to import cotton. So they cannot compete
with me in my market,” Dewji explains.
His
success speaks for itself. This year alone, he will earn at least $85
million after taxes, he says. But he is far too humble to take credit
for the entirety of his achievement.
“People
often ask me: ‘Who is smarter, you or your father?’ I ask them back:
‘Is the person who goes from zero to ten smarter, or someone who goes
from ten to a thousand?’ Obviously, it’s much easier to go from ten to a
thousand than to start from zero. So I believe that my father is much
smarter than me,” he says.
Nothing could be further from his mind than taking it easy, or even early retirement.
“People
in Tanzania look at my wealth and think I must be sunbathing and
playing golf all day. But I work really hard. I put in a hundred hours a
week. It’s a never stopping game. You can never say, ‘I’ve worked hard
enough now’,” says Dewji, who has 60 divisional board meetings every
month, or two per day.
Every
morning, Dewji, who lives in with his wife, daughter and two sons in
one of Dar es Salaam’s best neighborhoods, starts work at 6AM, spending
the first hour responding to emails and reading commodity reports. He
then runs meetings until lunch, by which time he has already put in
almost seven hours of work.
“When
I feel my energy levels starting to drop, I drive to the gym near my
house. Every day, I run three kilometers and lift weights. I like to
keep fit,” says Dewji, who is of slender built and the proud owner of a
‘six-pack’.
After
gym, he goes home for lunch and to play 15 minutes with his three
children before he returns to the office until late at night. The only
days he takes off are Sundays, he says, when he spends time with his
family and totally shuts off from work.
“Until about four years ago, I also used to work on Sundays, until my wife almost divorced me,” he jokes.
Dewji
is not only growing his own empire. He is putting Tanzania on the map,
making sure the east African nation – which boasts the continent’s third
largest gold reserves, recently discovered uranium and gas reserves as
well as a flourishing tourism industry combined with long-term political
stability – will become one of sub-Sahara Africa’s big economic
players, together with South Africa, Nigeria, Ghana and Kenya.
Already,
Dar es Salaam is the second fastest growing African city after Lagos.
And Tanzania, which boasts an average of 7% national economic growth
over the past decade, has become one of the fastest growing economies in
the world. According to World Bank, Tanzania’s per capita GDP more than
doubled from $730 in 2000 to $1,500 in 2012.
“There’s
no doubt that the country’s purchasing power is increasing,” notes
Dewji, who believes the whole of sub-Saharan Africa, which currently has
an overall growth rate of 4.8%, could achieve double-digit growth
figures if countries are well-governed, politically stable and create
conducive environments to attract investment.
As
if Dewji didn’t already have enough on his plate, he is also in
politics. The decision was made when he visited Singida, the town and
district he grew up in, after returning from the US. As he walked the
city’s streets, he encountered an old man who was scooping yellowish
water out of a dirty puddle. It was his family’s only access to drinking
water.
“A
lot of people die from water-born diseases in rural Tanzania. But every
life has the same value. So I decided to run in the next elections to
change the dire situation these people live in. I was 24 years old. My
parents thought I was crazy,” he remembers.
Whatever
Dewji sets his mind to, he turns into a success. In 2005, he was
elected as a Member of Parliament in the National Assembly of Tanzania.
Five years later, he was re-elected in a landslide victory with 80% of
votes. Not being a fan of ‘politicking’, Dewji, who is fluent in both
English and Kiswahili, says he decided to put his own spin on the role
of an MP.
“I
don’t really have time for politics. I don’t go to parliament, and I
don’t get involved in national politics, because I don’t want it to
conflict with my business interests. All I do is serve my constituency
because I believe people see hope in me,” he explains.
He
puts his money where his mouth is. Every year, he donates half a
million Dollars of his own money to help the people of Singida, with
focus on three areas: education, health care and water. And with
tangible success. In years Dewji has been representing the central
Tanzanian district, access to clean water has jumped from 23% to 75%,
while the number of secondary schools increased from two to 18.
“I
studied theology as a minor because I feel that religion is
complimenting me. It makes you strive to become a better person. I am
very conscious of everything I do. If you get too engrossed in making
money, you lose focus on life. Life is very short. I don’t want to die
with all this money,” he explains.
Even
though he makes millions, he has little interest in living a life of
utter luxury, employing only a driver, a butler and private security.
“You
have to live well, but you don’t have to live lavishly to the extreme.
You need to be humble. I could buy a plane, a Rolls Royce or a Bentley.
But I don’t. If drilling a borehole costs $20,000, you tell me to buy a
watch for $20,000? To make a decision that has an impact on people’s
lives is a one-second decision for me. If you get too egocentric, you
lose your vision. It deceives you.”
Source Kristin Palitza blog
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