Thanks! Great episode. I really enjoyed it. “Poverty hurts, work hard my son”. Thanks for the inspiration Des. “If you are consistent, something has to give”.
I will start by start by saying I feel very bad to not have subscribed to the channel the second it was born. Pari and I known each other since 1999 from Monte Sorri pre-School. He is a good man. I had the pleasure of catching up with him over my visit in zim few weeks back. Well done Barry! Live ON! On to Des (Shumba) as I call him this has been very insightful and inspiring. He always inspires me when he speaks, I tell him all the time. For us future businessman and owners we will follow footprints and blueprints that would've been paved on by our elders. Desmond is on them for me. Yes, he inherited a family Business and he has run with it with immense pride. He has re-evolutionised the concept and he is now pushing the brand futher. He is on a path of leaving behind more for the next generation of Makovas to come. Well done Shumba 👏.
Great man! Thank you for this - very good insight. Was great to catch up with you a couple of weeks ago! Thank you for this feedback. Make magic out there 💪🏾
Love his take on controlled growth an aspect I had never truly thought off, additionally agree with his notion of property & land ownership over trading. I'm a big advocate for journalling!
Great bit of content, literally flew most of the videos in just one day. Sorry who are the Brightonsynes, i would also love to learn about the "zim asset lol" Des mentioned
Amazing.As a Kenyan who lived in Zimbabwe,the issue of networking and someone putting a mark up on it is very very true and really sad . Keep up with the great content.
In your personal succession plan, do you have any intention to administer petroleum trade for the country perhaps as a minister or head of say NOIC or any such state institutions? These i feel are positions that should be taken up based on merit and you have clearly taken the time to study and continue to do so. Your vast experience doing business in Zimbabwe and Mozambique will also be great in that regard. In other words do you see yourself as someone who is willing to leave the family business and entrepreneurship and take on the challenges of rebuilding this country and our communities?
You hit the nail on the head in saying "they believe in the person, not the brand!" THROUGHLY ENJOYED THE CONVERSATION! 😂😂"That £6.50 an hour student slavery season of my life MADE ME THE GO GETTER I AM, those days were THOUGH but well worth-it!" I took away so much, but creating STRUCTURE & VALUE are the key pointers I took away from the conversation... BEAUTIFUL CONVERSATION...
Thanks! Great episode. I really enjoyed it. “Poverty hurts, work hard my son”. Thanks for the inspiration Des. “If you are consistent, something has to give”.
Well done Des very proud of the man youve become!
I will start by start by saying I feel very bad to not have subscribed to the channel the second it was born. Pari and I known each other since 1999 from Monte Sorri pre-School. He is a good man. I had the pleasure of catching up with him over my visit in zim few weeks back. Well done Barry! Live ON!
On to Des (Shumba) as I call him this has been very insightful and inspiring. He always inspires me when he speaks, I tell him all the time. For us future businessman and owners we will follow footprints and blueprints that would've been paved on by our elders. Desmond is on them for me. Yes, he inherited a family Business and he has run with it with immense pride. He has re-evolutionised the concept and he is now pushing the brand futher. He is on a path of leaving behind more for the next generation of Makovas to come. Well done Shumba 👏.
Great man! Thank you for this - very good insight. Was great to catch up with you a couple of weeks ago!
Thank you for this feedback. Make magic out there 💪🏾
Love his take on controlled growth an aspect I had never truly thought off, additionally agree with his notion of property & land ownership over trading. I'm a big advocate for journalling!
Amazing piece. Poverty is a disease, work hard boss. You inspire the young business minds
This conversation clearly shows that anyone even the older generation can learn such wisdom from a young man. This was humbling and eye opening
Was Dez's jr in college. Top bloke. Heartwarming to see this growth. Awesome pod Pari!
Wonderful chat gents. Inspiring mind Des has, could not agree more on everything he mentioned on the young generation. Hard work always pays off.
Des, very inspiring indeed! Glad you got a bit out of the episode. Thank you for tuning in.
Great bit of content, literally flew most of the videos in just one day. Sorry who are the Brightonsynes, i would also love to learn about the "zim asset lol" Des mentioned
Great story and advice Dez… Keep pushing and yup “NETWORK not net worth….”
Great podcast and well done Des and Pari for this insightful work
“If you are consistent, something has to give”
28:17 taking the sites back was a massive risk to cashflows especially. Shout out young black business people ✊🏿
Awesome Pod!
Loved this!
@@Bellarue2020 thank you for tuning in!
Very good episode. I was really pleasantly surprised by how many takeaways I took. Well done
“Poverty hurts, work hard”. Throughly enjoyed this podcast. Very inspired and got away with some wise words there🙏🏽
Glad you enjoyed it! Thank you!
Really really enjoyed listening to this 👏🏾👏🏾
Thank you for tuning in!
Loved his humility and his ideas
Thank you for re-inspiring me!
Poverty hurts work hard and "Don't forget to take care of what matters the most"🙏
Amazing.As a Kenyan who lived in Zimbabwe,the issue of networking and someone putting a mark up on it is very very true and really sad .
Keep up with the great content.
Thank you for that feedback!
In your personal succession plan, do you have any intention to administer petroleum trade for the country perhaps as a minister or head of say NOIC or any such state institutions? These i feel are positions that should be taken up based on merit and you have clearly taken the time to study and continue to do so. Your vast experience doing business in Zimbabwe and Mozambique will also be great in that regard. In other words do you see yourself as someone who is willing to leave the family business and entrepreneurship and take on the challenges of rebuilding this country and our communities?
Brilliant conversation
Desmond Makovah once said "Do the small things right and you will be big eventually"
"Poverty hurts work hard " Des V Makova
You hit the nail on the head in saying "they believe in the person, not the brand!" THROUGHLY ENJOYED THE CONVERSATION!
😂😂"That £6.50 an hour student slavery season of my life MADE ME THE GO GETTER I AM, those days were THOUGH but well worth-it!"
I took away so much, but creating STRUCTURE & VALUE are the key pointers I took away from the conversation...
BEAUTIFUL CONVERSATION...
Good stuff boys
🫡boss
Pari, please have a conversation with this brother....
37:23 Zino culture 😂
It’s so bad here 🤦🏾♂️😂
Work on ur network 🙏🏻