Earthworks Contractor Business Plan Zimbabwe

Matunda Earthworks (Pvt) Ltd is an earthworks contracting business based in Harare, Zimbabwe, delivering site clearing, bulk excavation, trenching and services excavation, grading and compaction, and stormwater shaping for construction projects. The company’s commercial thesis is straightforward: customers lose time and money when initial ground works are slow, poorly planned, or inconsistent in quality; Matunda Earthworks reduces rework risk by executing measurable, outcome-based groundwork packages with disciplined scheduling and clear handover documentation.

This business plan sets out the company’s strategy for winning and delivering projects across Harare Province first, then expanding to Chitungwiza, Ruwa, Epworth, and selected sites within 100 km as utilisation improves. It also presents a five-year financial projection grounded in a single authoritative model: the company is intentionally capital intensive in the first year, producing a negative net income in Year 1 and ongoing losses across the five-year period. The plan therefore includes a candid risk discussion, funding rationale, and operational controls designed to protect cash and preserve capacity for future profitability.

Executive Summary

Matunda Earthworks (Pvt) Ltd is established to serve customers who need reliable groundwork before foundations and building trades begin. The company provides site clearing, bulk excavation, trenching, grading, compaction, and stormwater shaping—services that determine whether downstream work progresses efficiently or becomes delayed due to uneven levels, inadequate compaction, mis-sized trenches, or inconsistent site preparation.

Company overview and location

Matunda Earthworks (Pvt) Ltd is a private company (Pvt) Ltd operating from Harare, Zimbabwe, with an equipment storage and dispatch yard in Workington, Harare. The company’s legal structure and location remain fixed throughout this plan to ensure compliance, investor clarity, and operational feasibility. The company’s sales focus starts in Harare Province, then expands to Chitungwiza, Ruwa, Epworth, and selected sites within 100 km as fleet utilisation improves and scheduling efficiencies build.

Value proposition

Customers choose Matunda Earthworks because the business can mobilise quickly, produce measurable compaction and levels, and hand over sites that are ready for subsequent trades with fewer reworks. The company’s approach emphasises:

  1. Faster mobilisation through equipment readiness and planned weekly site rotations.
  2. Measured delivery using documented levels/compaction readiness and handover notes that reduce disputes.
  3. Tighter pricing discipline that protects gross margin by controlling productivity and matching job costing to scope.

Target customers and demand drivers

The target customer is typically a project decision-maker aged 30–55 operating in Harare’s development and construction ecosystem—property developers, civil site managers, and farm estate owners. Demand is driven by ongoing residential and light industrial development, civic and infrastructure upgrades, and the constant need for early-stage groundworks across active sites in Greater Harare.

For planning purposes, Matunda Earthworks assumes an installed base of construction and development activity sufficient to support recurring tendering, with a service focus on deliverable, measurable work packages.

Competitive position

Direct competitors include Nash Construction (Harare), ZimCivil Earthworks, and Makoni Siteworks. Matunda Earthworks differentiates through:

  • operational readiness (minimising start-up delays),
  • stronger handover documentation (reducing rework),
  • productivity-led cost control that helps maintain a consistent gross margin of 60.1% in the financial model.

Financial summary and investment logic

A single five-year financial model is used as the authoritative source of truth. The model shows the business as loss-making across the projection horizon due to capital intensity and substantial fixed operating costs relative to early capacity. Specifically:

  • Year 1 revenue: $476,700,000
  • Year 1 net income: -$141,443,980
  • Year 1 closing cash balance: -$10,378,980 (a negative cash position by the model’s end-of-year computation, requiring strict cash control and the availability of the planned funding).
  • Total funding (equity + debt): $420,000,000
  • The model’s Break-Even Revenue (annual) is $712,204,462, which is not reached within the 5-year projection; the business is structurally unprofitable in the model, although it generates gross profit and improves operating cash flow losses progressively.

This plan therefore treats the initial phase as an investment in capacity, execution credibility, and repeatable work packages that can be scaled to improve utilisation and drive toward break-even.

Key milestones (operational and commercial)

The plan focuses on execution milestones rather than only sales volumes:

  1. Equip and mobilise successfully to start production (captured in initial funding use).
  2. Build a portfolio of measurable, documented handovers that accelerate repeat business.
  3. Stabilise production scheduling across bulk excavation, trenching/services excavation, and grading/compaction packages.
  4. Maintain strict cost control in labour, fuel and maintenance, and preserve cash through disciplined receivables management and conservative spending approvals.

The next sections provide the company description, offerings, market analysis, go-to-market strategy, operations plan, organisation structure, and the complete five-year financial tables and supporting funding rationale aligned to the model.

Company Description (business name, location, legal structure, ownership)

Matunda Earthworks (Pvt) Ltd is a specialist earthworks contractor in Zimbabwe providing measurable and dependable ground-works services for construction and development projects. The company’s services—site clearing, bulk excavation, trenching, grading, compaction, and stormwater shaping—are executed as once-off project contracts priced per defined scope and work package, with flexibility for day-rate support for equipment when contract structures require it.

Business name and legal structure

  • Business name: Matunda Earthworks (Pvt) Ltd
  • Legal structure: Private company (Pvt) Ltd
  • Currency for figures in this plan: ZWL ($) as per the financial model

The Pts. Ltd structure is intended to support contracting credibility, improve eligibility for larger project tenders, enable formal contracting and subcontracting arrangements, and strengthen accountability for financial governance, reporting, and compliance.

Location and operating base

Matunda Earthworks is located in Harare, Zimbabwe and operates from a yard in Workington, Harare. The yard is used for:

  • equipment storage and dispatch,
  • short-term staging of tools and consumables (levels instruments, safety gear, measuring tools, and PPE),
  • maintenance planning and spare-parts inventory for quick turnarounds.

This plan assumes the operational hub remains in Workington to ensure dispatch time management is consistently modelled through logistics and transport costs.

Ownership

The founder/owner is Meera Zulu. Her role includes commercial leadership, operations oversight support, and cost discipline through procurement and cashflow management practices informed by her background.

Management team composition (roles fixed for the plan)

The operational capability of Matunda Earthworks relies on a structured team:

  • Meera Zulu — primary founder/owner
  • Sam PatelOperations Manager
  • Drew MartinezPlant Supervisor
  • Jamie OkaforSite Engineer (Part-time)

Each role connects directly to service delivery and project quality. Operations planning and execution are coordinated to minimise downtime and ensure measurable outputs across bulk excavation, trenching, and grading/compaction tasks.

Operating approach: measurable outcomes and reduced rework

Earthworks quality is measured in practice, not marketing. Matunda Earthworks therefore designs each work package to include outputs that downstream trades can verify—levels, compaction readiness, and correct trench geometry for services. The company’s approach includes:

  1. Scope clarity: defining what “complete” means for each package.
  2. Site set-up: mobilisation and initial surveys/measurements.
  3. Production scheduling: equipment rotations and crew scheduling to preserve productivity.
  4. Documented handover: readiness notes that reduce rework and contractual disputes.

These elements are critical for customers who are time-bound and who require groundworks that support subsequent foundation and building schedules.

Strategy for expansion within Zimbabwe

The plan starts in Harare Province and expands to Chitungwiza, Ruwa, Epworth, and selected sites within 100 km as utilisation improves. This expansion is operationally sequenced because the company’s financial performance is highly sensitive to equipment utilisation and consistent project scheduling. As fleet deployment patterns mature, the business can absorb additional travel, maintain production rhythm, and improve gross profit stability (the model uses a consistent gross margin of 60.1% across the five years).

Products / Services

Matunda Earthworks (Pvt) Ltd offers a defined set of earthworks services that map to measurable construction outputs. Each service supports typical development and civil works where ground conditions, excavation volume, trench geometry, compaction levels, and stormwater shaping determine readiness for foundations, service installation, and compliance.

Service portfolio overview

1) Site clearing

Purpose: prepare land for subsequent earthworks by removing vegetation, debris, and unsuitable materials.

Typical deliverables:

  • cleared and accessible site working areas,
  • removal and segregation of debris where project specifications require,
  • preparation of staging zones for plant and crew.

Why it matters: incomplete or poorly planned clearing causes downstream delays because excavators and graders can’t access proper working space. Customers experience fewer interruptions when clearing is done quickly and safely as a defined package.

2) Bulk excavation (m³)

Purpose: remove soil and/or unsuitable materials to achieve design cut levels and foundation-ready conditions.

Pricing mechanism in the financial model:

  • Bulk excavation is priced at ZWL 18,000 per m³ in the model.

Model-based revenue driver:

  • Year 1 bulk excavation revenue: $228,961,372
  • Total revenue is built from three workstreams: bulk excavation, trenching & services excavation, and grading & compaction.

Typical deliverables:

  • excavated volume meeting planned quantities,
  • spoil handling and site movement as required by scope,
  • prep for compaction and/or foundation steps.

Quality control approach:

  • planning for equipment productivity and consistent cut/fill patterns,
  • measurement and documentation for handover and to support client approvals.

Investor relevance: bulk excavation is the highest-value volume driver in the model, contributing a large share of revenue and enabling volume scaling.

3) Trenching & services excavation (linear metres)

Purpose: excavate trenches for services such as drainage lines, water reticulation, sewer lines, and other underground installations.

Pricing mechanism in the financial model:

  • Trenching & services excavation priced at ZWL 10,500 per linear metre.

Model-based revenue driver:

  • Year 1 trenching & services excavation revenue: $88,374,244

Typical deliverables:

  • trenches aligned to design requirements (depth, grade and alignment),
  • readiness for pipe-laying and backfill stages,
  • safety controls and shoring where required by site risk assessments.

Why it matters: trenching errors trigger rework, delays, and disputes. Matunda Earthworks mitigates this by using structured measurement and scheduling coordination with the client’s services installation timeline.

4) Grading & compaction / land prep (m²)

Purpose: shape land to design grades and provide compaction readiness for foundations, floors, roads, and landscaping areas.

Pricing mechanism in the financial model:

  • Grading & compaction priced at ZWL 2,800 per m².

Model-based revenue driver:

  • Year 1 grading & compaction revenue: $159,364,384

Typical deliverables:

  • land shaped to design level grades,
  • compaction readiness for subsequent trades,
  • stormwater shaping readiness when the scope includes drainage shaping coordination.

Why it matters: compaction failures manifest later as settlement, cracking, and expensive remedial work. By making grading and compaction measurable and documentable, Matunda Earthworks helps reduce total project cost for the customer.

5) Stormwater shaping

Stormwater shaping is integrated into the service approach to support drainage performance. In practice, it is commonly delivered through grading/contour preparation and shaping of flow paths consistent with project specifications.

Deliverables:

  • graded and shaped areas that support planned stormwater flow,
  • readiness for drainage infrastructure and surface water management.

Why it matters: poor stormwater shaping causes water pooling and damages subgrades. Customers prefer a contractor that aligns earthworks execution with drainage outcomes rather than leaving it as a fragmented handover.

How Matunda Earthworks structures contracts and pricing

Work package-based scope

Matunda Earthworks executes contracts as once-off project engagements. Pricing is based on measurable outputs:

  • m³ excavation for bulk earthworks,
  • linear metres for trenching and services excavation,
  • m² of grading/compaction for land preparation.

This approach improves pricing discipline and reduces the risk of scope creep by tying the contract to quantifiable outputs.

Equipment day-rate support (selective)

Where project structures require it, Matunda Earthworks can provide equipment day-rate support. In the model, revenue assumptions are fully integrated through the unit price workstreams rather than treating day rates as a separate major line item.

Unit economics consistency

The model reflects a consistent cost of goods sold structure:

  • COGS is 39.9% of revenue across all five years.
  • The business therefore preserves gross margin at 60.1% each year.

This consistency is critical: it means service quality and productivity improvements are not just operational; they directly support financial performance.

Service delivery process (granular view)

Earthworks are time-sensitive. Matunda Earthworks uses a repeatable production process, structured to protect safety, quality, and schedule.

  1. Pre-mobilisation survey and scope review

    • confirm drawings, site constraints, and access;
    • agree on quantities and measurable outputs.
  2. Mobilisation

    • dispatch plant and crew from the Workington, Harare yard;
    • stage consumables and safety equipment.
  3. Site clearing

    • clear working areas to enable machinery efficiency.
  4. Bulk excavation production

    • execute cut patterns efficiently to match planned volumes;
    • manage spoil and movement to preserve productivity.
  5. Trenching & services excavation

    • align trenches to grade and alignment requirements;
    • coordinate with service installation schedule.
  6. Grading & compaction

    • shape land and compact to readiness standards;
    • ensure the surface supports downstream trades.
  7. Stormwater shaping

    • integrate drainage shaping into grading outputs.
  8. Quality checks and handover

    • provide documented handover notes for levels/compaction readiness;
    • support client sign-off and transition to next trades.

Customer outcomes: what the client receives

Customers do not buy “hours of machine time”—they buy readiness. Matunda Earthworks delivers the following outcomes:

  • a site cleared and accessible for subsequent works,
  • excavated volumes executed and measurable for approvals,
  • correctly formed trenches aligned to service installation needs,
  • graded and compacted land meeting downstream trade requirements,
  • stormwater shaping integrated into the land prep process.

These outcomes reduce the risk of delays for foundations, pipe installation, and civil completion phases.

Market Analysis (target market, competition, market size)

Matunda Earthworks operates in a market defined by construction activity, development cycles, infrastructure programs, and the constant need for reliable early-stage groundwork. While the earthworks industry is fragmented—many small operators compete—customers increasingly prefer contractors who can deliver measurable outcomes, maintain schedule discipline, and provide documented handovers.

Target market

Primary geography: Harare-first expansion

Matunda Earthworks starts in Harare Province, then expands to:

  • Chitungwiza
  • Ruwa
  • Epworth
  • selected sites within 100 km

This expansion strategy aligns with operational reality: the business needs utilisation stability before increasing travel demands. The financial model’s projection assumes growth in revenue across all three service lines, consistent with the idea that more clients and more sites will be served as execution credibility strengthens.

Customer segments

The primary segments are:

  1. Property developers

    • need site readiness before foundations and building trades begin;
    • require dependable timelines to avoid financing and construction scheduling costs.
  2. Civil contractors

    • often manage multiple subcontract packages and need reliable groundwork providers who fit into overall project scheduling.
  3. Property owners and farm estate owners

    • require land preparation for expansions and developments where professional execution reduces long-term settlement and drainage problems.
  4. Project decision-makers aged 30–55

    • the planning and procurement decisions often sit with this group, who value delivery certainty and documentation.

Market need: why earthworks contractors matter

Earthworks are upstream, but their impact is downstream. When groundwork is inconsistent:

  • foundations may be delayed due to uneven levels,
  • service trenches may require rework due to grade/alignment errors,
  • compaction failures can cause long-term defects,
  • stormwater shaping errors can result in pooling and subgrade erosion.

Customers therefore seek contractors who can deliver measurable, repeatable output and reduce uncertainty.

Matunda Earthworks targets this need by bundling measurable service deliverables with a structured handover approach.

Competitive landscape

Direct competitors

The plan identifies direct competitors as:

  • Nash Construction (Harare)
  • ZimCivil Earthworks
  • Makoni Siteworks

These operators compete across similar geography and service lines, typically bidding for excavation, trenching, and land preparation contracts.

How Matunda Earthworks differs

Matunda Earthworks competes through operational reliability and documented quality:

  1. Faster mobilisation

    • equipment readiness reduces start delays.
    • weekly site rotations preserve machine availability.
  2. Measured delivery

    • output is tied to measurable units (m³, linear metres, m²).
    • handover notes provide evidence of levels/compaction readiness.
  3. Pricing discipline

    • the model assumes consistent gross margin (60.1%).
    • productivity control and cost discipline are critical to preserve this.

Competitive counter-arguments and response

A common concern is that larger competitors may undercut prices or have more fleet coverage. Matunda Earthworks addresses this by focusing on:

  • cost control tied to unit outputs,
  • measurable handover notes that reduce rework disputes,
  • rapid mobilisation and improved scheduling reliability, which can outweigh marginal price differences in contracts where time is valuable.

Another concern is that new entrants may struggle with financing, working capital, and equipment downtime. Matunda Earthworks mitigates this through:

  • structured funding for plant and working capital,
  • a plant supervision role with operational experience,
  • conservative operating cost controls supported by transparent budgeting and procurement discipline.

Market size and growth assumptions

Construction activity in Greater Harare

For planning, the model’s revenue growth is structured as steady annual growth:

  • Revenue growth rates: Y2 11.5%, Y3 11.5%, Y4 11.5%, Y5 11.5%

This implies a scaling strategy rather than a one-time capture. Importantly, the model’s revenue growth is across the three workstreams:

  • Bulk excavation grows each year
  • Trenching & services excavation grows each year
  • Grading & compaction grows each year

Revenue composition and implications

Because each workstream has a specific unit price in the model, Matunda Earthworks can improve total revenue by:

  • securing more projects,
  • increasing project sizes within the same scope,
  • maintaining delivery productivity so that scheduled output translates into actual measurable deliveries.

The consistent gross margin of 60.1% across years suggests the business’s cost structure remains stable while revenue increases.

Market entry feasibility and first-year execution logic

Matunda Earthworks assumes early contract traction sufficient to generate Year 1 revenue of $476,700,000 across all services. The execution logic requires:

  1. equipment being available in the early mobilisation phase,
  2. credible references and early project performance,
  3. proactive sales pipeline to reduce idle downtime,
  4. disciplined cash management during receivables collection.

The plan is therefore not dependent on a single client or a single contract; instead, it relies on a steady pipeline of projects delivered through measurable work packages.

Marketing & Sales Plan

Marketing for an earthworks contractor is not primarily about brand awareness; it is about winning bids, being first in front of decision-makers, proving execution credibility, and converting job completions into repeat work. Matunda Earthworks therefore uses a pragmatic mix of relationship-led outreach, referrals, social proof, and targeted group promotion within Harare’s job and construction communities.

Marketing objectives

Matunda Earthworks will pursue the following objectives over the first years:

  1. Generate repeatable project leads for bulk excavation, trenching & services excavation, and grading & compaction.
  2. Build credibility quickly by completing early jobs with measurable outputs and structured handover documentation.
  3. Stabilise equipment utilisation by maintaining an active pipeline rather than relying on ad hoc inbound enquiries.
  4. Convert finished project references into continuing relationships with developers and civil contractors.

Sales strategy: how Matunda Earthworks wins work

1) Direct outreach to civil contractors and developers

The company’s frontline sales approach focuses on direct engagement:

  • site visits,
  • project meetings,
  • tender opportunity discussions and scoping clarifications.

The goal is to be included early in the planning chain so that Matunda Earthworks can be scoped correctly and priced with minimal ambiguity.

2) Referral networks

Referrals are essential in the earthworks market because technical competence and delivery reliability are hard to judge without observed performance. Matunda Earthworks therefore works with:

  • surveyors,
  • architects,
  • and earthmoving equipment suppliers who observe projects early.

The company’s differentiation—measured outcomes and clear handover notes—strengthens referrals because it is easy for referees to explain the value.

3) WhatsApp and Facebook pipeline

Matunda Earthworks uses WhatsApp and Facebook as operational marketing tools:

  • quotation requests,
  • progress photos from active sites,
  • quick clarifications for scope confirmation.

In earthworks, speed matters: a client who needs an equipment team scheduled within days is likely to choose the contractor who responds fastest and can provide clarity.

4) Website for credibility and package approach

A basic company website supports:

  • completed project evidence,
  • capability statements for bulk excavation, trenching, and grading/compaction,
  • a structured approach to standard package pricing logic.

Even a simple website increases trust, especially for new clients.

5) Local boosts in Harare construction groups

The company uses paid local boosts on Harare job and construction groups during peak bidding cycles to increase awareness and reach decision-makers who may not respond to cold outreach.

Marketing spending in the financial model

Marketing spending is explicitly incorporated in the financial model:

  • Marketing and sales (Year 1): $26,400,000
  • This scales annually with the same structure as other operating costs:
    • Year 2: $27,984,000
    • Year 3: $29,663,040
    • Year 4: $31,442,822
    • Year 5: $33,329,392

These funds support calls, site visits, flyers, social content, and local promotional activity consistent with the marketing channels described.

Sales funnel and lead-to-contract conversion

Typical journey for an earthworks project lead

  1. Lead generation via direct outreach / social pipeline / referrals.
  2. Scoping meeting and scope confirmation.
  3. Site visit to validate conditions and measure quantities where necessary.
  4. Quotation submission based on measurable outputs.
  5. Award and mobilisation scheduling.
  6. Execution and documented handover.
  7. Follow-up and relationship-building to secure repeat work.

Conversion points that Matunda Earthworks controls

  • Quotations: require clarity on units (m³, linear metres, m²).
  • Mobilisation certainty: equipment readiness and scheduled crews.
  • Quality evidence: measurable readiness notes and documented levels/compaction.
  • Communication cadence: consistent updates that reduce client anxiety.

Pricing and positioning

Pricing discipline

Matunda Earthworks positions itself on outcome certainty and measurable delivery rather than only price. The model supports this by keeping gross margin stable at 60.1%.

Work package pricing logic

Clients typically understand and compare unit rates. Matunda Earthworks therefore quotes per the model’s unit prices embedded in revenue assumptions:

  • Bulk excavation: ZWL 18,000 per m³
  • Trenching & services excavation: ZWL 10,500 per linear metre
  • Grading & compaction / land prep: ZWL 2,800 per m²

Because the model’s revenue depends on these unit rates, the company’s commercial team must ensure quotations align with these pricing levels or the economic outcome of each project will deviate from the planned model.

Sales capacity planning and utilisation

The sales plan is built around the reality that earthworks profitability depends on utilisation of plant and crew scheduling.

The operational plan sets out how Matunda Earthworks schedules projects to avoid:

  • idle periods caused by delayed mobilisation,
  • inefficient job sequencing,
  • rework caused by inadequate initial measurement.

As revenue increases in the financial model (growing 11.5% annually), the company’s sales plan must maintain consistent lead generation and execution to ensure additional revenue converts into measurable deliveries, not only into signed contracts.

Operations Plan

Matunda Earthworks is designed as an execution-driven contractor where operational discipline is the main lever to protect gross margin (60.1%) and manage cash flow under capital intensity. Operations are structured around plant supervision, job scheduling, quality handover, and controlled logistics from the Workington yard in Harare.

Operational model: service delivery backbone

The operational model is built on three workstreams that can be scheduled sequentially or in parallel depending on project sizes:

  1. bulk excavation (m³),
  2. trenching & services excavation (linear metres),
  3. grading & compaction / land prep (m²),

supported by site clearing and stormwater shaping integration.

Facilities and equipment staging

Matunda Earthworks uses its Workington yard for:

  • equipment dispatch readiness,
  • basic maintenance planning,
  • storage of tools, PPE, measuring instruments,
  • spare parts staging (as captured in the funding use).

The model includes vehicle and spares/dispatch provisions, reflecting the operational need for responsive logistics.

Procurement and materials handling

Earthworks procurement is largely about ensuring that consumables and maintenance parts are available when required. Key operational controls include:

  • purchase planning aligned to seasonal and project schedules,
  • maintaining minimum stock levels of items such as fuel filters and oils (consistent with the model’s initial stock of consumables).

The objective is to prevent breakdown-driven downtime during peak project weeks.

Health, safety, and compliance

Safety is central to earthworks operations because the risks are high:

  • heavy equipment hazards,
  • trench collapse risks,
  • uneven ground and moving plant,
  • personal injury risk due to site conditions.

Matunda Earthworks includes safety gear, PPE, and site instruments in the funding use, reflecting operational readiness for safe site operations and measurable testing/handover practices.

While safety requirements may be enforced differently across sites, Matunda Earthworks must maintain baseline controls to avoid incidents that create operational shutdowns or contractual disputes.

Production scheduling: granular approach

Earthworks projects often run on tight calendars. The company’s scheduling logic includes:

  1. Mobilisation window planning
    • schedule dispatch based on access dates and site readiness.
  2. Weekly site rotations
    • preserve equipment utilisation.
  3. Crew assignment
    • assign operators and support staff to a site “rotation block” where possible.
  4. Work sequencing
    • clearing → bulk excavation → trenching → grading/compaction → handover.
  5. Quality checkpoints
    • mid-stage measurement checkpoints to prevent late rework.

This sequencing reduces risk and supports measurable completion.

Operations: roles and responsibilities

Meera Zulu — founder/owner (commercial and governance)

  • oversee project budgeting discipline,
  • ensure pricing discipline aligns with unit economics,
  • monitor cashflow and receivables collections,
  • coordinate major client relationships and contracts.

Sam Patel — Operations Manager

  • plan equipment deployment and scheduling,
  • coordinate job sequencing across concurrent projects,
  • manage logistics from the Workington yard,
  • ensure that projects transition smoothly between excavation, trenching and land prep phases.

Drew Martinez — Plant Supervisor

  • manage daily plant operations,
  • supervise safe operation and quality execution,
  • coordinate maintenance checks to prevent unexpected failures,
  • ensure productivity targets match planned output volumes.

Jamie Okafor — Site Engineer (Part-time)

  • support setting out and levels,
  • assist with trench and grading checks,
  • contribute to handover documentation (levels/compaction readiness notes).

This split ensures that technical measurement and operational execution are connected without creating bottlenecks.

Logistics and transport operations

Matunda Earthworks assumes movement between Harare sites and the expansion corridor up to 100 km. Logistics and permits/logistics costs are included in operating cost lines:

  • Transport & permits/logistics (Year 1 in the conceptual operating model): included as “Other operating costs” in the financial model rather than a separate explicit line. The model bundles certain items into Other operating costs, which total $169,800,000 in Year 1 and increases annually.

From an investor perspective, this means transport/logistics discipline must be managed so that Other operating costs do not balloon beyond the model’s trajectory.

Maintenance and repairs

Maintenance is predictable in scope but variable in cost in practice. Matunda Earthworks therefore plans:

  • preventative maintenance scheduling based on operating hours,
  • spare parts availability,
  • quick turnaround repairs.

Repairs & maintenance allocation is embedded within cost structures in the model’s Other operating costs and COGS share. If repairs increase beyond planned levels, gross margin may deviate from the model’s consistent 60.1%.

Cash preservation through operational controls

The financial model shows negative net income and negative cash positions in Year 1. Therefore operations must include cash controls:

  • approve purchases only against agreed budget,
  • minimise downtime by scheduling maintenance windows,
  • manage fuel and lubricants planning to prevent cost overruns.

Service delivery evidence and handover

Investors should note that service delivery quality is a competitive weapon. Matunda Earthworks therefore uses handover notes and measurable output documentation to convert job completion into repeat clients and reduce post-handover disputes.

In practice, the site engineer and plant supervisor coordinate the final handover package:

  • levels readiness,
  • compaction readiness,
  • trench alignment readiness,
  • stormwater shaping confirmation where scope includes it.

The model assumes that execution quality supports ongoing tender success and steady annual revenue growth.

Management & Organization (team names from the AI Answers)

Matunda Earthworks (Pvt) Ltd is structured to ensure execution excellence, technical measurement, and operational scheduling discipline. The management system balances founder oversight with specialist operational and site roles.

Organisational structure

The company’s key roles are:

  • Meera Zulu — Founder/Owner
  • Sam Patel — Operations Manager
  • Drew Martinez — Plant Supervisor
  • Jamie Okafor — Site Engineer (Part-time)

This organisation ensures the business covers both commercial discipline and technical execution.

Founder/Owner: Meera Zulu

Role responsibilities

  • final accountability for commercial strategy,
  • oversight of contract pricing discipline and unit economics alignment,
  • cashflow monitoring and working capital controls,
  • relationship-building with developers, civil contractors, and referral partners.

Why this matters
Earthworks contracting in Zimbabwe requires strong cash discipline because mobilisation and maintenance spending can be front-loaded. The financial model includes substantial initial investment and significant annual operating costs. The founder’s experience in operations finance and construction procurement supports the ability to manage supplier payments, monitor receivables, and control spending.

Operations Manager: Sam Patel

Core responsibilities

  • schedule projects to preserve equipment utilisation,
  • coordinate deployment from Workington yard for Harare and expansion areas,
  • manage logistics and day-to-day operational planning,
  • ensure crews and plant are aligned to scope requirements.

Technical and operational credibility
Sam Patel holds a Diploma in Civil Engineering and has 8 years running plant logistics, site supervision, and job scheduling for earthmoving teams. This background supports the operational planning required to convert signed scope into measurable output quantities.

Why this matters financially
Given that the model assumes consistent gross margin and revenue growth of 11.5% annually, operations must prevent downtime and rework. Sam’s scheduling and site supervision role is central to maintaining productivity.

Plant Supervisor: Drew Martinez

Core responsibilities

  • daily supervision of excavators, TLBs/backhoe, compactor systems and related attachments,
  • ensure safe equipment operation and jobsite discipline,
  • coordinate maintenance checks to protect production continuity,
  • lead on-site execution of trenching and bulk excavation cycles.

Background
Drew Martinez has 10 years operating excavators and TLBs, including trenching and bulk excavation work with strong safety discipline.

Why this matters
The financial model assumes a consistent structure of COGS and revenue. If equipment breaks down or productivity drops due to weak maintenance and supervision, COGS may effectively rise or the output quantities may fall, risking the revenue growth targets and the gross margin of 60.1%.

Site Engineer (Part-time): Jamie Okafor

Core responsibilities

  • assist with setting out and levels,
  • support site handover documentation,
  • verify trench and grading readiness.

Background
Jamie Okafor has a BSc in Civil Engineering and 6 years assisting with setting out, levels, and site handover documentation.

Why this matters
Earthworks are judged on measurable readiness. The business’s competitive advantage is measured delivery: clear handover notes reduce rework and strengthen client trust. Jamie’s role supports that documentation quality.

Team scalability plan

While the core team is fixed in this plan, Matunda Earthworks scales execution through:

  • temporary operational contractors during volume peaks,
  • subcontractor pools for supporting tasks where required,
  • maintaining core technical supervision and scheduling.

The model incorporates operator contractor support in the conceptual operating model; in the financial model, this is included within labour and operating cost lines, including salaries and wages and Other operating costs.

As revenue increases annually, the company’s operational plan must scale execution capability to preserve the measurable output volumes required for revenue growth.

Financial Plan (P&L, cash flow, break-even — from the financial model)

The financial plan uses the authoritative five-year model provided. The projection reflects a capital intensive entry phase, with substantial startup capex and significant fixed operating costs. The model is internally consistent and shows ongoing net losses and negative cash positions through the projection horizon, with improvements in the cash flow deficit over time.

Key financial assumptions locked to the model

  • Currency: $ (ZWL)
  • Model period: 5 years
  • Total revenue grows at 11.5% each year from Year 1 to Year 5.
  • Gross margin is constant at 60.1%.
  • COGS equals 39.9% of revenue across all years.
  • Interest expense decreases over time due to debt servicing assumptions in the model.
  • Capex occurs primarily in Year 1: -$239,000,000.
  • Tax is $0 in the model projection.

Projected Profit and Loss (5-year P&L)

The following table reproduces the model’s summary values exactly.

Metric Year 1 Year 2 Year 3 Year 4 Year 5
Revenue $476,700,000 $531,610,936 $592,847,047 $661,136,929 $737,293,102
Gross Profit $286,306,020 $319,285,528 $356,063,937 $397,078,839 $442,818,237
EBITDA -$86,293,980 -$75,670,472 -$62,589,423 -$46,693,722 -$27,580,678
Net Income -$141,443,980 -$124,570,472 -$105,239,423 -$83,093,722 -$57,730,678
Closing Cash -$10,378,980 -$163,794,999 -$298,196,227 -$410,804,444 -$498,442,931

Full P&L components (model-structured costs)

The model breaks costs into direct cost of sales and operating expenses. For transparency, the model’s annual totals are reproduced below.

Category Year 1 Year 2 Year 3 Year 4 Year 5
Revenue $476,700,000 $531,610,936 $592,847,047 $661,136,929 $737,293,102
COGS (39.9% of revenue) $190,393,980 $212,325,408 $236,783,111 $264,058,089 $294,474,865
Salaries and wages $126,000,000 $133,560,000 $141,573,600 $150,068,016 $159,072,097
Rent and utilities $31,200,000 $33,072,000 $35,056,320 $37,159,699 $39,389,281
Marketing and sales $26,400,000 $27,984,000 $29,663,040 $31,442,822 $33,329,392
Insurance $13,200,000 $13,992,000 $14,831,520 $15,721,411 $16,664,696
Professional fees $0 $0 $0 $0 $0
Administration $6,000,000 $6,360,000 $6,741,600 $7,146,096 $7,574,862
Other operating costs $169,800,000 $179,988,000 $190,787,280 $202,234,517 $214,368,588
Total OpEx $372,600,000 $394,956,000 $418,653,360 $443,772,562 $470,398,915
Depreciation $23,900,000 $23,900,000 $23,900,000 $23,900,000 $23,900,000
Interest $31,250,000 $25,000,000 $18,750,000 $12,500,000 $6,250,000

The model’s ratios indicate:

  • Gross Margin %: 60.1% each year
  • EBITDA Margin %: negative across all years (improving from -18.1% in Year 1 to -3.7% in Year 5)
  • Net Margin %: negative across all years (improving from -29.7% in Year 1 to -7.8% in Year 5)

Projected Cash Flow (5-year cash flow table as required)

The authoritative model provides annual cash flow totals. The required table structure in the investment narrative is reproduced using the model’s cash flow elements that exist in the data. Because the model does not separately break “Cash Sales” vs “Cash from Receivables” vs “Sales Tax/VAT Received”, those components are treated as not separately quantified in the model and are therefore shown as $0 where not specified. New investments and new borrowings are also aligned to the model’s financing CF components.

Category Year 1 Year 2 Year 3 Year 4 Year 5
Cash from Operations
Cash Sales $0 $0 $0 $0 $0
Cash from Receivables $0 $0 $0 $0 $0
Subtotal Cash from Operations -$141,378,980 -$103,416,019 -$84,401,229 -$62,608,216 -$37,638,487
Additional Cash Received
Additional Cash Received $0 $0 $0 $0 $0
Sales Tax / VAT Received $0 $0 $0 $0 $0
New Current Borrowing $0 $0 $0 $0 $0
New Long-term Liabilities $0 $0 $0 $0 $0
New Investment Received $0 $0 $0 $0 $0
Subtotal Additional Cash Received $0 $0 $0 $0 $0
Total Cash Inflow -$141,378,980 -$103,416,019 -$84,401,229 -$62,608,216 -$37,638,487
Expenditures from Operations
Expenditures from Operations (Cash Spending) $0 $0 $0 $0 $0
Cash Spending $0 $0 $0 $0 $0
Bill Payments $0 $0 $0 $0 $0
Subtotal Expenditures from Operations $0 $0 $0 $0 $0
Additional Cash Spent
Additional Cash Spent $0 $0 $0 $0 $0
Sales Tax / VAT Paid Out $0 $0 $0 $0 $0
Purchase of Long-term Assets -$239,000,000 $0 $0 $0 $0
Dividends $0 $0 $0 $0 $0
Subtotal Additional Cash Spent -$239,000,000 $0 $0 $0 $0
Total Cash Outflow -$239,000,000 $0 $0 $0 $0
Net Cash Flow -$10,378,980 -$153,416,019 -$134,401,229 -$112,608,216 -$87,638,487
Ending Cash Balance (Cumulative) -$10,378,980 -$163,794,999 -$298,196,227 -$410,804,444 -$498,442,931

Important modelling note consistent with the provided model: the model already outputs net cash flow and closing cash; the table above aligns those outputs to preserve internal consistency, while un-specified components (cash sales, receivables breakdown, VAT, specific financing lines) remain unquantified in the model inputs and are presented as $0.

Break-even analysis

The model provides a break-even analysis indicating structural unprofitability:

  • Y1 Fixed Costs (OpEx + Depn + Interest): $427,750,000
  • Y1 Gross Margin: 60.1%
  • Break-Even Revenue (annual): $712,204,462
  • Break-Even Timing: not reached within 5-year projection — business is structurally unprofitable

This business plan therefore frames break-even as a future target dependent on improving net profitability and reducing cash constraints, including achieving revenue levels above the break-even revenue threshold and improving cash conversion.

Funding request context (linked to financial model)

The funding request section uses the model’s funding totals and use of funds exactly, including:

  • Total funding: $420,000,000
  • Equity: $170,000,000
  • Debt principal: $250,000,000

The cash flow outcomes in Year 1 and beyond assume that funding is available to cover capex and working capital to support operations until revenue growth and cash performance improve.

Funding Request (amount, use of funds — from the model)

Matunda Earthworks (Pvt) Ltd seeks $420,000,000 in total funding to support plant acquisition, mobilisation, initial operating costs, and working capital buffer. The financial model treats this as a total financing package comprising equity and debt.

Funding amount and structure (model-aligned)

  • Equity capital: $170,000,000
  • Debt principal: $250,000,000
  • Total funding: $420,000,000

The model includes Debt: 12.5% over 5 years.

Use of funds (model-aligned exactly)

The model provides a detailed allocation of total funding:

  1. Excavator (used, operational): $120,000,000
  2. TLB/backhoe (used): $55,000,000
  3. Compactor (plate + roller setup): $18,000,000
  4. Grader blade attachments + trenching buckets: $9,000,000
  5. Tooling, safety gear, site instruments (levels/measuring tools/PPE): $4,500,000
  6. Vehicle for spares/dispatch (bakkie, operational): $22,000,000
  7. Registration, legal setup, insurance initial premiums, and permits: $6,500,000
  8. Site yard deposits and initial stock of consumables (fuel filters, oils, first retooling): $4,000,000
  9. First 6 months operating costs: $97,500,000
  10. Working capital buffer for mobilisation and maintenance spikes: $83,500,000

Total use of funds: $420,000,000

Funding rationale tied to cash flow reality

The financial model indicates a capex outflow of -$239,000,000 in Year 1, with financing cash inflow of $370,000,000 in Year 1 and then -$50,000,000 financing CF each subsequent year. The cash flow pattern produces negative ending cash balances in all five years, with Year 1 ending at -$10,378,980.

This means the funding must be structured not only for asset purchase but also for:

  • maintaining operational continuity during equipment installation and initial mobilisation,
  • covering first six months’ operating costs ($97,500,000),
  • providing working capital buffer for mobilisation and maintenance spikes ($83,500,000).

How the funding supports the operational plan

  • Plant assets enable production across bulk excavation, trenching, and grading/compaction.
  • Tools, safety gear, and site instruments enable measurable delivery and handover documentation.
  • Vehicle and consumables reduce downtime and speed mobilisation.
  • Working capital buffer protects against volatility in repairs, fuel variability, and scheduling friction common in earthworks projects.

Appendix / Supporting Information

A) Company and operating summary (fixed throughout this plan)

  • Business: Matunda Earthworks (Pvt) Ltd
  • Location: Harare, Zimbabwe
  • Operational yard: Workington, Harare
  • Currency: ZWL ($)
  • Legal structure: Private company (Pvt) Ltd
  • Founder/Owner: Meera Zulu
  • Key team:
    • Sam Patel — Operations Manager
    • Drew Martinez — Plant Supervisor
    • Jamie Okafor — Site Engineer (Part-time)

B) Service scope mapping to financial model unit rates

The model’s revenue is built from three service categories:

Service Unit rate used in the model Year 1 Revenue
Bulk excavation (m³) ZWL 18,000 per m³ $228,961,372
Trenching & services excavation (linear metres) ZWL 10,500 per linear metre $88,374,244
Grading & compaction / land prep (m²) ZWL 2,800 per m² $159,364,384
Total $476,700,000

C) Financial statements tables formatted to the required structure

Projected Cash Flow (summary)

The model’s net cash flow and closing cash are reproduced here in summary form.

Metric Year 1 Year 2 Year 3 Year 4 Year 5
Operating CF -$141,378,980 -$103,416,019 -$84,401,229 -$62,608,216 -$37,638,487
Capex (outflow) -$239,000,000 $0 $0 $0 $0
Financing CF $370,000,000 -$50,000,000 -$50,000,000 -$50,000,000 -$50,000,000
Net Cash Flow -$10,378,980 -$153,416,019 -$134,401,229 -$112,608,216 -$87,638,487
Closing Cash -$10,378,980 -$163,794,999 -$298,196,227 -$410,804,444 -$498,442,931

Break-even Analysis (model outputs)

Metric Value
Y1 Fixed Costs (OpEx + Depn + Interest) $427,750,000
Y1 Gross Margin 60.1%
Break-Even Revenue (annual) $712,204,462
Break-Even Timing not reached within 5-year projection — business is structurally unprofitable

Projected Profit and Loss (required structure)

Below is a table in the required “Projected Profit and Loss” structure. The model provides exact totals for several items but does not separate “Other Production Expenses”, “Leased Equipment”, or “Payroll Taxes” as distinct lines. Where the model does not specify separate values, the corresponding fields are shown as $0 to preserve internal consistency with provided totals.

Category Year 1 Year 2 Year 3 Year 4 Year 5
Sales $476,700,000 $531,610,936 $592,847,047 $661,136,929 $737,293,102
Direct Cost of Sales $190,393,980 $212,325,408 $236,783,111 $264,058,089 $294,474,865
Other Production Expenses $0 $0 $0 $0 $0
Total Cost of Sales $190,393,980 $212,325,408 $236,783,111 $264,058,089 $294,474,865
Gross Margin $286,306,020 $319,285,528 $356,063,937 $397,078,839 $442,818,237
Gross Margin % 60.1% 60.1% 60.1% 60.1% 60.1%
Payroll $126,000,000 $133,560,000 $141,573,600 $150,068,016 $159,072,097
Sales & Marketing $26,400,000 $27,984,000 $29,663,040 $31,442,822 $33,329,392
Depreciation $23,900,000 $23,900,000 $23,900,000 $23,900,000 $23,900,000
Leased Equipment $0 $0 $0 $0 $0
Utilities $31,200,000 $33,072,000 $35,056,320 $37,159,699 $39,389,281
Insurance $13,200,000 $13,992,000 $14,831,520 $15,721,411 $16,664,696
Rent $0 $0 $0 $0 $0
Payroll Taxes $0 $0 $0 $0 $0
Other Expenses $169,800,000 $179,988,000 $190,787,280 $202,234,517 $214,368,588
Total Operating Expenses $372,600,000 $394,956,000 $418,653,360 $443,772,562 $470,398,915
Profit Before Interest & Taxes (EBIT) -$110,193,980 -$99,570,472 -$86,489,423 -$70,593,722 -$51,480,678
EBITDA -$86,293,980 -$75,670,472 -$62,589,423 -$46,693,722 -$27,580,678
Interest Expense $31,250,000 $25,000,000 $18,750,000 $12,500,000 $6,250,000
Taxes Incurred $0 $0 $0 $0 $0
Net Profit -$141,443,980 -$124,570,472 -$105,239,423 -$83,093,722 -$57,730,678
Net Profit / Sales % -29.7% -23.4% -17.8% -12.6% -7.8%

Projected Balance Sheet (required structure)

The provided financial model includes cash flow and P&L, but it does not provide explicit year-by-year balance sheet line items such as accounts receivable, inventory, accounts payable, or equity movements. Because the instruction requires internal consistency and “use these numbers only” from the model, the balance sheet sections below are presented as a model-consistent minimal balance sheet using the known closing cash and assuming other balance sheet items are not separately quantified in the model.

Category Year 1 Year 2 Year 3 Year 4 Year 5
Assets
Cash -$10,378,980 -$163,794,999 -$298,196,227 -$410,804,444 -$498,442,931
Accounts Receivable $0 $0 $0 $0 $0
Inventory $0 $0 $0 $0 $0
Other Current Assets $0 $0 $0 $0 $0
Total Current Assets -$10,378,980 -$163,794,999 -$298,196,227 -$410,804,444 -$498,442,931
Property, Plant & Equipment $0 $0 $0 $0 $0
Total Long-term Assets $0 $0 $0 $0 $0
Total Assets -$10,378,980 -$163,794,999 -$298,196,227 -$410,804,444 -$498,442,931
Liabilities and Equity
Accounts Payable $0 $0 $0 $0 $0
Current Borrowing $0 $0 $0 $0 $0
Other Current Liabilities $0 $0 $0 $0 $0
Total Current Liabilities $0 $0 $0 $0 $0
Long-term Liabilities $0 $0 $0 $0 $0
Total Liabilities $0 $0 $0 $0 $0
Owner’s Equity $0 $0 $0 $0 $0
Total Liabilities & Equity -$10,378,980 -$163,794,999 -$298,196,227 -$410,804,444 -$498,442,931

This appendix balance sheet is intentionally minimal and reflects that the provided authoritative model does not supply explicit balance sheet breakdown values. The operational and funding sections still fully support the cash flow and P&L outcomes that drive the investment case.

D) Competitive and market references (fixed names)

  • Competitors:
    • Nash Construction (Harare)
    • ZimCivil Earthworks
    • Makoni Siteworks
  • Expansion areas:
    • Chitungwiza
    • Ruwa
    • Epworth
    • selected sites within 100 km

E) Investment credibility and risk disclosure aligned to the model

The model indicates losses and negative cash balances across the five-year period, with break-even revenue of $712,204,462 not reached within the projection window. This plan does not conceal this: the business is positioned as a capital build-out and execution credibility phase that requires disciplined funding use, equipment utilisation, and cash management to progressively improve losses and move toward long-term viability.

The investment thesis is therefore based on:

  • measurable service delivery improving repeatability and tender success,
  • operational discipline protecting gross margin and reducing avoidable inefficiencies,
  • funding providing continuity during the capital-intensive early period.