Cold Chain Logistics Business Plan Zimbabwe

ColdChain Zimbabwe Logistics (Pty) Ltd is a temperature-controlled transport and warehousing operator built to protect high-value, perishable, and regulated goods moving across Zimbabwe—especially routes between Harare, Bulawayo, Gweru, and Mutare. The business provides booked refrigerated road transport, refrigerated storage per pallet-day, and documented temperature-log compliance packs that help customers reduce spoilage, stock write-offs, and compliance risk.

This business plan presents the company’s strategy, service design, market positioning, operating model, organization, and a five-year financial projection grounded in a single authoritative financial model. While the model indicates structural losses over the five-year period (negative net income and negative operating cash flow), the plan outlines how the company will manage execution risk, strengthen customer retention, and build the reliability and documentation standards that cold-chain buyers in Zimbabwe value.

Executive Summary

ColdChain Zimbabwe Logistics (Pty) Ltd will deliver reliable cold-chain logistics in Zimbabwe by combining refrigerated road transport contracts, refrigerated warehouse space, and temperature-log compliance packs for shipments that require proof of temperature management. The company’s practical focus is on the operational failures that commonly lead to temperature excursions: inconsistent cold handling during loading and transit, limited transparency on proof-of-delivery, and weak documentation trails that create compliance concerns for pharmaceutical distributors, clinics, and cold-sensitive food suppliers.

The problem in Zimbabwe’s cold supply chains

Zimbabwe’s supply chain environment creates pressure on cold-chain reliability due to a mix of infrastructural variability, vehicle maintenance constraints, and operational cash-flow limitations among mid-market distributors and manufacturers. Temperature-sensitive goods such as pharmaceuticals and certain food categories are especially vulnerable. When cold-chain handling breaks down, the downstream costs are immediate and difficult to reverse—products spoil, wholesalers must discount or destroy stock, and clinics and distributors face documentation and audit-related exposure. These losses often outweigh the marginal savings that buyers seek by switching transport providers without strong temperature assurance.

ColdChain Zimbabwe Logistics (Pty) Ltd is designed to reduce these losses through a repeatable service system:

  1. Booked refrigerated transport on disciplined schedules and run planning between Harare and key corridors (Bulawayo, Gweru, Mutare).
  2. Cold storage time for customers who need a buffer for inventory staging, promotional cycles, or regulatory lead times.
  3. Temperature-log compliance packs including digital documentation (PDF plus summary) that support customers’ internal compliance and customer reporting.

Our customer promise

Customers will use ColdChain Zimbabwe Logistics as a “trust layer” for cold-chain execution. The differentiators are not simply having a refrigeration unit, but ensuring that every run is supported by:

  • Temperature logging and documented logs
  • Route visibility through GPS tracking
  • Clear proof-of-delivery and operational accountability

This creates purchasing confidence for B2B buyers—especially pharmaceutical distributors and mid-sized food manufacturers—who must show evidence that their cold-chain handling was intentional, monitored, and verifiable.

Financial reality and investor transparency

The authoritative financial model projects five-year results in USD ($). The business generates total revenue of $105,000 in Year 1 and $118,475 in Year 3, while maintaining a stable gross margin of 46.0% in every projected year. However, operating expenses, depreciation, and interest remain high enough that EBITDA and net income remain negative throughout the five-year projection. For example:

  • Year 1 Net Income: -$87,860
  • Year 1 EBITDA: -$65,460
  • Projected Closing Cash (Year 5): -$427,103 cumulative

The model shows that break-even is not reached within the 5-year projection, with break-even revenue of $296,000 annually versus Year 1 sales of $105,000.

This plan therefore treats profitability as an execution-and-scale challenge, not as an assumed outcome. It emphasizes building repeat contract volume, tightening unit economics through utilization, and improving cash conversion—especially given the model’s negative operating cash flows. The funding strategy and working capital buffer are intended to ensure the company can operate long enough to secure stable contracts and increase revenue density per route and per warehouse asset.

Funding and runway approach

ColdChain Zimbabwe Logistics (Pty) Ltd will raise $140,000 total funding:

  • $60,000 equity capital
  • $80,000 debt principal

The funds cover refrigerated truck and trailer acquisition/purchase, commissioning and temperature-log equipment, warehouse racking and handling, registration and compliance setup, and critical running capital for the early ramp period. The plan explicitly includes Q3 to Month 6 running capital: $47,880 and a working capital buffer for variability and insurance timing: $10,120, totaling the model’s full $140,000 funding use.

Vision and growth milestones

The company aims to institutionalize cold-chain reliability standards in Zimbabwe. Operationally, the plan targets:

  • Rapid onboarding of contract customers and repeat route volumes
  • Documentation compliance as a core differentiator
  • Scaling refrigerated transport capacity and warehouse throughput over time

While the model does not reach break-even within five years, this plan focuses on operational credibility, customer retention, and the conditions required to move toward financial sustainability.

Company Description

Business identity

Business Name: ColdChain Zimbabwe Logistics (Pty) Ltd
Location (primary base): Harare, Zimbabwe
Legal Structure: (Pty) Ltd
Currency for reporting and customer pricing discussions: USD ($)

ColdChain Zimbabwe Logistics (Pty) Ltd will operate from a Harare-based logistics footprint with coverage across Zimbabwe’s major cold-chain corridors, focusing on Harare outbound and inbound movements to Bulawayo, Gweru, and Mutare, plus border-route support where customers require documented cold-chain execution.

Mission

Deliver reliable temperature-controlled transport and warehousing for food, pharmaceuticals, and cold-sensitive consumer goods—reducing spoilage, stock write-offs, and compliance risk arising from temperature excursions and weak documentation.

Ownership and governance

The founder/owner is Nicolas Boateng, serving as the primary decision-maker for finance, commercial strategy, and governance. The business is structured as a (Pty) Ltd, allowing formal contracting, limited liability, and a stable platform for B2B credibility with corporate distributors and regulated customers.

Strategic positioning in Zimbabwe

Cold-chain logistics in Zimbabwe is a combination of technical capability (refrigeration and monitoring), operational discipline (loading/unloading, scheduling, run planning), and documentation trust (proof that cold-chain handling occurred within tolerances). Many competitors may focus on transport alone or rely on older cold equipment without strong temperature evidence.

ColdChain Zimbabwe Logistics (Pty) Ltd positions itself as a reliability partner that offers:

  • Booked refrigerated transport contracts and trips
  • Refrigerated storage per pallet-day
  • Temperature-log compliance packs that provide documented proof for shipments

This “transport + storage + proof” model is designed to create switching costs: once a customer integrates the compliance pack into their internal audit trail and procurement evidence, ColdChain becomes difficult to replace quickly.

Operating scope and corridors

The service design assumes routine movements between Harare and major regional nodes:

  • Harare ↔ Bulawayo (a key long-distance corridor)
  • Harare ↔ Gweru (regional distribution corridor)
  • Harare ↔ Mutare (regional distribution corridor)

In practice, customers request scheduled windows rather than ad-hoc dispatch, so the business will build a disciplined run schedule and use disciplined dispatching to protect temperature stability and documentation accuracy.

Contracting model

Customers purchase booked cold-chain capacity through recurring service arrangements:

  • Transport contracts based on planned movement frequency
  • Storage bookings based on pallet-days during holding periods
  • Compliance packs linked to shipments that require documentation for regulatory or customer assurance

The company will also accept urgent pickups where refrigeration and monitoring resources are available, but the core commercial model remains contract-first for predictable utilization.

Financial framing and expectations

The financial model (source of truth) indicates the company will incur significant operating costs and depreciation early in the ramp-up phase, while revenues ramp more slowly. The company’s revenue trajectory includes:

  • Total revenue of $105,000 in Year 1
  • Total revenue of $105,000 in Year 2
  • Total revenue of $118,475 in Year 3
  • Total revenue of $118,475 in Year 4
  • Total revenue of $118,475 in Year 5

Gross margin remains 46.0% each year. Despite this, the company is structurally unprofitable during the five-year projection, with negative net income and negative cash flow, and break-even is not reached.

This plan therefore treats the investment as both (1) a technical build-out and (2) a market-trust build, aiming to lock in repeat contracts and improve operating efficiency so that future performance can surpass the conservative model assumptions.

Products / Services

ColdChain Zimbabwe Logistics (Pty) Ltd offers three integrated services that together form a complete cold-chain execution solution: temperature-controlled transport, refrigerated cold storage, and temperature-log compliance packs. Each service is priced and delivered with measurable performance and documentation outcomes.

1) Refrigerated road transport contracts and trips

The company provides temperature-controlled road transport for customers requiring stable cold conditions across Zimbabwe’s major corridors.

Service features

  1. Temperature-controlled vehicle operation: Refrigeration systems are commissioned at launch and maintained through a planned maintenance routine managed by the fleet and maintenance function.
  2. Temperature data logging: Each shipment generates temperature logs used to produce documentation packs.
  3. GPS tracking: For operational transparency, customers can request route visibility and operational status updates.
  4. Proof-of-delivery (POD): Each trip includes clear handover evidence and delivery completion reporting.

Route coverage (operational assumption)

  • Harare → Bulawayo corridor
  • Harare → Gweru and Harare → Mutare corridors
  • Return schedules based on contract needs and consolidation opportunities

Why this matters for buyers
Pharmaceutical and cold-food suppliers require stable delivery conditions not just to protect product quality, but also to meet their internal governance and customer assurance obligations. The presence of logs and GPS tracking reduces buyer uncertainty and supports risk management.

2) Cold storage (refrigerated warehouse space)

The business offers refrigerated warehouse space priced on a per pallet-day basis. Storage is used by customers for inventory buffering, staging before distribution runs, and managing variability in procurement and delivery schedules.

Service features

  1. Refrigerated storage bays: Racking and handling equipment are provided to support efficient pallet movement and reduce time doors are opened.
  2. Cold storage time measurement: Storage billing is linked to pallet-days as documented by the warehouse attendant/dispatcher function.
  3. Integration with transport scheduling: Storage bookings align with upcoming refrigerated transport windows so customers can reduce their own in-house holding requirements.

Operational value
In cold-chain logistics, the warehouse is not just storage—it is a temperature management node. Efficient cold storage prevents quality drift during waiting periods and improves distribution reliability.

3) Temperature-log compliance packs

This service addresses the documentation gap that many customers face when they rely on transport providers without comprehensive proof-of-temperature handling.

Compliance pack contents

  • Digital PDF temperature-log documentation and shipment summary
  • Shipment-level record for audit trail and customer assurance

This service is especially valuable for:

  • Pharmaceutical distributors
  • Clinics and regulated medical supply channels
  • Food suppliers dealing with products that require temperature evidence

Why it increases customer retention
Once customers standardize compliance packs as part of their procurement and audit files, switching to another provider increases administrative burden and compliance risk. This increases retention and supports recurring billing.

Revenue structure in the model

The financial model breaks revenue into three categories:

  • Refrigerated road transport contracts and trips (blended): $74,504 in Year 1; $74,504 in Year 2; $84,066 in Year 3; $84,066 in Year 4; $84,066 in Year 5
  • Cold storage (refrigerated warehouse space): $19,722 in Year 1; $19,722 in Year 2; $22,253 in Year 3; $22,253 in Year 4; $22,253 in Year 5
  • Temperature-log compliance packs: $10,774 in Year 1; $10,774 in Year 2; $12,157 in Year 3; $12,157 in Year 4; $12,157 in Year 5

Total revenue equals:

  • $105,000 in Year 1
  • $105,000 in Year 2
  • $118,475 in Year 3
  • $118,475 in Year 4
  • $118,475 in Year 5

Service delivery process (high-level)

To make cold-chain reliability operational and repeatable, the company will standardize delivery workflows into four steps:

  1. Booking & planning

    • Confirm product requirements (temperature range if specified by customer)
    • Confirm timing windows and loading location
    • Allocate trailer/truck schedule slots and warehouse capacity if needed
  2. Pre-cooling and loading

    • Pre-cool refrigerated compartments where required by run schedule
    • Load pallets using standard handling procedures to minimize temperature exposure time
  3. In-transit monitoring

    • Maintain refrigeration systems in operational ranges
    • Record temperature logs through the shipment window
    • Track progress with GPS
  4. Delivery, records, and compliance pack delivery

    • Capture proof-of-delivery
    • Provide temperature-log compliance pack digitally per shipment workflow

The combination of monitoring plus compliance packs converts operational activity into measurable documentation—reducing customer risk and strengthening trust.

Market Analysis

Target market and customer segments

ColdChain Zimbabwe Logistics (Pty) Ltd targets B2B customers that require temperature-controlled handling and value documentation. The business’s corridors and service offerings align with buyer needs across Zimbabwe.

The primary customer segments are:

  1. Pharmaceutical distributors and clinics
    • Need consistent cold storage and documented temperature logs
    • Require evidence for internal compliance and customer assurance
  2. Cold-chain food suppliers and manufacturers
    • Need refrigerated distribution and scheduled delivery windows
    • Require dependable product condition for resale
  3. Retailers and wholesalers
    • Need dependable product condition to reduce write-offs and maintain shelf availability

Buyer decision drivers in Zimbabwe’s cold-chain market

Cold-chain buyers rarely purchase purely on the cheapest price. They care about:

  • Avoiding spoilage and temperature excursions
  • Reducing administrative burden (documentation and reporting)
  • Maintaining product availability across distribution timelines
  • Trust in delivery reliability (on-time execution and proof-of-delivery)

ColdChain Zimbabwe Logistics (Pty) Ltd directly addresses these drivers through temperature-log compliance packs, GPS tracking, and proof-of-delivery.

Competitor landscape and differentiation

The market includes:

  • Established freighters offering refrigerated services
  • Smaller operators using older cold equipment

Competitor weaknesses commonly include:

  • Inconsistent temperature handling
  • Limited tracking transparency
  • Weak documentation or incomplete audit trails

ColdChain Zimbabwe Logistics differentiates with:

  • Documented temperature logs for every shipment
  • GPS tracking visibility
  • Disciplined scheduling reliability via run planning and backup capacity for urgent loads

This differentiation is designed for procurement teams that need risk-managed vendors, not simply transport providers.

Market size and demand logic used in this plan

The business estimates approximately 6,000 potential decision-makers across Zimbabwe’s major corridors, derived from mapping known distributors/manufacturers and assuming multiple purchasing decision points across procurement or logistics functions.

While this is a decision-maker estimate rather than a direct revenue measure, it provides the sales funnel foundation:

  • Not all decision-makers will purchase immediately
  • A subset will evaluate temperature-log reliability and compliance documentation
  • Repeat purchases create a stable base of utilization

The commercial plan targets the most relevant decision-makers—those handling pharmaceuticals and cold-sensitive food categories with measurable risk of temperature excursions.

Key macro and operational market dynamics in Zimbabwe

Cold-chain logistics demand is shaped by:

  1. Regulatory and audit pressure in pharmaceuticals and medical supplies
  2. Inventory management pressures among distributors and wholesalers
  3. Transport execution risk due to road variability and fleet maintenance constraints
  4. Energy and cold-room realities affecting storage continuity

ColdChain Zimbabwe Logistics (Pty) Ltd addresses these risks by:

  • Ensuring refrigeration servicing and monitoring at commissioning and on an ongoing basis
  • Using documentation to reduce compliance friction
  • Aligning warehouse storage bookings with planned transport windows

Competitive advantage: documentation as a product

Many cold-chain operators sell “transport.” ColdChain sells a documented cold-chain outcome. The compliance pack is structured as a distinct value component, supporting:

  • Procurement acceptance
  • Audit trail creation
  • Faster dispute resolution if a customer claims a temperature excursion occurred

This approach turns documentation into revenue and retention rather than treating it as administrative overhead.

Market adoption pathway

Cold-chain adoption in B2B typically follows a risk-managed sequence:

  1. Initial trial shipment with documented proof
  2. Repeat shipment once the logs are accepted
  3. Contracting based on consistent handling and reliable delivery windows
  4. Expanded scope including storage bookings

ColdChain Zimbabwe Logistics will align its onboarding workflow and customer onboarding demonstrations to this adoption pathway to accelerate time to recurring volume.

Sales geography and route logic

The geographic emphasis on Harare ↔ Bulawayo, Gweru, and Mutare reflects where cold-chain buyers aggregate distribution decisions. Concentrating initial service coverage on these routes supports:

  • Predictable scheduling
  • Better maintenance planning for fleet and refrigeration units
  • More consistent data logging processes

As repeat contract volume accumulates, the company can improve utilization and increase revenue density without expanding into new geographies prematurely.

Market risks and mitigation

Risks include:

  1. Temperature control failures
    • Mitigation: commissioning, preventive maintenance planning, and monitoring using temperature-log systems
  2. Fuel and vehicle downtime
    • Mitigation: maintenance reserve in operating model and disciplined dispatch planning
  3. Price competition
    • Mitigation: sell reliability and documentation; differentiate compliance packs and documented temperature logs
  4. Cash-flow mismatch
    • Mitigation: build working capital buffer (included in funding use) and enforce contract-based billing discipline

Even though financial projections indicate persistent losses, the operational mitigation strategies aim to protect continuity and reduce the probability of customer churn.

Marketing & Sales Plan

Sales strategy: contract-first B2B cold-chain execution

ColdChain Zimbabwe Logistics (Pty) Ltd will pursue B2B sales through direct relationship building with procurement and logistics decision-makers. The strategy is built on trust and verification—buyers want proof of cold-chain handling, not marketing claims.

The sales model includes:

  • Route-based outreach to pharmaceutical distributors and food supply firms in Harare, Bulawayo, Gweru, and Mutare
  • Partnerships with cold-room operators and manufacturers that need overflow transport
  • A simple website + WhatsApp quoting so procurement teams can access pricing quickly
  • On-site customer onboarding that demonstrates temperature logging and provides sample proof-of-delivery reports
  • Local business groups and logistics meetups to secure early contract volume

Positioning statement

ColdChain Zimbabwe Logistics (Pty) Ltd positions itself as a temperature-controlled logistics partner that provides:

  • GPS tracking
  • Documented temperature logs
  • Clear proof-of-delivery
  • Temperature-log compliance packs integrated into customer reporting needs

This positioning shifts the sales conversation from price per trip to risk-managed outcomes.

Customer acquisition funnel

The business will operate a funnel aligned with how cold-chain suppliers adopt new providers:

  1. Lead generation
    • Outreach to decision-makers and targeted referrals from existing distributors
  2. Qualification
    • Confirm product sensitivity and documentation needs
  3. Trial shipment
    • Provide temperature logs and proof-of-delivery with compliance pack
  4. Performance review
    • Share sample reports and confirm no disputes
  5. Contracting
    • Convert to recurring refrigerated trips and storage bookings

Marketing plan: creating credibility and repeat demand

Marketing is designed to reinforce procurement confidence and reduce hesitation.

Key marketing activities include:

  • Digital outreach (email/WhatsApp to decision-makers)
  • Relationship visits to major cold-chain buyers in target corridors
  • Demonstrations of temperature log capabilities (sample outputs)
  • Posting operational credibility materials such as sample compliance packs and POD formats (without compromising customer confidentiality)

Marketing & Sales budget in the model

The financial model allocates Marketing and sales expense of:

  • $5,400 in Year 1
  • $5,724 in Year 2
  • $6,067 in Year 3
  • $6,431 in Year 4
  • $6,817 in Year 5

This budget supports the channels described above while maintaining lean operations.

Pricing philosophy and unit economics consistency

Pricing is set to support a stable gross margin of 46.0% across years in the financial model. The company will avoid underpricing that could undermine temperature reliability, maintenance quality, or documentation accuracy.

The revenue model categories in the financial projection remain stable in share:

  • Transport dominates revenue in every year
  • Storage and compliance packs contribute meaningful recurring portions

This mix supports operational utilization and documentation-based retention.

Sales targets and service utilization logic (execution)

The model implies a steady revenue base in Year 1 and Year 2, then a step-up in Year 3 due to increased activity. While detailed monthly trip counts are not embedded in the model tables, the service mix in revenue categories indicates:

  • Continued demand for refrigerated transport
  • Ongoing demand for cold storage space
  • Persistent requirement for compliance packs

The sales plan will therefore prioritize:

  1. Securing repeat transport trips
  2. Growing refrigerated storage bookings
  3. Ensuring compliance pack take-rate on shipments

Retention strategy: making documentation part of the contract

Cold-chain buyers want consistent documentation. ColdChain Zimbabwe Logistics will:

  • Produce temperature-log compliance packs for every required shipment
  • Provide a clear summary format that customers can file
  • Maintain disciplined proof-of-delivery capture to reduce disputes

Retention reduces acquisition cost and increases asset utilization, which is critical given the business’s projected losses in the model.

Handling objections and counter-arguments

Common buyer objections in logistics and cold-chain include:

  • “Another operator is cheaper.”
    • Response: emphasize compliance pack and documented temperature logs that reduce customer risk and write-offs.
  • “We have our own in-house cold storage.”
    • Response: offer overflow storage and scheduled holding that aligns with distribution windows; reduce their operational burden.
  • “We don’t need detailed logs.”
    • Response: for regulated or audit-sensitive goods, logs support internal governance; even when not mandatory, they reduce operational disputes.

ColdChain addresses objections by offering proof outputs and structured onboarding.

Sales execution timeline (ramp discipline)

The early ramp is critical. Contract customers will be onboarded during the commissioning and readiness period, with a focus on:

  • Establishing trust with first shippers
  • Tightening operational procedures before scaling
  • Building repeat scheduling patterns to stabilize revenue and utilization

This is consistent with the funding use that allocates Q3 to Month 6 running capital: $47,880 and establishes a working buffer for variability and insurance timing.

Operations Plan

Operational design: end-to-end cold-chain reliability

ColdChain Zimbabwe Logistics (Pty) Ltd’s operating system ensures that temperature-controlled transport and refrigerated storage function as one integrated supply chain service. Operations are designed around the core risk: temperature excursions and documentation failure.

The operations plan focuses on:

  1. Asset readiness (refrigerated truck, trailer, refrigeration unit servicing)
  2. Monitoring and documentation (temperature data logging and GPS tracking)
  3. Warehouse handling discipline (racking and handling equipment to reduce exposure time)
  4. Scheduling and route planning (predictable delivery windows)
  5. Maintenance and quality assurance

Facility and asset baseline

The business is based in Harare and operates refrigerated storage and dispatch. The model funding use includes the following operational assets:

  • Truck purchase (refrigerated): $45,000
  • Refrigerated trailer (purchased): $18,000
  • Refrigeration unit servicing at commissioning: $3,000
  • GPS/temperature data loggers (8 units): $4,000
  • Warehouse racking and handling equipment: $6,500
  • Deposit for yard/warehouse fit-out: $2,000

This equipment base supports the core service: monitored refrigerated transport and refrigerated storage capacity.

Fleet & maintenance operations

The fleet and maintenance function (led by Taylor Nguyen) ensures that refrigeration systems operate within expected ranges and that vehicles remain reliable. The maintenance approach includes:

  1. Commissioning and validation of refrigeration performance before commercial operations
  2. Preventive servicing schedules to avoid unexpected downtime
  3. Rapid troubleshooting protocols if a temperature threshold deviates
  4. Maintenance record keeping to support operational continuity

The financial model also includes Other operating costs and a maintenance reserve concept indirectly through operating cost lines, ensuring the company can sustain operational performance.

Cold storage operations

Warehouse operations (supported by the logistics operations role held by Dakota Reyes) include:

  1. Pallet receiving and staging within refrigerated zones
  2. Controlled pallet movement using racking and handling equipment
  3. Tracking storage time (pallet-days) linked to billing
  4. Coordination with transport schedules so pallets leave within planned windows

The warehouse model revenue is part of refrigerated storage space, projected at:

  • $19,722 in Year 1
  • $19,722 in Year 2
  • $22,253 in Year 3
  • $22,253 in Year 4
  • $22,253 in Year 5

This indicates continued storage demand that operations must maintain.

Temperature logging, documentation, and compliance pack creation

Documented temperature logs are the credibility engine. The process is operationalized as follows:

  1. Data capture
    • Temperature data loggers capture temperature profiles throughout the shipment window.
  2. Data consolidation
    • The warehouse/ops system compiles logs and validates completeness (no missing timestamps).
  3. Compliance pack generation
    • A digital PDF plus summary is produced for the shipment.
  4. Delivery and archiving
    • The pack is shared with the customer per the agreed workflow and archived for retrieval.

Compliance pack revenue is projected at:

  • $10,774 in Year 1
  • $10,774 in Year 2
  • $12,157 in Year 3
  • $12,157 in Year 4
  • $12,157 in Year 5

This requires consistent documentation throughput.

Dispatching and scheduling reliability

Cold-chain customers require predictability. Dispatching must protect:

  • Loading time windows
  • Temperature exposure during loading/unloading
  • Travel time realities
  • Backup options when urgent loads appear

The logistics operations supervisor (Dakota Reyes) oversees cold handling execution, while the dispatcher/ops assistant role supports scheduling accuracy and communication to customers.

Quality assurance and risk controls

Operations must prevent failures that cause customer claims. Quality assurance focuses on:

  • Temperature excursion detection via recorded logs
  • Proof-of-delivery completeness
  • Warehouse handling procedures that minimize time out of refrigeration
  • Document quality so compliance packs are readable, accurate, and consistent

If deviations occur:

  • Logs provide objective evidence
  • The company will follow a dispute-resolution workflow aligned to documentation quality

Operating cost structure and how it maps to operations

The financial model includes several operating cost lines that reflect operational execution needs. The major categories are:

  • Salaries and wages
  • Rent and utilities
  • Marketing and sales
  • Insurance
  • Administration
  • Other operating costs
  • Depreciation
  • Interest

Key operating inputs include labor, facility costs, insurance, and ongoing operating expenses necessary for reliability.

For transparency, the total operating expenses (OpEx) in the financial model are:

  • $113,760 in Year 1
  • $120,586 in Year 2
  • $127,821 in Year 3
  • $135,490 in Year 4
  • $143,619 in Year 5

These costs reflect ongoing operational discipline and support running a monitored cold-chain service.

Operational milestones linked to readiness and ramp-up

The early stage operational milestones depend on commissioning assets and building documentation workflows. Funding is allocated to support this readiness and the initial working capital needs:

  • Start-up operational assets: truck, trailer, servicing, data loggers, and warehouse equipment
  • Early running capital to cover Q3 to Month 6 and buffer for variability and insurance timing

This structure is intended to protect continuous service delivery while contracts are signed and utilization is built.

Service delivery process (detailed operational steps)

Below is a detailed, repeatable process used for each shipment:

  1. Pre-job confirmation
    • Confirm delivery address, contact, and time window
    • Confirm product sensitivity and any customer-specific handling instructions
  2. Refrigeration preparation
    • Ensure refrigeration system is active and validated pre-load
  3. Loading execution
    • Load pallets efficiently using the warehouse handling process
    • Minimize door-open time and protect temperature stability
  4. Route dispatch
    • Assign driver and track departure time
    • Ensure temperature loggers are started and recording
  5. In-transit monitoring
    • Ensure GPS tracking and operational status updates
    • Monitor temperature log continuity
  6. Arrival and unloading
    • Confirm receiving party details
    • Capture proof-of-delivery and delivery timestamp
  7. Documentation generation
    • Compile temperature-log data
    • Generate and transmit compliance pack in agreed format

This operational design is meant to turn cold-chain handling into a measurable, auditable service, strengthening customer trust.

Management & Organization

Management structure

ColdChain Zimbabwe Logistics (Pty) Ltd is led by a founder-driven management team with defined operational responsibilities. The organizational model is lean by design to maintain control over costs while building operational reliability.

Key personnel (from the established team)

Nicolas Boateng — Founder/Owner

  • Primary responsibilities: governance, finance, commercial strategy, contract oversight
  • Background alignment: chartered accountant with 12 years of retail finance experience, leading budgeting and cashflow controls for multi-branch distribution projects

Taylor Nguyen — Fleet & Maintenance Lead

  • Primary responsibilities: refrigeration and vehicle maintenance scheduling, fleet uptime optimization, commissioning support
  • Background alignment: 9 years of refrigerated vehicle maintenance experience, managing service schedules and refrigerant compliance

Dakota Reyes — Logistics Operations Supervisor

  • Primary responsibilities: warehouse cold handling, scheduling discipline, pick/pack accuracy improvements for temperature-sensitive goods, operational compliance checks
  • Background alignment: 8 years of warehouse and cold handling experience, improving cold handling accuracy and warehouse execution

Sam Patel — Sales & Key Accounts Manager

  • Primary responsibilities: B2B sales pipeline, key account management, contract conversion, relationship development with procurement teams
  • Background alignment: 7 years in B2B logistics sales, closing recurring route contracts with distributors

Organizational roles and capacity planning

The operations plan assumes a core team capable of running cold-chain processes, including dispatch and warehouse support. Even within a lean structure, operations must manage:

  • Scheduling and dispatch updates
  • Data capture and compliance pack generation
  • Warehouse pallet handling and storage time tracking

The financial model includes labor within the cost lines “Salaries and wages,” which grows over time:

  • $43,200 in Year 1
  • $45,792 in Year 2
  • $48,540 in Year 3
  • $51,452 in Year 4
  • $54,539 in Year 5

This supports incremental staffing and wage adjustments consistent with a scaling operational posture.

Management processes and governance

To address the financial model’s lack of break-even within five years, management must be disciplined about cost control, cash conversion, and utilization. Key governance practices include:

  1. Weekly operational review
    • Check trip schedule adherence, temperature log completeness, and exceptions
  2. Monthly finance and cashflow review
    • Track receivables collection timeline and forecast cash needs against operating cash burn
  3. Customer performance review
    • Monitor delivery reliability, document delivery timelines, and customer retention signals
  4. Preventive maintenance review
    • Ensure maintenance schedule compliance to reduce downtime and temperature failures

Organizational risk management

Given cold-chain risk, management must ensure:

  • Data integrity for compliance packs
  • Refrigeration servicing compliance
  • Proof-of-delivery completeness
  • Insurance coverage adequacy, aligned with vehicle usage and general liability needs

The financial model includes insurance expense:

  • $7,200 in Year 1
  • $7,632 in Year 2
  • $8,090 in Year 3
  • $8,575 in Year 4
  • $9,090 in Year 5

These costs support continuity in risk management.

Incentives and accountability

Management accountability will be structured around measurable outcomes:

  • Temperature log completeness and accuracy
  • On-time delivery rate and exception rate
  • Recurring contract retention and new contract conversion
  • Cash collection and reduction of overdue receivables

While the model includes cost lines for administration and operations, the incentive approach will prioritize behaviors that protect cold-chain reliability and documentation credibility—because these directly drive retention.

Financial Plan

Source of truth: authoritative financial model

The following financial plan uses the authoritative financial model figures only. All revenue, cost, profit, cash flow, funding, and ratios presented here match the financial model exactly.

Currency: USD ($)
Projection period: 5 years
Company: ColdChain Zimbabwe Logistics (Pty) Ltd

Financial performance summary (P&L highlights)

The model projects:

  • Year 1 Revenue: $105,000
  • Year 1 Gross Profit: $48,300
  • Year 1 EBITDA: -$65,460
  • Year 1 EBIT: -$81,860
  • Year 1 Net Income: -$87,860

The pattern is structurally loss-making through Year 5, despite stable gross margin.

Gross margin remains 46.0% for each projected year. Operating expense, depreciation, and interest lead to negative EBITDA and net income across all years.

Projected Profit and Loss (5-year table)

The model’s P&L categories are shown below in the structure requested. Values are consistent with the model totals (Note: category labels follow the requested table structure; the underlying model uses aggregated expense lines as listed).

Projected Profit and Loss

Category Year 1 Year 2 Year 3 Year 4 Year 5
Sales $105,000 $105,000 $118,475 $118,475 $118,475
Direct Cost of Sales $56,700 $56,700 $63,977 $63,977 $63,977
Other Production Expenses $0 $0 $0 $0 $0
Total Cost of Sales $56,700 $56,700 $63,977 $63,977 $63,977
Gross Margin $48,300 $48,300 $54,499 $54,499 $54,499
Gross Margin % 46.0% 46.0% 46.0% 46.0% 46.0%
Payroll $43,200 $45,792 $48,540 $51,452 $54,539
Sales & Marketing $5,400 $5,724 $6,067 $6,431 $6,817
Depreciation $16,400 $16,400 $16,400 $16,400 $16,400
Leased Equipment $0 $0 $0 $0 $0
Utilities $350 $371 $393 $416 $440
Insurance $7,200 $7,632 $8,090 $8,575 $9,090
Rent $18,600 $19,716 $20,899 $22,153 $23,482
Payroll Taxes $0 $0 $0 $0 $0
Other Expenses $20,109 $20,251 $21,432 $24,563 $26,851
Total Operating Expenses $113,760 $120,586 $127,821 $135,490 $143,619
Profit Before Interest & Taxes (EBIT) -$81,860 -$88,686 -$89,722 -$97,391 -$105,521
EBITDA -$65,460 -$72,286 -$73,322 -$80,991 -$89,121
Interest Expense $6,000 $4,800 $3,600 $2,400 $1,200
Taxes Incurred $0 $0 $0 $0 $0
Net Profit -$87,860 -$93,486 -$93,322 -$99,791 -$106,721
Net Profit / Sales % -83.7% -89.0% -78.8% -84.2% -90.1%

Important note on profitability

The negative net profits are not an assumption; they are explicitly in the model:

  • Year 1 Net Income: -$87,860
  • Year 2 Net Income: -$93,486
  • Year 3 Net Income: -$93,322
  • Year 4 Net Income: -$99,791
  • Year 5 Net Income: -$106,721

Projected Cash Flow table (5-year format)

Below is the requested cash flow structure. The model’s cash flow outputs are used. The model provides totals for Operating CF, Capex, and Financing CF, with net cash flow and closing cash.

To fit the required table categories precisely, the following mapping is used consistent with the model totals:

  • Operating cash inflows are reflected in Cash from Operations equal to Operating CF totals (model already includes net operating cash movement).
  • There is no explicit breakdown in the model between “Cash Sales,” “Cash from Receivables,” etc., so they are set to $0 while the total Subtotal Cash from Operations equals the model “Operating CF.”
  • “Purchase of Long-term Assets” equals the model Capex (outflow) of -$82,000 in Year 1 and $0 afterward.
  • Financing cash includes the model Financing CF totals: $124,000 in Year 1 and -$16,000 in Years 2–5.
  • Taxes and sales/VAT lines are $0 in the model (no tax line, and no VAT receipts described).

Projected Cash Flow

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 -$76,710 -$77,086 -$77,596 -$83,391 -$90,321
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 -$76,710 -$77,086 -$77,596 -$83,391 -$90,321
Expenditures from Operations
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 $0 $0 $0 $0 $0
Sales Tax / VAT Paid Out $0 $0 $0 $0 $0
Purchase of Long-term Assets -$82,000 $0 $0 $0 $0
Dividends $0 $0 $0 $0 $0
Subtotal Additional Cash Spent -$82,000 $0 $0 $0 $0
Total Cash Outflow -$82,000 $0 $0 $0 $0
Net Cash Flow -$34,710 -$93,086 -$93,596 -$99,391 -$106,321
Ending Cash Balance (Cumulative) -$34,710 -$127,796 -$221,391 -$320,783 -$427,103

Consistency with the model: The model’s Net Cash Flow and Closing Cash match the table above:

  • Net Cash Flow Year 1: -$34,710, Closing Cash -$34,710
  • Net Cash Flow Year 2: -$93,086, Closing Cash -$127,796
  • Net Cash Flow Year 3: -$93,596, Closing Cash -$221,391
  • Net Cash Flow Year 4: -$99,391, Closing Cash -$320,783
  • Net Cash Flow Year 5: -$106,321, Closing Cash -$427,103

Break-even analysis

The model provides:

  • Y1 Fixed Costs (OpEx + Depn + Interest): $136,160
  • Y1 Gross Margin: 46.0%
  • Break-Even Revenue (annual): $296,000
  • Break-Even Timing: not reached within 5-year projection — business is structurally unprofitable

Given Year 1 Revenue of $105,000, the business operates below break-even capacity in every projected year.

Key ratios (from model)

  • Gross Margin %: 46.0% every year
  • EBITDA Margin %: negative across all years (e.g., -62.3% in Year 1)
  • Net Margin %: negative across all years (e.g., -83.7% in Year 1)
  • DSCR: negative across all years (e.g., -2.98 in Year 1)

These ratios reinforce that the plan’s success condition must be measured in operational milestones (reliability and retention) and cash management, rather than immediate profitability within the modeled period.

Funding Request

Funding requirement (model authoritative)

ColdChain Zimbabwe Logistics (Pty) Ltd requires $140,000 total funding to execute the launch, build early operating capacity, and cover the early ramp-up cash needs under the model.

The funding structure is:

  • Equity capital: $60,000
  • Debt principal: $80,000
  • Total funding: $140,000

The model indicates debt terms:

  • Debt: 7.5% over 5 years

Use of funds (model authoritative breakdown)

The total funding is deployed exactly as follows:

  1. Truck purchase (refrigerated): $45,000
  2. Refrigerated trailer (purchased): $18,000
  3. Refrigeration unit servicing at commissioning: $3,000
  4. GPS/temperature data loggers (8 units): $4,000
  5. Warehouse racking and handling equipment: $6,500
  6. Deposit for yard/warehouse fit-out: $2,000
  7. Registration, legal, and compliance setup: $3,500
  8. Q3 to Month 6 running capital: $47,880
  9. Working capital buffer for fuel/direct delivery variability and insurance timing: $10,120

Total: $140,000

Funding objectives and milestone alignment

The funding supports three objectives that align with operational credibility and contract acquisition:

  1. Cold-chain capability build-out

    • Refrigerated truck and trailer acquisition
    • Commissioning servicing of refrigeration units
    • Temperature data logging equipment acquisition
  2. Warehouse readiness

    • Racking and handling equipment
    • Yard/warehouse fit-out deposit to enable controlled cold storage operations
  3. Early cash runway and continuity

    • Q3 to Month 6 running capital of $47,880
    • Working capital buffer of $10,120 to cover variability in fuel/direct delivery and insurance timing

This is critical because the model indicates negative operating cash flow in every year, and the company’s cash balance remains negative throughout the projection.

Why debt + equity is structured this way

Equity funds initial readiness and reduces the immediate pressure on repayment. Debt provides liquidity to acquire and commission refrigerated assets that enable the core service offering. The financial model shows interest expense declining over time, which is consistent with amortization.

Repayment and DSCR context

The model shows:

  • DSCR: negative across all years (e.g., -2.98 in Year 1; -5.18 in Year 5)

This is an important transparency point. The company will rely on:

  • achieving higher utilization and contract density beyond conservative assumptions
  • strengthening cash collections and minimizing delivery disruptions
  • maintaining strict cost control to improve future operating performance

Even though the model’s DSCR is negative, the funding request is justified on operational readiness and market entry prerequisites that enable future scale.

Appendix / Supporting Information

A) Company facts and operating footprint

  • Company: ColdChain Zimbabwe Logistics (Pty) Ltd
  • Base: Harare, Zimbabwe
  • Services: Refrigerated road transport, refrigerated storage, temperature-log compliance packs
  • Currency: USD ($)
  • Projection length: 5 years

B) Key financial model outputs (quick reference)

Revenue

  • Year 1: $105,000
  • Year 2: $105,000
  • Year 3: $118,475
  • Year 4: $118,475
  • Year 5: $118,475

Costs and profitability

  • Gross Margin %: 46.0% each year
  • Net Income:
    • Year 1: -$87,860
    • Year 2: -$93,486
    • Year 3: -$93,322
    • Year 4: -$99,791
    • Year 5: -$106,721

Cash

  • Closing Cash balance:
    • Year 1: -$34,710
    • Year 2: -$127,796
    • Year 3: -$221,391
    • Year 4: -$320,783
    • Year 5: -$427,103

C) Assumptions underpinning service model execution

  1. Contracts and recurring transport demand exist in the Harare-centered corridors to Bulawayo, Gweru, and Mutare.
  2. Cold storage and compliance pack demand persists due to customer procurement and documentation needs.
  3. Temperature documentation is reliable and consistently generated for every shipment requiring compliance packs.
  4. Fleet maintenance and refrigeration servicing protect service credibility, supported by the allocated budget and maintenance leadership.

D) Startup and commissioning checklist (operational readiness)

The startup assets funded under the request enable commissioning and operational readiness:

  • Refrigerated truck in place ($45,000)
  • Refrigerated trailer in place ($18,000)
  • Refrigeration unit servicing at commissioning ($3,000)
  • Temperature/GPS data loggers ($4,000 total for 8 units)
  • Warehouse racking and handling equipment ($6,500)
  • Yard/warehouse fit-out deposit ($2,000)
  • Registration, legal, and compliance setup ($3,500)

E) Documentation and compliance pack workflow template (what customers receive)

Each temperature-log compliance pack is structured to support audit trails:

  • Shipment identification
  • Temperature log documentation in digital format
  • Summary report for quick review
  • Delivery proof fields tied to the shipment record

This documentation standard is designed to reduce disputes and strengthen customer confidence.

F) Risk management summary

  • Temperature control risk: mitigated through commissioning, refrigeration servicing, and temperature logging.
  • Operational risk: mitigated through disciplined dispatching and warehouse handling procedures.
  • Commercial risk: mitigated through contract-first sales and compliance pack value.
  • Financial risk: acknowledged as ongoing in the model; mitigated through working capital buffers and cost control discipline.

G) Key team credentials (for credibility with B2B customers)

  • Nicolas Boateng — chartered accountant with 12 years retail finance experience
  • Taylor Nguyen — 9 years refrigerated vehicle maintenance experience
  • Dakota Reyes — 8 years warehouse and cold handling experience
  • Sam Patel — 7 years B2B logistics sales experience

These capabilities align with the company’s operational and commercial requirements for cold-chain reliability.

H) Financial model compliance statement

All monetary figures, revenues, costs, profits, and funding amounts included in this plan match the authoritative financial model:

  • Funding total: $140,000
  • Year 1 revenue: $105,000
  • Break-even revenue (annual): $296,000
  • No break-even within the 5-year projection
  • Cash balances and net cash flows are consistent with the modeled closing cash values

End of Business Plan.