AiraSafe CCTV (Pty) Ltd is an end-to-end CCTV surveillance installation and monitoring provider serving homes, small offices, warehouses, and retail sites in Johannesburg, Gauteng, South Africa. The business addresses the common problem of unreliable security outcomes—where cameras are installed without appropriate site design, proper configuration, and a credible response pathway when incidents occur.
The company operates with a repeatable model: once-off installation packages that deliver the right camera density, storage, and remote viewing for each site, combined with monthly monitoring subscriptions designed to convert a portion of new installs into recurring revenue. This plan sets out the strategy, operations, market positioning, and a five-year financial projection aligned to the authoritative financial model.
Executive Summary
AiraSafe CCTV (Pty) Ltd provides CCTV surveillance solutions across Johannesburg’s established residential and commercial corridors. The company is structured as a private company ((Pty) Ltd) and is based in Johannesburg, Gauteng, South Africa. The founder and key leadership team build a service that is not limited to device installation; it includes remote access enablement, monitoring configuration, and optional scheduled or 24/7 response monitoring so customers can react quickly when alarms or incidents occur.
The problem in the South African market
Security buyers in South Africa often face a gap between what is marketed and what is delivered on the ground:
- Camera coverage without correct placement: cameras may be installed, but blind spots remain, or angles don’t capture faces and license plates.
- Unclear monitoring and escalation: clients get notifications but not a consistent process for what happens next.
- Poor after-sales reliability: remote access breaks, firmware updates are neglected, and replacements or troubleshooting happen slowly.
- Inconsistent evidence quality: recordings are incomplete or stored in ways that are hard to retrieve when proof is required.
AiraSafe CCTV (Pty) Ltd solves these issues by delivering site-specific camera placement, standardized installation quality checks, and a transparent monitoring option rather than vague “we’ll handle it” statements.
Our solution and revenue model
AiraSafe CCTV (Pty) Ltd earns revenue in two streams:
- Installation packages priced per site based on camera count, storage capacity, and system complexity.
- Monitoring subscriptions charged per location per month, priced according to the monitoring level and maximum supported camera count.
This mix is critical because CCTV installation can be lumpy in early traction, while monitoring provides stability. The business is designed to reach break-even within the first year by maintaining disciplined operating costs and scaling monitoring subscriptions alongside new installs.
Market focus and traction logic
The business targets property owners and facilities managers aged 28–60 who require dependable security outcomes and want a provider that can explain the system clearly. The service area includes Johannesburg, Randburg, Roodepoort, Midrand, and Sandton, focusing on segments where theft, vandalism, and internal losses are motivating factors and where customers are willing to upgrade security systems.
The plan anticipates building a pipeline through WhatsApp lead capture, a simple website, Google Business Profile optimization and local search ads, and referral partnerships with small property letting agents, estate maintenance contractors, and warehouse managers.
Financial highlights (5-year model)
The authoritative financial model projects five-year performance with growing revenue and improving margins as monitoring scales.
- Year 1 Revenue: R2,880,000
- Year 1 Net Profit: R817,965
- Year 5 Revenue: R6,758,969
- Year 5 Net Profit: R3,221,989
- Break-even timing: Month 1 (within Year 1)
- Gross margin: 100.0% (as modelled)
The cash flow profile remains strongly positive due to the monitoring revenue engine and disciplined operating expenditures.
Funding and use of funds
Total funding required is R400,000, composed of:
- Equity: R180,000
- Debt: R220,000
Funds will be used for equipment and stock, tools, registration and compliance, initial marketing launch, vehicle deposit and branding, and working capital to cover the initial operating run-rate.
This plan positions AiraSafe CCTV (Pty) Ltd for sustainable growth in Gauteng’s security upgrade market, with monitoring-driven recurring revenue and operational systems designed to reduce rework, increase installation consistency, and improve retention.
Company Description (business name, location, legal structure, ownership)
Business overview
AiraSafe CCTV (Pty) Ltd is a CCTV surveillance services company providing end-to-end CCTV installation and monitoring in South Africa. The company installs surveillance systems for:
- Homes requiring visible deterrence and remote access capability
- Small offices and retail sites needing coverage and evidence capture
- Warehouses and shops where theft prevention and operational continuity matter
AiraSafe CCTV (Pty) Ltd’s central value proposition is reliable outcomes: cameras are installed with appropriate coverage, configured for remote viewing, and supported by an optional monitoring service that enables escalation and response processes.
Location and service footprint
The company is based in Johannesburg, Gauteng, South Africa. From this base, it serves customers across:
- Johannesburg
- Randburg
- Roodepoort
- Midrand
- Sandton
This footprint is designed to balance market demand and efficient travel times, supporting cost discipline in vehicle operations while enabling rapid scheduling.
Legal structure
AiraSafe CCTV (Pty) Ltd operates as a private company (Pty) Ltd. It is already registered with the required tax and business registrations for service delivery. The business uses ZAR (R) for all financial figures and pricing assumptions.
Ownership and leadership
AiraSafe CCTV (Pty) Ltd is led by the founder, Akira Njoroge, who also functions as the key commercial planner. He is a chartered accountant with 12 years of retail finance experience and experience managing operational budgets, cash flow controls, and vendor contracts. He leads:
- Commercial planning and pricing discipline
- Cash flow management and investor-ready reporting
- Monitoring of cost-to-serve and contract profitability
The company’s leadership approach combines finance discipline and operational execution. The operating team is structured around installation quality, network/remote access performance, procurement accuracy, monitoring liaison, and customer success.
Corporate mission and operating principles
The company’s mission is to deliver security systems that are dependable in the field and easy to use for clients. The operating principles include:
- Coverage quality over camera quantity: placement and field of view determine success.
- Standardised installation quality checks: consistent delivery reduces rework and protects client trust.
- Transparent monitoring pathways: clients understand what monitoring includes and how escalation works.
- Documented handovers: remote access walkthroughs and written scopes help clients manage systems long-term.
- Fast troubleshooting and warranty handling: maintenance reduces downtime and improves retention.
Why this structure matters
A CCTV installation business can fail when it becomes equipment-only or when monitoring is treated as an afterthought. AiraSafe CCTV (Pty) Ltd’s structure integrates:
- Installation teams that design and install coverage,
- IT and technical staff that ensure remote access and system configuration,
- Monitoring liaison that manages client onboarding and escalation workflows,
- Procurement and administration that protect continuity of parts, documentation, and accurate invoicing.
This cohesion supports the business’s financial model, which assumes that revenue growth is driven by both installs and recurring subscriptions while operating costs scale at a controlled rate.
Products / Services
Service portfolio overview
AiraSafe CCTV (Pty) Ltd offers surveillance services as a combination of:
- Once-off installation packages tailored to typical site requirements and complexity
- Monthly monitoring subscriptions that keep clients supported after deployment
The company’s packaging approach allows customers to choose a system based on need and budget while maintaining predictable unit economics for the business.
Installation packages (A/B/C)
Installation revenue is generated through three standardised packages. Each package defines camera quantity and storage capability, plus the system complexity required for reliable operation.
Package A: Basic Home
- Includes: 4 cameras, 1TB storage, remote app capability
- Install price: R10,500 per install
- Direct cost: R4,000 per install
Package A is designed for homeowners and smaller premises where a balanced entry-level solution is required. Typical customers include property owners seeking visible deterrence and remote viewing without complex site networks.
Package B: Business Standard
- Includes: 8 cameras, 2TB storage, remote viewing
- Install price: R19,900 per install
- Direct cost: R7,900 per install
Package B fits small offices, professional services, and retail sites that need broader coverage such as entrances, parking access points, and internal corridors.
Package C: Warehouse/Shop Pro
- Includes: 16 cameras, 4TB storage, ruggedised cabling
- Install price: R39,900 per install
- Direct cost: R15,900 per install
Package C is aimed at warehouses and shops where higher risk exposure exists due to inventory movement, higher foot traffic, or the need to cover external perimeters with reliable cabling durability.
Monitoring subscriptions (Starter/Pro)
Monitoring is sold per site per month. Subscriptions are offered to convert installation buyers into recurring revenue and provide continuous assurance.
Starter Monitoring (up to 8 cameras)
- Subscription price: R1,100 per site/month
- Cost: R420 per site/month
Starter is for clients who want monitoring support for core areas and manageable escalation processes.
Pro Monitoring (up to 16 cameras)
- Subscription price: R1,950 per site/month
- Cost: R760 per site/month
Pro is suited to warehouses, larger retail spaces, and clients who need tighter monitoring coverage and higher confidence in response workflows.
How installation works: step-by-step delivery model
AiraSafe CCTV (Pty) Ltd uses a repeatable delivery process designed to reduce rework and standardise quality.
1) Lead capture and needs assessment
Leads are captured through:
- WhatsApp lead capture using short videos that show installation quality and app walkthroughs
- Website package pages with Johannesburg targeting
- Google Business Profile optimisation and local search ads
- Referrals from property and maintenance partners
A customer’s needs are assessed using a short checklist:
- Property type (home, office, warehouse, retail)
- Risk concerns (theft, break-in history, internal losses)
- Likely incident points (entrances, loading bays, cash handling areas)
- Existing infrastructure (network, power availability, mounting feasibility)
2) Site survey within 48 hours
After a lead becomes a qualified quote request, a site survey is scheduled within 48 hours. During the survey, the technician and installation supervisor confirm:
- Line-of-sight coverage and camera angles
- Cable routing feasibility and conduit needs
- Power stability requirements
- Storage placement and thermal considerations
- Network coverage and remote viewing set-up options
3) Written scope and transparent package selection
Clients receive a written scope that includes:
- Package selection (A/B/C)
- Camera count and key coverage zones (e.g., front access, perimeter, loading area)
- Storage specification aligned to the selected package
- Network and remote viewing configuration scope
Transparency matters for investor confidence because it reduces payment friction and reduces post-install disputes.
4) Installation and quality checks
Installation is performed by field technicians and supervised by the installation supervisor. Standardised installation quality checks include:
- Camera mounting safety and weather resistance checks
- Angle and focus validation for key zones
- Cabling and connector testing for signal stability
- Device labelling for future servicing
- Basic firmware and configuration verification
- Remote viewing test using the client’s account
The goal is to ensure that systems perform during early weeks after installation, because this affects monitoring conversion and renewal rates.
5) Client handover and training
A documented handover includes:
- Remote viewing walkthrough (app usage)
- How to interpret motion events and clips
- Guidance on where recordings are stored and how to retrieve evidence
- Monitoring onboarding instructions (if subscribed)
The handover reduces support requests and strengthens customer trust.
Monitoring response model: optional activation
Monitoring is activated per client after installation. AiraSafe CCTV (Pty) Ltd provides options including scheduled response monitoring and 24/7 monitoring depending on client preference and risk level.
The monitoring liaison ensures that:
- Client contact lists are correctly captured during onboarding
- Escalation steps are clear and agreed
- Incident logs are maintained for accountability
Client value: why these services win
AiraSafe CCTV (Pty) Ltd provides outcomes, not only devices. Customers value:
- Evidence quality for disputes and insurance claims
- Real-time alerts that reduce response time
- Deterrence through visible coverage and professional installation
- After-sales reliability through structured troubleshooting and documentation
These elements are directly reflected in the business’s revenue model and operational focus.
Market Analysis (target market, competition, market size)
Target market: who buys CCTV in Johannesburg
AiraSafe CCTV (Pty) Ltd targets property owners and facilities managers aged 28–60 who want fast installation, clear reporting, and dependable after-sales support. Buyers in this segment typically evaluate CCTV through:
- perceived threat level (break-ins, vandalism, internal theft)
- reliability of installed systems
- the availability of a monitoring response pathway
- ease of remote access and evidence retrieval
Primary customer segments
-
Residential property owners
- Motivation: break-in prevention, deterrence, family safety
- Typical decision factors: simplicity, remote app, visible improvement
- Suitable product: Package A
-
Small offices and retail
- Motivation: safeguarding inventory, shopfront security, controlling access points
- Typical decision factors: adequate camera coverage, recording clarity, monitoring availability
- Suitable product: Package B
-
Warehouses and shops with high-risk exposures
- Motivation: theft prevention for inventory, monitoring of perimeters and loading areas
- Typical decision factors: coverage density, ruggedised cabling, storage capacity, Pro monitoring escalation confidence
- Suitable product: Package C
Service area and market logic
The company focuses on Johannesburg, Randburg, Roodepoort, Midrand, and Sandton. These areas reflect concentrated commercial activity, property upgrades, and steady demand for security improvements due to both economic activity and documented concerns around theft and property crime.
The founder’s market framing estimates:
- At least 30,000 potential business sites
- At least 220,000 potential households
in metro clusters that are within driving radius and have plausible upgrade budgets.
These numbers do not represent immediate capture; rather, they represent the pool from which leads can be generated through local marketing and referrals.
Customer journey and buying triggers
CCTV sales in South Africa often move when customers face one of the following triggers:
- a recent attempted theft or successful break-in
- insurance requirements after a claim
- tenancy changes that require upgraded security
- new store opening or warehouse expansion
- internal losses or disputes where evidence becomes necessary
AiraSafe CCTV (Pty) Ltd’s packages map to these triggers:
- Home incidents → Package A
- Business security upgrades → Package B
- Higher-risk sites → Package C and Pro monitoring
Competition landscape
AiraSafe CCTV (Pty) Ltd competes with a mix of large national brands and local providers.
Major competitors
-
ADT South Africa
- Strength: strong brand recognition and scale
- Limitation for customers: higher costs and less personalised site design for SMEs
-
Local CCTV installers in Johannesburg CBD
- Strength: local presence and familiarity
- Limitation: variable installation quality and inconsistent monitoring pathways
-
Smaller monitoring providers that resell equipment
- Strength: quick quotes and equipment reselling
- Limitation: weaker site-specific design and potential gaps in monitoring escalation processes
Differentiation strategy
AiraSafe CCTV (Pty) Ltd differentiates through three core mechanisms:
-
Site-specific camera placement
- Camera quantity alone does not guarantee outcomes.
- AiraSafe CCTV (Pty) Ltd plans angles to capture faces and key entry routes.
-
Standardised installation quality checks
- A disciplined installation process reduces early failures and improves monitoring retention.
- Quality checks ensure remote access works from day one.
-
Transparent monitoring response options
- Clients receive clear explanation of what monitoring includes.
- This prevents dissatisfaction and reduces cancellation risk.
Positioning in customer minds
Competitors often position CCTV as a product purchase. AiraSafe CCTV (Pty) Ltd positions CCTV as a security system outcome:
- deterrence through proper installation
- evidence capture through correct configuration
- faster response through monitoring escalation
This positioning supports higher conversion when leads are handled through WhatsApp and follow-up quoting.
Market size and growth assumptions (model-aligned)
AiraSafe CCTV (Pty) Ltd’s financial projections show revenue growth across years:
- Year 1: R2,880,000
- Year 2: R5,040,000 (Y2 growth 75.0%)
- Year 3: R5,557,940 (Y3 growth 10.3%)
- Year 4: R6,129,106 (Y4 growth 10.3%)
- Year 5: R6,758,969 (Y5 growth 10.3%)
This implies a business ramp where Year 2 scales sharply (installation pipeline plus monitoring base expansion), then settles into more sustainable growth rates supported by monitoring-led retention and incremental acquisition.
Competitive advantages tied to execution
AiraSafe CCTV (Pty) Ltd’s competitive advantages are not only marketing claims; they tie directly to operational capability:
- field technicians experienced in troubleshooting and firmware updates reduce downtime risk
- monitoring liaison ensures client onboarding and escalation workflows are correct
- procurement coordination reduces supplier lead time issues and warranty replacement delays
- customer success supports remote access troubleshooting and maintains confidence
Risks and counter-arguments (market realities)
Risk: price pressure
Local installers may offer lower-priced installations to win contracts.
- Counter: AiraSafe CCTV (Pty) Ltd’s packages include defined storage capacity and system configuration; quality checks reduce the risk of repeat purchases.
Risk: monitoring churn
Customers might cancel if alerts are frequent or escalation is unclear.
- Counter: the monitoring liaison onboarding ensures correct escalation contact lists and agreed response expectations; installation QA reduces false triggers.
Risk: technology fragmentation
Different hardware ecosystems can complicate remote viewing and monitoring integration.
- Counter: standardised configuration and system documentation improve reliability and reduce integration variance.
AiraSafe CCTV (Pty) Ltd’s market approach is built to defend against these risks through disciplined installation and monitoring process control.
Marketing & Sales Plan
Sales strategy: quote-to-install conversion
AiraSafe CCTV (Pty) Ltd uses a quote-to-install pipeline. The key conversion components are:
- Transparent package pricing (A/B/C)
- Site survey scheduling within 48 hours
- Written scope of work that customers can share with landlords and property owners
- Fast response and clear next steps for decision-makers
Instead of complex custom proposals, the business provides standardised packages supported by a site survey to ensure correct coverage and feasibility.
Go-to-market channels
AiraSafe CCTV (Pty) Ltd plans a multi-channel lead strategy to reduce reliance on a single source.
WhatsApp lead capture
WhatsApp is used for:
- lead capture with short videos showing installation quality and app walkthroughs
- quick Q&A for decision-makers
- scheduling site surveys
This channel suits South African buyer behaviour where WhatsApp remains a common communication tool.
Website and Johannesburg targeting
The company uses a simple website with:
- package pages for Package A, Package B, and Package C
- Johannesburg service-area targeting
- clear calls to action to request a survey or monitoring consultation
Google Business Profile and local search ads
AiraSafe CCTV (Pty) Ltd optimises:
- Google Business Profile for local credibility signals
- local search ads focusing on terms such as “CCTV installation Johannesburg” and “CCTV monitoring South Africa”
This channel helps capture high-intent buyers actively searching for CCTV providers.
Referral partnerships
The company builds referral partnerships with:
- small property letting agents
- estate maintenance contractors
- warehouse managers
Referrals are treated as a structured channel. AiraSafe CCTV (Pty) Ltd provides partners with:
- a simple referral script
- package brochures
- assurance of same-week quoting and consistent handover documentation
Direct sales visits
Where appropriate, the sales team conducts direct sales visits to:
- shopfronts
- small industrial parks
These visits follow a brief security need measurement and then progress to same-week quotes when feasible.
Marketing message: outcomes and trust
The brand’s marketing message focuses on:
- evidence capture
- real-time alerts
- deterrence through professional installation
- optional monitoring response processes
This message differentiates AiraSafe CCTV (Pty) Ltd from “device-only installers” by emphasising reliable outcomes and the monitoring pathway.
Sales enablement and materials
AiraSafe CCTV (Pty) Ltd will deploy consistent customer-facing materials:
- Package A/B/C one-page summaries with what’s included
- Monitoring Starter/Pro subscription sheets with escalation expectations
- Installation QA checklist summary (simplified for customers)
- Client handover template showing how remote viewing works
Consistency improves conversion rates because buyers can compare options quickly.
Customer onboarding and retention approach
Monitoring conversions and renewals require strong onboarding.
Monitoring conversion process
Within the first month after installation:
- clients are presented with Starter or Pro monitoring options
- monitoring liaison explains the subscription model
- clients select based on camera count and response preference
Retention and renewal logic
AiraSafe CCTV (Pty) Ltd improves retention by:
- reducing system downtime via maintenance troubleshooting discipline
- ensuring remote access remains functional
- maintaining clear incident communication during monitoring
Even though the business model is designed to scale financially, operational retention is what makes the monitoring revenue engine sustainable.
Sales and marketing KPIs
The company tracks KPIs linked to the model’s revenue growth.
- Lead-to-survey conversion rate
- Survey-to-install conversion rate
- Monitoring conversion rate (Starter/Pro) among new installs
- Churn or cancellation rate for monitoring subscriptions
- Average installation package mix to ensure stable install revenue
- Support ticket volume and resolution time
These metrics link operational execution to financial projections.
Budget alignment to the financial model
The financial model includes marketing and sales operating expense of:
- Year 1 marketing and sales: R120,000
- rising over time with operating scaling to support continued lead generation.
This plan aligns marketing intensity with controlled growth so the business maintains positive cash flow.
Operations Plan
Operating model: people, process, and quality
AiraSafe CCTV (Pty) Ltd’s operations are designed to deliver consistent installations and reliable monitoring onboarding. The operational blueprint is supported by:
- a structured installation process with survey, installation, QA checks, and documented handover
- technical capability for remote access troubleshooting and firmware updates
- procurement and administration that protect stock and documentation accuracy
- monitoring liaison processes for escalation and client onboarding
Key operational workflows
Workflow 1: Lead-to-Installation delivery
- Lead captured via WhatsApp/website/ads/referrals
- Qualified lead triggers site survey scheduling (within 48 hours)
- Scope documented with package selection and coverage plan
- Install scheduled; equipment prepared and installed
- QA checks performed; remote access tested
- Handover completed with documented walkthrough
- Monitoring subscription presented (if applicable)
This workflow ensures new installs are achieved efficiently and reduces follow-up burden.
Workflow 2: Monitoring onboarding and response management
- Client selects Starter or Pro monitoring based on camera count and response needs
- Monitoring liaison collects contact details and escalation pathway agreements
- Monitoring configuration is validated against system setup
- Scheduled response monitoring or 24/7 mode activation occurs as selected
- Incident alerts are escalated with consistent procedures
- Logs are maintained for accountability and improvement
A clear escalation workflow reduces customer frustration and churn.
Workflow 3: Maintenance and troubleshooting
The company expects early-life issues such as:
- network connectivity glitches
- firmware or device reset needs
- cabling connector issues
Operational discipline includes:
- fast troubleshooting
- firmware updates performed by experienced IT systems technician and field technician
- documentation retained for future service
Supply chain and procurement approach
AiraSafe CCTV (Pty) Ltd’s procurement is coordinated by Naledi Tshabalala, operations and procurement coordinator with 6 years of experience in supplier lead times, stock accuracy, and warranty replacements.
Procurement practices include:
- maintaining sufficient demo units and initial install stock
- tracking parts by package requirement (A/B/C camera and storage components)
- ensuring warranty replacement capability for key hardware components
- using consistent brands/units to reduce integration variance (within the standardised packages model)
This keeps installation schedules predictable and protects margins.
Technology and system stack
The company’s technical capabilities include NVR/VMS integration and remote access troubleshooting. The monitoring subscription model relies on stable remote viewing and configuration, which is handled by the IT systems technician and field technician team.
The company also uses tools and software for:
- remote viewing licenses
- cloud storage and monitoring support
- CRM and tracking of leads and customer onboarding
Facilities and resource requirements
AiraSafe CCTV (Pty) Ltd operates from a Johannesburg base with:
- a small workshop for equipment staging and part checks
- administrative operations and monitoring coordination support
- vehicle resources for field visits
This structure supports controlled operating costs and efficient scheduling.
Quality assurance and compliance
Quality assurance is embedded into installation delivery. Standard checks include:
- mounting safety
- signal testing and configuration verification
- remote access testing
- documentation accuracy for monitoring onboarding
Compliance is supported by administration and compliance support by Zanele Gumede, who manages documentation, invoicing accuracy, and policy tracking for insured equipment.
Insurance cover for public liability and equipment is included in operating costs, supporting risk management.
Service capacity and scaling plan
The operational scaling aligns with revenue growth in the financial model:
- Year 1: build stable installation and monitoring base
- Year 2 and onwards: expand capacity through increased delivery throughput and technical support
Even without adding staff immediately, operational process discipline and standardised packages allow manageable growth. The financial model shows rising salaries over years, reflecting scaling of operating team support.
Management & Organization (team names from the AI Answers)
Leadership structure
AiraSafe CCTV (Pty) Ltd is organised with clear responsibilities across commercial control, technical delivery, procurement and operations coordination, monitoring liaison, customer success, marketing, and field troubleshooting.
Founder / CEO / Financial lead
Akira Njoroge – Chartered accountant with 12 years of retail finance experience. He leads commercial planning, pricing discipline, cash flow controls, and vendor contract management. His role includes:
- setting pricing and package delivery targets
- monitoring cost discipline and profitability
- investor-ready reporting and strategic oversight
Team roles (as deployed in the operations plan)
Technical and installation team
-
Bongani Sithole – IT systems technician with 8 years’ experience in network configuration, NVR/VMS integrations, and remote access troubleshooting.
- Responsible for remote access reliability, system integrations, and technical support escalation.
-
Tumelo Khumalo – security installation supervisor with 7 years’ field experience in structured cabling, camera mounting safety standards, and site surveys for line-of-sight.
- Responsible for installation quality assurance, safety checks, and survey-led planning.
-
Lerato Ndlovu – field technician with 6 years’ experience in troubleshooting, firmware updates, and onsite maintenance.
- Performs installation tasks and supports maintenance and updates.
Operations and administration
-
Naledi Tshabalala – operations and procurement coordinator with 6 years’ experience managing supplier lead times, stock accuracy, and warranty replacements.
- Manages parts availability, stock staging, and warranty replacement logistics.
-
Zanele Gumede – administration and compliance support with 5 years’ experience in documentation, invoicing accuracy, and policy tracking for insured equipment.
- Ensures documentation correctness, compliance support, and accurate invoicing.
Customer success and monitoring liaison
- Thandi Mokoena – customer success and monitoring liaison with 5 years’ experience in incident call handling, escalation workflows, and client onboarding.
- Owns monitoring onboarding, escalation processes, and ongoing customer communication.
Marketing and partnerships
- Palesa Zulu – marketing and partnerships lead with 4 years’ experience running local lead-generation, WhatsApp funnels, and trade referrals with property agents.
- Manages the marketing engine, partner outreach, and lead funnel tracking.
Org chart (conceptual)
AiraSafe CCTV (Pty) Ltd’s management structure can be summarised as:
- Akira Njoroge (Commercial & Finance Lead)
- Bongani Sithole (IT Systems Technician)
- Tumelo Khumalo (Installation Supervisor)
- Lerato Ndlovu (Field Technician)
- Naledi Tshabalala (Procurement & Operations Coordinator)
- Thandi Mokoena (Monitoring Liaison & Customer Success)
- Palesa Zulu (Marketing & Partnerships)
- Zanele Gumede (Administration & Compliance Support)
Management cadence and decision-making
To align execution with the financial model:
- weekly operational review: installations, scheduling constraints, parts readiness, and early technical issues
- weekly monitoring review: subscription onboarding status, incident response feedback, and churn signals
- monthly management meeting: P&L review, cash flow health, marketing channel performance, and pipeline quality
This cadence ensures the business scales with controlled operating costs while protecting installation quality and monitoring retention.
Human capital strategy
As the business grows, the company prioritises:
- retaining technical talent to protect installation and remote access reliability
- protecting procurement and documentation accuracy
- strengthening customer onboarding processes for monitoring
The financial model reflects operating cost scaling through payroll growth over five years, indicating that organisational scaling is planned alongside revenue growth.
Financial Plan (P&L, cash flow, break-even — from the financial model)
Financial strategy overview
AiraSafe CCTV (Pty) Ltd’s financial plan is built on recurring revenue from monitoring subscriptions to stabilise cash flow while installation packages create scalable top-line growth. The financial model assumes Gross Margin 100.0% as modelled, with operating expenses (salaries, rent and utilities, marketing and sales, insurance, administration, and other operating costs) driving EBITDA and net income outcomes.
The model also assumes:
- COGS: R0 in all years (as modelled)
- a one-time capex outflow in Year 1 of -R230,000
- and a financing cash flow from debt and equity that supports initial working capital.
Break-even analysis
Year 1 Fixed Costs (OpEx + Depn + Interest): R1,759,500
Year 1 Gross Margin: 100.0%
Break-Even Revenue (annual): R1,759,500
Break-Even Timing: Month 1 (within Year 1)
This implies that as soon as installation and monitoring revenue begins accruing, the business can cover fixed costs within Year 1.
Projected Profit and Loss (5 years)
| Category | Year 1 | Year 2 | Year 3 | Year 4 | Year 5 |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Sales | R2,880,000 | R5,040,000 | R5,557,940 | R6,129,106 | R6,758,969 |
| Direct Cost of Sales | R0 | R0 | R0 | R0 | R0 |
| Other Production Expenses | R0 | R0 | R0 | R0 | R0 |
| Total Cost of Sales | R0 | R0 | R0 | R0 | R0 |
| Gross Margin | R2,880,000 | R5,040,000 | R5,557,940 | R6,129,106 | R6,758,969 |
| Gross Margin % | 100.0% | 100.0% | 100.0% | 100.0% | 100.0% |
| Payroll | R1,020,000 | R1,101,600 | R1,189,728 | R1,284,906 | R1,387,699 |
| Sales & Marketing | R120,000 | R129,600 | R139,968 | R151,165 | R163,259 |
| Depreciation | R46,000 | R46,000 | R46,000 | R46,000 | R46,000 |
| Leased Equipment | R0 | R0 | R0 | R0 | R0 |
| Utilities | R222,000 | R239,760 | R258,941 | R279,656 | R302,029 |
| Insurance | R42,000 | R45,360 | R48,989 | R52,908 | R57,141 |
| Rent | R0 | R0 | R0 | R0 | R0 |
| Payroll Taxes | R0 | R0 | R0 | R0 | R0 |
| Other Expenses | R236,000 | R245,560 | R282,894 | R309,409 | R286, |
| Total Operating Expenses | R1,686,000 | R1,820,880 | R1,966,550 | R2,123,874 | R2,293,784 |
| Profit Before Interest & Taxes (EBIT) | R1,148,000 | R3,173,120 | R3,545,389 | R3,959,232 | R4,419,184 |
| EBITDA | R1,194,000 | R3,219,120 | R3,591,389 | R4,005,232 | R4,465,184 |
| Interest Expense | R27,500 | R22,000 | R16,500 | R11,000 | R5,500 |
| Taxes Incurred | R302,535 | R850,802 | R952,800 | R1,066,023 | R1,191,695 |
| Net Profit | R817,965 | R2,300,318 | R2,576,089 | R2,882,209 | R3,221,989 |
| Net Profit / Sales % | 28.4% | 45.6% | 46.3% | 47.0% | 47.7% |
Model note for internal alignment: The above P&L breakdown reflects the model’s Total OpEx and derived earnings (EBIT, EBITDA, net income). The authoritative totals used elsewhere in the plan are the model’s Revenue, EBITDA, and Net Income.
Projected Cash Flow (5 years)
The model provides cash flow totals through operating cash flow, capex, and financing cash flow.
| Category | Year 1 | Year 2 | Year 3 | Year 4 | Year 5 |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Cash from Operations | R719,965 | R2,238,318 | R2,596,192 | R2,899,651 | R3,236,496 |
| Cash Sales | R2,880,000 | R5,040,000 | R5,557,940 | R6,129,106 | R6,758,969 |
| Cash from Receivables | R0 | R0 | R0 | R0 | R0 |
| Subtotal Cash from Operations | R719,965 | R2,238,318 | R2,596,192 | R2,899,651 | R3,236,496 |
| Additional Cash Received | R356,000 | -R44,000 | -R44,000 | -R44,000 | -R44,000 |
| Sales Tax / VAT Received | R0 | R0 | R0 | R0 | R0 |
| New Current Borrowing | R0 | R0 | R0 | R0 | R0 |
| New Long-term Liabilities | R0 | R0 | R0 | R0 | R0 |
| New Investment Received | R180,000 | R0 | R0 | R0 | R0 |
| Subtotal Additional Cash Received | R356,000 | -R44,000 | -R44,000 | -R44,000 | -R44,000 |
| Total Cash Inflow | R1,075,965 | R2,194,318 | R2,552,192 | R2,855,651 | R3,192,496 |
| Expenditures from Operations | R1,686,000 | R1,820,880 | R1,966,550 | R2,123,874 | R2,293,784 |
| Cash Spending | R1,686,000 | R1,820,880 | R1,966,550 | R2,123,874 | R2,293,784 |
| Bill Payments | R0 | R0 | R0 | R0 | R0 |
| Subtotal Expenditures from Operations | R1,686,000 | R1,820,880 | R1,966,550 | R2,123,874 | R2,293,784 |
| Additional Cash Spent | R0 | R0 | R0 | R0 | R0 |
| Sales Tax / VAT Paid Out | R0 | R0 | R0 | R0 | R0 |
| Purchase of Long-term Assets | -R230,000 | R0 | R0 | R0 | R0 |
| Dividends | R0 | R0 | R0 | R0 | R0 |
| Subtotal Additional Cash Spent | -R230,000 | R0 | R0 | R0 | R0 |
| Total Cash Outflow | R1,456,000 | R1,820,880 | R1,966,550 | R2,123,874 | R2,293,784 |
| Net Cash Flow | R845,965 | R2,194,318 | R2,552,192 | R2,855,651 | R3,192,496 |
| Ending Cash Balance (Cumulative) | R845,965 | R3,040,283 | R5,592,475 | R8,448,126 | R11,640,622 |
Projected Balance Sheet (5 years)
The model block provided does not include explicit year-by-year balance sheet line items beyond funding and cash totals. However, the company’s balance sheet structure is aligned to the required format; the model’s cash trajectory supports the cash asset component.
| Category | Year 1 | Year 2 | Year 3 | Year 4 | Year 5 |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Assets | |||||
| Cash | R845,965 | R3,040,283 | R5,592,475 | R8,448,126 | R11,640,622 |
| Accounts Receivable | R0 | R0 | R0 | R0 | R0 |
| Inventory | R0 | R0 | R0 | R0 | R0 |
| Other Current Assets | R0 | R0 | R0 | R0 | R0 |
| Total Current Assets | R845,965 | R3,040,283 | R5,592,475 | R8,448,126 | R11,640,622 |
| Property, Plant & Equipment | R230,000 | R230,000 | R230,000 | R230,000 | R230,000 |
| Total Long-term Assets | R230,000 | R230,000 | R230,000 | R230,000 | R230,000 |
| Total Assets | R1,075,965 | R3,270,283 | R5,822,475 | R8,678,126 | R11,870,622 |
| Liabilities and Equity | |||||
| Accounts Payable | R0 | R0 | R0 | R0 | R0 |
| Current Borrowing | R0 | R0 | R0 | R0 | R0 |
| Other Current Liabilities | R0 | R0 | R0 | R0 | R0 |
| Total Current Liabilities | R0 | R0 | R0 | R0 | R0 |
| Long-term Liabilities | R220,000 | R176,000 | R132,000 | R88,000 | R44,000 |
| Total Liabilities | R220,000 | R176,000 | R132,000 | R88,000 | R44,000 |
| Owner’s Equity | R855,965 | R3,094,283 | R5,690,475 | R8,590,126 | R11,826,622 |
| Total Liabilities & Equity | R1,075,965 | R3,270,283 | R5,822,475 | R8,678,126 | R11,870,622 |
Year-by-year summary table (as required)
Reproduced directly from the authoritative model:
| Year 1 | Year 2 | Year 3 | Year 4 | Year 5 | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Revenue | R2,880,000 | R5,040,000 | R5,557,940 | R6,129,106 | R6,758,969 |
| Gross Profit | R2,880,000 | R5,040,000 | R5,557,940 | R6,129,106 | R6,758,969 |
| EBITDA | R1,194,000 | R3,219,120 | R3,591,389 | R4,005,232 | R4,465,184 |
| Net Income | R817,965 | R2,300,318 | R2,576,089 | R2,882,209 | R3,221,989 |
| Closing Cash | R845,965 | R3,040,283 | R5,592,475 | R8,448,126 | R11,640,622 |
Interpretation: sustainability and scaling
- Revenue growth accelerates in Year 2 with 75.0% increase, reflecting ramp-up from installs and the accumulation of monitoring subscriptions.
- EBITDA margin strengthens and remains strong as the monitoring engine scales (consistent with model assumptions).
- Closing cash grows to R11,640,622 by Year 5, indicating the operating model generates sufficient cash to fund operations without requiring additional capital beyond Year 1.
Funding Request (amount, use of funds — from the model)
Total funding request
AiraSafe CCTV (Pty) Ltd requests total funding of R400,000.
Funding structure:
- Equity capital: R180,000
- Debt principal: R220,000
- Total funding: R400,000
Debt terms in the model:
- Debt: 12.5% over 5 years
Use of funds (aligned to model)
The funding will be used for the following items and working capital reserve:
| Use of Funds Category | Amount (R) |
|---|---|
| Equipment demo units and initial install stock (cameras, NVRs, cabling, mounts) | R120,000 |
| Tools and workshop gear (drills, crimpers, ladders, test monitors) | R35,000 |
| Vehicle deposit and initial branding | R25,000 |
| Registration, compliance, and first-year licences | R22,000 |
| Initial marketing launch (website build, Google Business, local print) | R28,000 |
| Working capital reserve (first 6 months operating run-rate per Q8) | R170,000 |
| Total funding | R400,000 |
Funding rationale
The funding supports both:
- Launch readiness (equipment stock, tools, branding, compliance, initial marketing)
- Early survivability through working capital that covers operating run-rate in the first six months
This approach protects the business from cash interruptions while monitoring subscriptions ramp up and recurring revenue becomes established.
Expected timing and impact on growth
The business model shows break-even within Month 1 (within Year 1) and maintains positive operating cash flow throughout the projection horizon. The requested funding is designed to protect cash flow health until revenue stabilises and monitoring subscriptions scale.
Appendix / Supporting Information
Appendix A: Service package quick reference
Installation Packages
- Package A: Basic Home
- 4 cameras + 1TB storage + remote app
- Install price: R10,500
- Package B: Business Standard
- 8 cameras + 2TB storage + remote viewing
- Install price: R19,900
- Package C: Warehouse/Shop Pro
- 16 cameras + 4TB storage + ruggedised cabling
- Install price: R39,900
Monitoring Subscriptions
- Starter Monitoring (up to 8 cameras)
- R1,100 per site/month
- Pro Monitoring (up to 16 cameras)
- R1,950 per site/month
Appendix B: Key operational milestones
- Lead capture via WhatsApp, website, Google Business Profile, and referrals
- Site survey scheduling within 48 hours
- Written scope shared with clients for decision-making
- Standardised installation, QA checks, and remote access validation
- Monitoring onboarding for Starter or Pro subscriptions
- Incident response through defined escalation workflows
Appendix C: Financial model constants used
- Currency: ZAR (R)
- Model period: 5 years
- Total funding: R400,000
- Equity: R180,000
- Debt principal: R220,000
- Capex outflow: -R230,000 in Year 1
- Break-even revenue (annual): R1,759,500
- Break-even timing: Month 1 (within Year 1)
- Year 1 Revenue: R2,880,000
- Year 1 Net Income: R817,965
- Closing cash by Year 5: R11,640,622
Appendix D: Competitive positioning summary
AiraSafe CCTV (Pty) Ltd differentiates versus:
- ADT South Africa by focusing on value, installation transparency, and smaller-site responsiveness
- local CBD installers by delivering standardised QA checks and consistent handover documentation
- equipment-reselling monitoring providers by offering transparent monitoring response pathways and site-specific system design
Appendix E: Management team list (names as used throughout)
- Akira Njoroge – Chartered accountant (Commercial & Finance Lead)
- Bongani Sithole – IT systems technician
- Tumelo Khumalo – security installation supervisor
- Naledi Tshabalala – operations and procurement coordinator
- Thandi Mokoena – customer success and monitoring liaison
- Palesa Zulu – marketing and partnerships lead
- Lerato Ndlovu – field technician
- Zanele Gumede – administration and compliance support