Harare PR & Media Solutions is a Zimbabwe-based public relations agency located in Harare, Zimbabwe, operating as a private company limited by shares (Pty) Ltd. The agency helps Zimbabwean SMEs, corporates, NGOs, and public-facing professionals build trust, earn consistent media coverage, and protect reputations through structured PR retainers and high-impact one-off campaigns.
This plan outlines the agency’s services, go-to-market strategy, operational model, management structure, and five-year financial projections in ZWL. It also candidly addresses profitability constraints shown in the financial model while demonstrating a credible path to scaling delivery capacity, improving cash discipline, and strengthening resilience through diversified PR engagements.
Executive Summary
Harare PR & Media Solutions will provide professional public relations services to client organizations that need reliable media visibility, coherent stakeholder messaging, and reputation protection. Many organisations in Zimbabwe—especially SMEs, growing corporates, NGOs, educational institutions, and healthcare providers—have strong programs and products but struggle to consistently translate those into media narratives that are timely, accurate, and aligned to business objectives. The resulting problem is not only low coverage, but also inconsistent messaging across channels and missed opportunities during key moments such as launches, partnerships, crises, and community engagements.
Our solution is to deliver PR through a structured monthly retainer model plus once-off campaign engagements. Retainers ensure predictable work-in-progress, systematic media pitching, and regular reporting that helps clients measure progress against communication goals. The agency’s retainer architecture—PR Starter, PR Growth, and crisis/launch engagements—allows clients to select the level of media outreach and content cadence that matches their resources and urgency.
The agency will operate in Harare initially while delivering content and campaign support across Zimbabwe. The company’s leadership and delivery team are anchored in media relations and communications coordination competencies:
- Chinedu Lim, Owner & Managing Director
- Blake Morgan, Media Relations Lead
- Casey Brooks, Client Services & Campaign Coordinator
- Reese Johansson, Digital Content & Copy Editor
The financial model projects Year 1 revenue of $30,000,000, with net losses in every year shown, including net income of -$8,207,500 in Year 1 and an improving loss profile through Year 5 where net income is -$5,980,918. Even though the model indicates the business is structurally unprofitable across the five-year projection, the plan treats this not as a reason to exit, but as an investment thesis: the business requires time to scale predictable retainer volumes, tighten cost structure, and build operational leverage. The agency’s gross margin target remains 70.0% throughout the projection, while the largest driver of ongoing losses is the combined impact of overhead and operating cost levels relative to revenue growth and pacing.
This plan requests total funding of $6,000,000, split into $3,500,000 equity and $2,500,000 debt (7.5% over 5 years). The funding will be used for office setup, equipment, branding and launch materials, compliance, and a minimum early runway reserve to support sustained delivery during the scaling period. Despite negative projected net income, the plan also provides a cash-flow lens that shows operational cash performance, investment cash outflows (notably capex), financing cash inflows, and ending cash balances through Year 5.
The overarching objective is to reach and sustain a commercially viable retainer base over time, improve the cost/revenue mix, and gradually reduce the gap between operating costs and gross profit creation. To support this, the business plan emphasizes: (1) disciplined onboarding and retention processes, (2) proactive industry-based pitching systems, (3) measurable reporting that encourages renewals, and (4) capacity planning so staff and contractors expand only when retainer demand is validated.
Company Description (business name, location, legal structure, ownership)
Business overview
Business name: Harare PR & Media Solutions
Location: Harare, Zimbabwe
Legal structure: Private company limited by shares (Pty) Ltd
Currency for all figures: ZWL
Harare PR & Media Solutions is designed to operate as a specialist PR partner rather than a general marketing add-on. The agency’s competitive advantage is its ability to convert client goals into press narratives that align with newsroom expectations, media relevance, and stakeholder context. The agency’s retainers create routine communication outputs—drafting, messaging refinement, pitching, follow-ups, and structured reporting—while crisis/launch engagements concentrate effort in short windows when reputational stakes are highest.
Ownership and governance
Ownership is anchored by the Founder and Managing Director, Chinedu Lim. The operational governance approach is practical for a small specialist agency: clear accountability for client acquisition and quality control (owner), structured media liaison execution (media lead), timeline and client documentation discipline (campaign coordinator), and high-quality copy and message accuracy (digital content and copy editor).
The company is registered as a Pty (Ltd) to support contracting, invoicing, and credibility with corporate clients, NGOs, and institutional partners in Zimbabwe. This legal structure also supports professional tax compliance processes and enables stable relationships with media and vendor partners.
Business mission and strategic intent
Mission: Help Zimbabwean clients build trust and strengthen reputations by turning communication goals into credible media coverage and disciplined stakeholder messaging.
Strategic intent:
- Establish Harare-based leadership in media relations and communications planning.
- Build a repeatable retainer delivery system with measurable outputs.
- Use one-off crisis/launch work to deepen case studies and reinforce renewal confidence.
- Gradually improve operating efficiency through standardized workflows and scalable production capacity.
Client focus and service coverage
The agency’s initial geographic focus is Zimbabwe’s key business hubs, with operations centered in Harare and delivery supporting campaigns and clients across Zimbabwe. Clients include:
- SMEs needing structured visibility and consistent outreach
- Corporates requiring disciplined stakeholder communication
- NGOs needing credibility for community, grant, and public trust narratives
- Public-facing professionals (including community and industry leaders) requiring reputation protection
The agency’s service model is structured to address the specific needs of these customer segments: inconsistent messaging, weak media pitching cadence, limited media contact networks, and inadequate reporting that makes it hard for clients to justify continuing investment.
Key constraints acknowledged in the financial model
The financial model indicates persistent negative net income across the five-year projection:
- Year 1 Net Income: -$8,207,500
- Year 2 Net Income: -$10,430,800
- Year 3 Net Income: -$8,634,964
- Year 4 Net Income: -$8,714,461
- Year 5 Net Income: -$5,980,918
These results reflect the model’s cost base and operating expenses relative to revenue, particularly overhead and operating costs. The plan therefore treats funding as critical to maintaining runway while building scale, and it focuses strongly on operational execution and cost discipline. The strategy includes:
- improving billing discipline and reducing cash delays,
- strengthening conversion of clinic and referrals into retainers,
- keeping COGS aligned with service delivery and maintaining the 70.0% gross margin profile reflected in the model.
Products / Services
Harare PR & Media Solutions offers PR services delivered through monthly retainers and once-off campaign engagements, structured around clear outputs, media outreach, and reporting. The agency’s service design emphasizes predictable deliverables to reduce client uncertainty and allow for repeatable performance improvements.
Core service lines
1) PR Starter (Monthly Retainer)
The PR Starter retainer is intended for clients who need consistent media engagement without overly heavy workload complexity. Deliverables include:
- Press release drafting/editing and narrative preparation
- Media pitching and follow-up coordination
- Media liaison support (including up to the agreed number of outreach contacts per month within contract scope)
- Monthly results reporting: a coverage summary and recommended next actions
Purpose: Establish regular communication cadence and improve the client’s media presence while building internal systems for messaging consistency.
2) PR Growth (Monthly Retainer)
PR Growth is designed for clients who require deeper outreach and more frequent communication output. Deliverables typically expand to:
- Increased press release drafts/editing volume
- Enhanced pitching capacity and broader outreach follow-ups
- Media monitoring summary and monthly strategy call to refine narrative direction and next steps
Purpose: Move the client from baseline visibility to sustained, campaign-like media presence.
3) PR Crisis / Launch (One-off Engagement)
Crisis/launch work focuses on urgent messaging and fast media responsiveness. This engagement includes:
- Rapid messaging development and holding statements
- A media brief supporting spokesperson guidance and key messages
- Coordinated outreach across a defined two-week window (within contract scope)
- Post-campaign reconciliation report: what happened, what was said, and what improvements are needed
Purpose: Protect reputations and secure coherent narratives under time pressure, preventing misinformation and reducing confusion among stakeholders.
Service delivery approach (from client intake to reporting)
A critical differentiator for the agency is a repeatable delivery pipeline that converts client inputs into media-ready narratives. The process is designed to be transparent and timeline-driven.
Step 1: Discovery and messaging audit
The agency begins with structured onboarding:
- Client briefing session: objectives, stakeholders, key messages, risk context
- Review of existing brand tone and prior communications
- Clarification of key themes and “do not say” boundaries
- Identification of media angles likely to resonate with Zimbabwe-based outlets
Step 2: Narrative development and press release production
The PR team develops press narratives that are:
- accurate and compliant with the client’s preferred wording,
- aligned with current events and relevant angles,
- prepared with a newsroom-friendly structure (headline angle, lead, supporting facts, quotes, and context).
Copy quality is ensured by the Reese Johansson role as Digital Content & Copy Editor, supporting accuracy and tone consistency.
Step 3: Media pitching system and follow-ups
The Blake Morgan role as Media Relations Lead manages:
- pitching alignment to target media preferences,
- follow-ups and interview preparation,
- tracking outcomes and updating the client on progress.
Rather than relying on ad-hoc outreach, the agency maintains an internal pitching workflow with lists, follow-up cadence, and response capture.
Step 4: Monitoring and reporting that builds renewal confidence
Reporting is structured to answer the client’s real questions:
- What coverage occurred?
- What messages were repeated or distorted?
- What gaps remain in the narrative?
- What should we do next month to improve outcomes?
This reporting is crucial in persuading clients to renew retainers instead of treating PR as a one-time expense.
Additional value services (modular support)
Depending on client needs, Harare PR & Media Solutions can expand scope with:
- Spokesperson script preparation and interview rehearsal support
- Stakeholder communication templates (internal and external)
- Partnership and event communications support
- Campaign creative briefing support in collaboration with partner agencies
These modular services help keep delivery flexible while staying aligned to the core retainer and campaign offerings.
Packaging and positioning
The service line positioning is built around clarity:
- Retainers: steady outputs and measurable communication momentum
- Crisis/launch: high-urgency narrative control and media response
This reduces decision friction for clients who struggle to justify PR because they cannot see consistent deliverables. By offering structured packages, the agency reduces uncertainty and increases the probability of retention.
Deliverables discipline
Harare PR & Media Solutions uses a delivery discipline designed around:
- weekly internal production schedules for drafts and review,
- planned pitching windows to maximize relevance,
- documented approvals from clients to minimize rework,
- post-delivery reconciliation for crisis/launch engagements.
This discipline is essential to keep capacity manageable and to ensure service quality does not degrade as client numbers rise.
Market Analysis (target market, competition, market size)
Zimbabwe PR market context
Public relations demand in Zimbabwe is closely tied to brand growth, stakeholder trust, and reputational risk. For businesses and institutions, PR is not merely about “getting on the news”; it is about:
- building credibility and legitimacy with communities,
- communicating institutional priorities and outcomes,
- protecting reputation during disputes, operational failures, or controversies,
- supporting fundraising and donor confidence for NGOs,
- improving customer trust and business sustainability for SMEs and growing corporates.
Media ecosystems in Zimbabwe are diverse, and the credibility gatekeeping function of journalism means that well-structured narratives significantly increase the probability of pickup. However, many smaller organizations lack media relations discipline, staff time, and structured messaging frameworks.
Target market definition
Harare PR & Media Solutions targets decision-makers aged 28–55 (CEOs, MDs, and communications leads) in Harare and Bulawayo. The agency targets:
- Zimbabwean SMEs with active growth strategies
- Corporates needing stakeholder visibility and institutional communication
- NGOs seeking credible coverage and public trust
- Public-facing professionals requiring reputation protection
The initial focus sectors include:
- real estate and retail businesses,
- banking/fintech,
- education,
- health providers,
- development NGOs,
- major events and community-facing initiatives.
The rationale is that these sectors have frequent communication needs—launches, partnerships, impact reporting, service updates, and risk exposure.
Addressable market and practical reach
The founder’s estimate indicates approximately 12,000 potential organisations/brands in Harare and Bulawayo that could benefit from PR services. The agency’s initial go-to-market prioritizes the first 1,000 organisations that are most likely to both (1) have decision-makers with budgets and (2) need consistent media outreach rather than occasional content alone.
A practical market view is essential. Even if total brand counts are large, only a subset can sustain monthly retainers. Therefore, the agency’s sales strategy is optimized for conversion of early target organisations through proof-driven outreach, clinics, and referral channels.
Customer needs and pain points
Clients typically face five major pain points:
- Inconsistent messaging across press releases, social posts, and stakeholder statements
- Low visibility due to weak pitching cadence and narrative misalignment to media angles
- Reactive communication (only responding when media interest spikes)
- Limited internal time for press narrative drafting and media follow-ups
- Unclear measurement—clients cannot justify PR because they cannot interpret outcomes
The retainer model addresses these needs by:
- ensuring regular press narrative creation,
- providing continuous pitching and follow-up,
- supplying monthly results reporting and next actions.
Crisis/launch services address the time-bound nature of reputational threats.
Competitive landscape
The main competitors in Zimbabwe include:
- Local newsroom-linked PR outfits that may act quickly but can deliver inconsistent reporting over time.
- Small freelance PR clusters that may offer flexibility but struggle with continuity and scale.
- General advertising agencies that treat PR as an add-on rather than a dedicated discipline.
Competitive differentiation
Harare PR & Media Solutions differentiates through:
- Structured monthly retainers with clear deliverables
- Tight response timelines and disciplined follow-ups
- Transparent, measurable reporting that builds renewal trust
- Media pitching systems and reputation messaging specialization, reducing waste clients experience when PR is treated as content-only production.
Differentiation in practice: why delivery matters
In PR, delivery quality often matters more than volume. A press release that is technically well-written but misaligned with the media angle is less likely to be picked up. Similarly, pitching without follow-ups creates false “sent but not seen” outcomes. Our process focuses on:
- angle selection and narrative packaging,
- repeatable follow-up cadence,
- consistent tracking and reconciliation.
Market entry barriers and risks
Barriers
- Building credibility with both clients and media contacts takes time.
- Establishing proof requires visible wins, even if early successes are limited.
- Client budgets may be conservative and require evidence of ROI.
Risks and countermeasures
- Risk: Clients see PR as optional or replaceable with digital content.
Countermeasure: Position PR retainers as media visibility and reputation protection, supported by reporting and reconciliation. - Risk: Capacity constraints limit service quality as client numbers grow.
Countermeasure: Standardize drafting and approval workflows; expand capacity when retainer contracts justify it. - Risk: Cash delays reduce ability to hire or sustain tools and media monitoring.
Countermeasure: Strengthen onboarding payment terms, manage cash flow tightly, and use funding runway strategically.
Market size summary in business terms
While the market estimate supports a large potential brand pool, the business is designed to capture a small, financially sustainable portion:
- Initial sales aim focuses on building the first retainer base and converting them into renewals.
- Revenue in the model is projected to be $30,000,000 in Year 1, with growth dynamics across later years based on retainer scaling and additional campaign work.
Even if demand exists broadly, the operational plan assumes gradual scale and emphasizes execution discipline.
Marketing & Sales Plan
The marketing and sales plan for Harare PR & Media Solutions is built on practical Zimbabwean decision-making patterns: clients buy PR when they can see credible messaging outputs, trust the agency’s execution, and understand what will be delivered each month. The strategy uses proof-driven marketing, relationship-led outreach, and structured conversion assets.
Sales objectives aligned to financial model
The financial model shows a stable Year 1 revenue of $30,000,000, with later growth:
- Year 1 Revenue: $30,000,000
- Year 2 Revenue: $30,000,000 (0.0% growth)
- Year 3 Revenue: $36,000,000 (20.0% growth)
- Year 4 Revenue: $39,600,000 (10.0% growth)
- Year 5 Revenue: $47,520,000 (20.0% growth)
This implies the marketing and sales plan prioritizes:
- Year 1: build retainer base sufficient to reach Year 1 revenue level in the model
- Year 2: sustain the base while protecting renewal rates and refining delivery
- Year 3 onward: expand retainer volume and/or average contract value while maintaining gross margin at 70.0%
Positioning and messaging
Harare PR & Media Solutions positions PR as:
- Structured communication outcomes (media narratives and outreach) rather than generic branding output.
- Reputation protection through crisis/launch readiness.
- Measurement through reporting rather than vague “awareness” claims.
The brand promise is: clients get predictable PR deliverables, a media pitching system, and transparent results summaries.
Target audience and buyer journey
Decision makers
- CEO/MD
- Communications lead
- Community and stakeholder-facing leaders
Buyer journey stages
- Awareness: learns about Harare PR & Media Solutions via LinkedIn, referral, or PR clinic
- Credibility: reviews media kit and portfolio-style proof outputs
- Consideration: discusses objectives, messaging requirements, and timelines
- Conversion: signs retainer or paid campaign agreement
- Renewal: monthly reporting builds confidence for continued retainer value
Marketing channels
1) LinkedIn outreach
LinkedIn outreach will target CEOs, founders, and communications leads in Harare and Bulawayo. The approach:
- send short value-based messages referencing relevant industry communications needs,
- follow up with a tailored example narrative (draft angle or press-style outline),
- invite decision-makers to a PR clinic or discovery call.
2) Website and industry landing pages
The website will host:
- a downloadable media kit,
- industry landing pages describing retainer use cases (e.g., retail expansion, healthcare service updates, NGO impact storytelling),
- case-study style summaries where permissions exist.
This channel is designed to support credibility for corporate procurement processes and NGO accountability reviews.
3) Partner referrals
Referrals come from:
- brand designers,
- event organisers,
- corporate training providers.
Partner messaging focuses on “PR outcomes” to reduce mismatch where partners offer only content creation.
4) WhatsApp and email follow-ups
After meetings, the agency sends:
- a recap of objectives,
- a proposed package and deliverables timeline,
- a question list to support faster client onboarding.
This reduces time-to-activation and supports smoother delivery.
5) Targeted paid social ads
Paid social ads will emphasize:
- retainer package awareness,
- credibility messages about reporting and media pitching systems,
- clinic sign-ups.
Because the financial model assumes sustained operating expenses, the ads are optimized for conversion and not for broad engagement metrics.
6) Quarterly PR clinics
The agency runs free PR clinics that convert into retainers by demonstrating:
- how to structure press narratives,
- how to plan media outreach cadence,
- how reporting builds ongoing trust.
Clinics also create a predictable lead funnel. Leads that show urgent communication needs are fast-tracked to paid engagements when appropriate.
Sales process and pipeline management
A disciplined sales process supports delivery planning and revenue predictability.
Step-by-step sales cycle
- Lead identification (LinkedIn, referrals, clinics)
- First contact (value message + CTA)
- Discovery call (objectives and messaging)
- Proposal with scoped deliverables and timeline
- Contracting and onboarding
- First deliverables activation within agreed schedule
- Monthly reporting and renewal negotiation
Pipeline metrics
To protect cash flow and delivery capacity, the agency will track:
- lead-to-meeting conversion rate,
- meeting-to-proposal conversion rate,
- proposal-to-close conversion rate,
- average time-to-first-deliverable,
- retention rate for retainers.
Even though the financial model does not explicitly break down marketing KPIs, the operational logic is essential: stable revenue requires stable retainer acquisition and renewal.
Pricing strategy fit
The service packaging supports different client budget levels. The retainer offers predictable monthly deliverables; the crisis/launch offers urgency-driven pricing. Pricing discipline also protects margins and ensures capacity planning aligns with revenue.
In practice, the retainer model reduces client friction because clients can justify monthly budgets for communications discipline rather than one-time spend.
Sales risk management
Risk: seasonality or procurement delays
Zimbabwean procurement cycles can delay contract signing. To mitigate:
- prioritize leads with active media events or urgent communications needs,
- use partial onboarding processes where allowed,
- offer clinic-to-retainer fast tracks.
Risk: competition undercutting
Competitors may offer lower-cost content production. The agency counter-messages:
- PR is media outcome-driven, not only content creation,
- reporting and pitching discipline reduce waste.
Risk: churn
If clients feel reporting is superficial, churn can rise. The counter is:
- deepen monthly reporting with next actions,
- include reconciliation summaries where possible,
- keep deliverables aligned to agreed scope.
Operations Plan
The operations plan defines how Harare PR & Media Solutions delivers PR outcomes consistently and efficiently. It covers service delivery workflows, staffing and capacity planning, vendor management, quality assurance, compliance, and risk controls—tailored to a Zimbabwe PR agency environment.
Operational principles
- Deliverables-first execution: every retainer includes predictable outputs (press drafts, pitching, reporting).
- Media pitching discipline: outreach is systematic, tracked, and followed up.
- Approval timeline control: clients receive drafts early enough for meaningful review cycles.
- Reputation protection mindset: accuracy, risk sensitivity, and messaging compliance are non-negotiable.
Delivery workflow and timeline
A retainer is executed through monthly sprints that align with the following workflow:
Week 1: Inputs and narrative planning
- client check-in (as needed),
- confirm key topics and story angles,
- finalize press narrative themes and required facts.
Week 2: Drafting and internal review
- Draft press releases and messaging materials,
- Copy-edit and align to brand tone.
Week 3: Client approval and media pitching
- client reviews and approvals,
- prepare pitch angles for specific outlets,
- begin outreach and follow-ups.
Week 4: Monitoring and reporting
- capture coverage outcomes,
- produce monthly results report including next actions.
This workflow maintains pace while keeping quality intact.
Crisis / Launch operational mode
Crisis/launch engagements operate with a compressed timeline:
- Rapid messaging discovery and fact verification
- Holding statement and media brief preparation
- Spokesperson script support
- Intensive outreach and follow-ups across the outreach window
- Post-campaign reconciliation report
During crisis mode, decision speed is crucial. The agency prioritizes direct access to client decision-makers to prevent approval delays.
Capacity planning and staffing model
The agency’s capacity must scale with retainer volume. The plan assumes:
- Chinedu Lim handles overall acquisition and quality control.
- Blake Morgan ensures pitching execution and interview preparation.
- Casey Brooks manages schedule, deliverable trackers, approvals, and reporting pipeline.
- Reese Johansson ensures copy quality and messaging accuracy.
As client volumes grow, operations will expand capacity using:
- additional part-time support for monitoring and design assistance if needed,
- freelance copy support in surge periods,
- increased coordination tempo for pitching schedules.
The operations model protects response times to media enquiries and reduces risk of missed follow-ups.
Quality assurance mechanisms
PR output quality is ensured through:
-
Editorial checklist for press releases
- headline angle clarity
- factual accuracy
- tone alignment
- quotes readiness
- structure compliant with media reading habits
-
Pitch readiness checklist
- outlet relevance to story angle
- subject line and introduction clarity
- attachment readiness and contact details correctness
- follow-up schedule alignment
-
Reporting verification
- coverage summary accuracy
- message repetition check
- next action recommendations tied to actual outcomes
Technology and tools
The agency relies on standard PR operating tools:
- media monitoring subscriptions,
- internal document management,
- email/WhatsApp communications,
- templates for press releases and reporting.
Tools are essential to maintain monitoring accuracy and report integrity, supporting the 70.0% gross margin model by reducing rework.
Compliance and ethical practices
PR in Zimbabwe requires sensitivity to:
- libel and misrepresentation risks,
- accuracy in crisis communications,
- respectful handling of community stakeholders and partner organisations.
The agency implements:
- fact verification steps prior to publication,
- clear approvals required from the client for sensitive claims,
- crisis messaging approval checkpoints.
Operational metrics
Even without explicit KPI tables in the financial model, the plan uses operational metrics to manage delivery:
- number of press releases produced per month per retainer tier,
- pitching count and follow-up completion rate,
- time from draft completion to client approval,
- media pickup rate (by outlet type),
- average time to reconciliation reporting after campaign end.
These metrics support both service quality and retention outcomes.
Alignment with financial model cost structure
The financial model includes distinct cost categories that operations must support:
- COGS at 30.0% of revenue (70.0% gross margin)
- payroll costs increasing by year
- operating overhead such as rent/utilities, marketing/sales, insurance, professional fees, administration, and other operating costs
Operations must therefore maintain cost discipline while scaling deliverables. The operational plan’s standard workflows and quality checks support this alignment by reducing rework and enabling predictable production pacing.
Management & Organization (team names from the AI Answers)
Harare PR & Media Solutions is organized to ensure high-quality PR production, consistent client service, and robust media relations execution. The organizational design focuses on clear role ownership, accountability for deliverables, and fast decision-making supported by the Founder’s leadership.
Team structure
1) Chinedu Lim — Owner & Managing Director
Primary responsibilities
- client acquisition strategy and relationship management,
- overall PR strategy and narrative direction,
- quality control of messaging and final outputs,
- oversight of financial discipline and runway management based on cash needs.
As the Owner & Managing Director, Chinedu Lim ensures that the agency does not drift into content-only work and stays committed to media outcome goals, including reputation protection during sensitive periods.
2) Blake Morgan — Media Relations Lead
Primary responsibilities
- manage media pitching and follow-ups,
- develop angle alignment for specific outlets,
- oversee interview preparation logistics and spokesperson readiness,
- maintain and update media liaison workflows.
Blake Morgan’s newsroom experience is crucial for translating client messages into credible angles that journalists are likely to adopt.
3) Casey Brooks — Client Services & Campaign Coordinator
Primary responsibilities
- schedule deliverables, coordinate approvals, and manage deadlines,
- maintain client documentation flow and onboarding checklists,
- ensure reporting is produced on time and includes agreed next steps,
- coordinate campaign timelines and reconciliation report preparation.
Casey Brooks ensures operational reliability, which is fundamental to retention. Clients renew when deliverables happen on schedule and reporting is consistent.
4) Reese Johansson — Digital Content & Copy Editor
Primary responsibilities
- draft and edit press releases and spokesperson scripts,
- ensure brand tone accuracy and messaging clarity,
- support digital copy requirements for campaign narratives where relevant.
Reese Johansson’s editing function protects accuracy and reduces reputational risk.
Organizational principles
Accountability and approvals
The agency’s delivery system uses a clear approval pipeline:
- drafts are prepared by the production/editorial functions,
- reviewed internally for accuracy and tone,
- submitted to client decision-makers for approval.
This reduces rework and prevents contradictions between client-approved messaging and media narrative.
Communication and reporting cadence
Client communications are planned:
- discovery inputs captured at onboarding,
- monthly reporting delivered at the end of each cycle,
- strategy calls embedded into the retainer tier expectations.
Organizational readiness for scaling
The five-year financial model includes revenue growth after Year 2. As those revenues rise, operations must scale carefully to maintain gross margin and prevent delivery quality degradation. The management approach includes:
- incremental capacity expansion,
- reliance on standardized workflows,
- potential use of part-time support for monitoring, design assistance, or surge copyediting during crisis/launch work.
Management oversight and controls
To address the persistent negative net income in the financial model, the leadership will also implement financial controls:
- tight monitoring of cash inflows relative to cash outflows,
- monthly review of outstanding receivables and payables timing,
- strict adherence to budgets in marketing and operating spend categories,
- funding runway governance using the funding schedule embedded in the model.
The company’s structure is designed to balance service credibility with operational accountability.
Financial Plan (P&L, cash flow, break-even — from the financial model)
The financial plan follows the authoritative five-year financial model for Harare PR & Media Solutions, with all currency in ZWL ($). The model includes projected Profit and Loss, Projected Cash Flow, Projected Balance Sheet, and Break-even Analysis. It also shows that the business remains loss-making throughout the five-year projection, highlighting the need for disciplined execution and cash management.
Key financial assumptions reflected in the model
-
Revenue
- Year 1 revenue: $30,000,000
- Year 2 revenue: $30,000,000
- Year 3 revenue: $36,000,000
- Year 4 revenue: $39,600,000
- Year 5 revenue: $47,520,000
-
Gross margin
- Gross margin remains 70.0% each year (COGS equals 30.0% of revenue).
-
Operating costs and financing
- Salaries and other operating expenses scale across years as revenue scales.
- Interest expense declines slightly over time based on financing structure.
-
Capex
- Capex outflow occurs in Year 1 as -$3,800,000, with no further capex in Years 2–5.
Projected Profit and Loss (P&L)
Projected Profit and Loss Summary (Year 1–Year 5)
| Category | Year 1 | Year 2 | Year 3 | Year 4 | Year 5 |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Sales | $30,000,000 | $30,000,000 | $36,000,000 | $39,600,000 | $47,520,000 |
| Direct Cost of Sales (Total Cost of Sales) | $9,000,000 | $9,000,000 | $10,800,000 | $11,880,000 | $14,256,000 |
| Other Production Expenses | $0 | $0 | $0 | $0 | $0 |
| Total Cost of Sales | $9,000,000 | $9,000,000 | $10,800,000 | $11,880,000 | $14,256,000 |
| Gross Margin | $21,000,000 | $21,000,000 | $25,200,000 | $27,720,000 | $33,264,000 |
| Gross Margin % | 70.0% | 70.0% | 70.0% | 70.0% | 70.0% |
| Payroll | $14,400,000 | $15,552,000 | $16,796,160 | $18,139,853 | $19,591,041 |
| Sales & Marketing | $2,400,000 | $2,592,000 | $2,799,360 | $3,023,309 | $3,265,174 |
| Depreciation | $760,000 | $760,000 | $760,000 | $760,000 | $760,000 |
| Leased Equipment | $0 | $0 | $0 | $0 | $0 |
| Utilities | $0 | $0 | $0 | $0 | $0 |
| Insurance | $720,000 | $777,600 | $839,808 | $906,993 | $979,552 |
| Rent | $0 | $0 | $0 | $0 | $0 |
| Payroll Taxes | $0 | $0 | $0 | $0 | $0 |
| Other Expenses | $0 | $0 | $0 | $0 | $0 |
| Total Operating Expenses | $28,260,000 | $30,520,800 | $32,962,464 | $35,599,461 | $38,447,418 |
| Profit Before Interest & Taxes (EBIT) | -$8,020,000 | -$10,280,800 | -$8,522,464 | -$8,639,461 | -$5,943,418 |
| EBITDA | -$7,260,000 | -$9,520,800 | -$7,762,464 | -$7,879,461 | -$5,183,418 |
| Interest Expense | $187,500 | $150,000 | $112,500 | $75,000 | $37,500 |
| Taxes Incurred | $0 | $0 | $0 | $0 | $0 |
| Net Profit | -$8,207,500 | -$10,430,800 | -$8,634,964 | -$8,714,461 | -$5,980,918 |
| Net Profit / Sales % | -27.4% | -34.8% | -24.0% | -22.0% | -12.6% |
Interpretation:
- Gross profit remains strong at 70.0%, reflecting the service model structure.
- Losses occur due to operating expense levels relative to revenue, resulting in negative EBITDA and negative net profit in every year.
Break-even Analysis
Break-even Analysis (from the model)
| Item | Value |
|---|---|
| Y1 Fixed Costs (OpEx + Depn + Interest) | $29,207,500 |
| Y1 Gross Margin | 70.0% |
| Break-Even Revenue (annual) | $41,725,000 |
| Break-Even Timing | not reached within 5-year projection — business is structurally unprofitable |
Interpretation:
- The modeled Year 1 revenue of $30,000,000 is below the break-even threshold of $41,725,000, and revenue growth in later years remains insufficient to reach break-even within the five-year horizon.
Projected Cash Flow (from the financial model)
Projected Cash Flow Table (Year 1–Year 5)
| 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 | -$8,947,500 | -$9,670,800 | -$8,174,964 | -$8,134,461 | -$5,616,918 |
| 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 | -$8,947,500 | -$9,670,800 | -$8,174,964 | -$8,134,461 | -$5,616,918 |
| 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 | -$3,800,000 | $0 | $0 | $0 | $0 |
| Dividends | $0 | $0 | $0 | $0 | $0 |
| Subtotal Additional Cash Spent | -$3,800,000 | $0 | $0 | $0 | $0 |
| Total Cash Outflow | -$12,747,500 | -$9,670,800 | -$8,174,964 | -$8,134,461 | -$5,616,918 |
| Net Cash Flow | -$7,247,500 | -$10,170,800 | -$8,674,964 | -$8,634,461 | -$6,116,918 |
| Ending Cash Balance (Cumulative) | -$7,247,500 | -$17,418,300 | -$26,093,264 | -$34,727,725 | -$40,844,643 |
Cash-flow note: The model includes financing cash flows separately in the overall cash flow summary, shown below.
Financing Cash Flow (from the model)
| Category | Year 1 | Year 2 | Year 3 | Year 4 | Year 5 |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Financing CF | $5,500,000 | -$500,000 | -$500,000 | -$500,000 | -$500,000 |
| Net Cash Flow | -$7,247,500 | -$10,170,800 | -$8,674,964 | -$8,634,461 | -$6,116,918 |
| Closing Cash | -$7,247,500 | -$17,418,300 | -$26,093,264 | -$34,727,725 | -$40,844,643 |
Projected Balance Sheet (from the financial model)
The authoritative model block provided contains Cash Flow and P&L, but does not include explicit balance-sheet line items for accounts receivable, inventory, accounts payable, and equity. To remain strictly consistent with the provided model, the balance sheet table is presented with totals implied by the model’s ending cash and structural assumptions; where line item values are not available, placeholders are set to $0 to avoid inventing numbers.
Projected Balance Sheet
| Category | Year 1 | Year 2 | Year 3 | Year 4 | Year 5 |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Assets | |||||
| Cash | -$7,247,500 | -$17,418,300 | -$26,093,264 | -$34,727,725 | -$40,844,643 |
| Accounts Receivable | $0 | $0 | $0 | $0 | $0 |
| Inventory | $0 | $0 | $0 | $0 | $0 |
| Other Current Assets | $0 | $0 | $0 | $0 | $0 |
| Total Current Assets | -$7,247,500 | -$17,418,300 | -$26,093,264 | -$34,727,725 | -$40,844,643 |
| Property, Plant & Equipment | $0 | $0 | $0 | $0 | $0 |
| Total Long-term Assets | $0 | $0 | $0 | $0 | $0 |
| Total Assets | -$7,247,500 | -$17,418,300 | -$26,093,264 | -$34,727,725 | -$40,844,643 |
| Liabilities and Equity | |||||
| Accounts Payable | $0 | $0 | $0 | $0 | $0 |
| Current Borrowing | $0 | $0 | $0 | $0 | $0 |
| Other Current Liabilities | $0 | $0 | $0 | $0 | $0 |
| Total Current Liabilities | $0 | $0 | $0 | $0 | $0 |
| Long-term Liabilities | $0 | $0 | $0 | $0 | $0 |
| Total Liabilities | $0 | $0 | $0 | $0 | $0 |
| Owner’s Equity | $0 | $0 | $0 | $0 | $0 |
| Total Liabilities & Equity | $0 | $0 | $0 | $0 | $0 |
Important financial realism: Because the provided model includes detailed cash flow and P&L but not full balance-sheet itemization, investors should rely on the P&L, cash flow, and funding sections for decision-making rather than treating the balance sheet as fully specified.
Key ratios (from the model)
| Key Ratio | Year 1 | Year 2 | Year 3 | Year 4 | Year 5 |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Gross Margin % | 70.0% | 70.0% | 70.0% | 70.0% | 70.0% |
| EBITDA Margin % | -24.2% | -31.7% | -21.6% | -19.9% | -10.9% |
| Net Margin % | -27.4% | -34.8% | -24.0% | -22.0% | -12.6% |
| DSCR | -10.56 | -14.65 | -12.67 | -13.70 | -9.64 |
Funding Request (amount, use of funds — from the model)
Funding amount and structure
Harare PR & Media Solutions requests total funding of $6,000,000, comprised of:
- Equity capital: $3,500,000
- Debt principal: $2,500,000
The debt is modeled as 7.5% over 5 years.
Use of funds (from the model)
The requested funding supports both initial setup and early runway for sustained PR delivery and scaling.
| Use of Funds Category | Amount |
|---|---|
| Office setup (desks, chairs, branding, filing) | $650,000 |
| Laptops & phones (2 sets) | $1,800,000 |
| Recording/press-event kit (light, mic, camera accessories) | $420,000 |
| Website + basic media kit design | $300,000 |
| Registration, compliance, and initial legal | $260,000 |
| Initial marketing launch (first campaign materials) | $370,000 |
| Minimum early runway reserve | $2,200,000 |
| Working capital / phased operational coverage reserve (to reconcile totals) | $0 |
| Total Funding | $6,000,000 |
Funding rationale
The funding is required because the model shows:
- Year 1 net income of -$8,207,500, meaning operating losses absorb cash while the agency scales retainer revenue.
- Capex in Year 1 is -$3,800,000, increasing upfront cash requirements.
- Financing offsets part of the Year 1 cash needs through Financing CF of $5,500,000 in Year 1, while subsequent years show financing cash outflows of -$500,000 annually.
Given the business will build credibility through consistent PR output and reporting, the early runway reserve ensures the agency can:
- maintain delivery quality,
- sustain media monitoring and compliance obligations,
- continue sales pipeline development without compromising output.
Debt servicing realism
The model’s DSCR ratios are negative in every year:
- Year 1 DSCR: -10.56
- Year 2 DSCR: -14.65
- Year 3 DSCR: -12.67
- Year 4 DSCR: -13.70
- Year 5 DSCR: -9.64
This is a key risk indicator and must be treated as a constraint. To protect lenders and investors, the business will emphasize:
- improved cash collection discipline,
- conservative spending controls aligned to operating categories in the model,
- retainer acquisition prioritization to strengthen operating cash flows,
- early renegotiation of terms where possible if receivable cycles extend.
Appendix / Supporting Information
Appendix A: Company details
- Company name: Harare PR & Media Solutions
- Location: Harare, Zimbabwe
- Legal structure: Private company limited by shares (Pty) Ltd
- Operating currency: ZWL ($)
- Model period: 5 years
- Core team:
- Chinedu Lim — Owner & Managing Director
- Blake Morgan — Media Relations Lead
- Casey Brooks — Client Services & Campaign Coordinator
- Reese Johansson — Digital Content & Copy Editor
Appendix B: Services overview map to outcomes
-
PR Starter retainer
- Press narrative drafting/editing
- Pitching and follow-ups
- Monthly results reporting and next steps
-
PR Growth retainer
- Increased volume and outreach capacity
- Media monitoring summary and monthly strategy call
-
PR Crisis / Launch one-off
- Rapid messaging + holding statements
- Media brief and spokesperson guidance
- Two-week outreach window
- Post-campaign reconciliation report
Appendix C: Financial tables as required by submission
Revenue, Gross Profit, EBITDA, Net Income, Closing Cash (from the model)
| Metric | Year 1 | Year 2 | Year 3 | Year 4 | Year 5 |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Revenue | $30,000,000 | $30,000,000 | $36,000,000 | $39,600,000 | $47,520,000 |
| Gross Profit | $21,000,000 | $21,000,000 | $25,200,000 | $27,720,000 | $33,264,000 |
| EBITDA | -$7,260,000 | -$9,520,800 | -$7,762,464 | -$7,879,461 | -$5,183,418 |
| Net Income | -$8,207,500 | -$10,430,800 | -$8,634,964 | -$8,714,461 | -$5,980,918 |
| Closing Cash | -$7,247,500 | -$17,418,300 | -$26,093,264 | -$34,727,725 | -$40,844,643 |
Appendix D: Key financial headings used consistently in the plan
- Gross margin is fixed at 70.0% for Years 1–5
- COGS is 30.0% of revenue each year
- Capex occurs in Year 1 only: -$3,800,000
- Interest expense declines from $187,500 in Year 1 to $37,500 in Year 5
- Taxes incurred are $0 in all years in the model
Appendix E: Strategic commitments to strengthen investor confidence
While the model forecasts persistent net losses, execution commitments improve the probability of improvement beyond the base projection:
- Retainer retention focus: monthly reporting quality and responsiveness to client approvals.
- Sales conversion discipline: clinic-to-retainer follow-through and referral onboarding speed.
- Cost control: protect payroll efficiency and prevent uncontrolled overhead growth in administration and other operating costs.
- Cash management: tighten receivables collections and align spending to verified cash inflows.