Black, youth-owned bakery thriving at Dube TradePort Mini Factories

Bakers Gallery SA, a black-youth-owned bakery business, has grown significantly in the last eight months, specialising in high-end celebratory cakes is growing as an affordable mass-market cake and pastry offering. Picture: Supplied

Bakers Gallery SA, a black-youth-owned bakery business, has grown significantly in the last eight months, specialising in high-end celebratory cakes is growing as an affordable mass-market cake and pastry offering. Picture: Supplied

Published Jul 28, 2022

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Durban — One of the first tenants to move into the Dube TradePort Mini Factories is a small to medium-sized enterprise that has grown significantly in the last eight months.

Bakers Gallery SA, a black, youth-owned bakery business, was among the first tenants to move into the Dube TradePort Mini Factories.

The business, specialising in high-end celebratory cakes, is growing as an affordable mass-market cake and pastry offering.

Moving into the mass-market cake line was a Covid-19 survival plan when the speciality celebratory cake orders halted, and it worked.

Bakers Gallery SA, a black, youth-owned bakery business, has grown significantly in the last eight months, specialising in high-end celebratory cakes is growing as an affordable mass-market cake and pastry offering. Picture: Supplied

Bakers Gallery SA executive pastry chef and founder Skhumbuzo Maphanga said: “In 2020, we had our first break in the retail sector with a contract to supply cake loaves, cake slices, cake rings, cupcakes, biscuits, tarts, and pastries to a Spar store. Within eight months, we were supplying 10 Durban-based Spar supermarkets, and we needed to expand to bigger, better premises.”

He said Dube TradePort’s Mini Factories were ideal.

“We were looking for security, a constant supply of power, even during load shedding, ease of access, and parking for our clients, and a well-kept environment that provides a good image,” Skhumbuzo said.

Skhumbuzo started Bakers Gallery in 2013 as a side-line hobby, supplying a home industry shop in Morningside to supplement his Durban ICC Pastry Chef’s salary. By 2018, his cake baking had grown to such an extent that he was working around the clock, and he had to make a choice between his full-time job and building a business. The latter won, and Bakers Gallery SA was registered as a business.

Bakers Gallery SA, a black, youth-owned bakery business, has grown significantly in the last eight months, specialising in high-end celebratory cakes is growing as an affordable mass-market cake and pastry offering. Picture: Supplied

Following in his older brother’s footsteps, Siphesihle Maphanga followed in his older brother’s footsteps, and trained as a chef and was drawn into the business. His forte is the intricate decoration and painting of celebratory cakes.

Another partner in the business, Ntobeko Ndlovu, is a qualified educator and a medical scientist who has brought his strategic thinking and business management skills to Bakers Gallery, changing it from a hobby into a business.

“He saw the potential in this line of business and gave up teaching temporarily and jumped in, with an aim of changing the ‘side-line hobby’ into a formal business. He brought in proper processes, bookkeeping and financial management, which were crucial in us raising funding from one of the big five financial institutions,” Skhumbuzo said with an understanding of equity in hindsight. He has also managed to use his skills to attract and bring on board private investors to invest in the business.

For a long time, he served as a company driver when the business was still limping financially.

Bakers Gallery SA, a black-youth-owned bakery business, has grown significantly in the last eight months, specialising in high-end celebratory cakes is growing as an affordable mass-market cake and pastry offering. Picture: Supplied

Ndlovu is also driving the processes towards achieving municipal Certification of Acceptability, which is crucial to building the business. In the longer term, the team’s personal goal is to achieve Hazard Analysis Critical Control Point and GLOBAL GAP compliance.

With a business plan backed by detailed research and documented growth and demand for their products, the trio’s future plans are to supply retail central distribution centres and use online shopping platforms, like Takealot, to market their cookie line.

“The evidence is there. In a space of eight months, we were selling into 10 Spar stores. This tells us that the demand for our product is very high. If we are to meet our goals of supplying our products nationally, we will need to run two to three shifts a day to achieve the volumes. We also anticipate that by also selling cookies in bulk online, we will be well positioned to grow exponentially,” Skhumbuzo said.

Bakers Gallery is also looking to collaborate with caterers supplying cakes, cookies and desserts.

Recently, the company supplied 1 200 desserts for a Midlands wedding. They have also supplied the likes of Durban ICC and Balmoral Hotel with desserts for big functions.

Bakers Gallery SA, a black, youth-owned bakery business, has grown significantly in the last eight months, specialising in high-end celebratory cakes is growing as an affordable mass-market cake and pastry offering. Picture: Supplied

Bakers Gallery has also started short baking courses and plans to open a training facility for people who have a passion for baking and the art of cake making, which they have opened to disadvantaged youth.

“It will also be a great way to teach people how to bake and empower themselves by means of selling,” Skhumbuzo said.

In addition to the three executives, Bakers Gallery employs four people, including three bakers who started as dishwashers and were trained to bake from scratch.

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