Twiga Foods CEO Peter Njonjo takes 6-month sabbatical
Peter Njonjo, the CEO of e-commerce and food
distribution company Twiga Foods has announced he is taking a six-month sabbatical.
Through an announcement published in a local
daily, the co-founder of the business-to-business (B2B) marketplace
said after “an intense 2023”, he had decided
to take a break from his CEO role to focus on personal matters.
“I
joined Twiga as CEO in 2019 because I had a dream of increasing food security
in Africa, starting with my home country of Kenya... I am proud of what we have
built at Twiga and the impact that Twiga has had through job creation, the
reduction of agricultural waste, and ultimately the reduction of food costs for
our people. I have decided to take a break after an intense 2023 from my
day-to-day role as CEO to focus on personal matters,” Njonjo said.
Twiga said its Chief Operating Officer Laurent Gouault and Chief Financial Officer Zuber Momoniat will be leading the operational and
commercial and finance & legal functions of the company respectively during
this period.
Peter
Njonjo will remain on the board of directors, the company added.
“The
board supports Peter's decision to take a sabbatical and has full confidence in
the capabilities of Twiga's recently bolstered senior leadership team. On
behalf of the Board of Directors, I thank Peter for his demonstrated commitment
in ensuring the completion of Twiga's recent funding round, despite the
personal sacrifices required. As the board, we are delighted with Twiga's
strong market position, and we look forward to working together with Peter on
the business's further growth and development going forward,” the company’s
chairman, Hein Pretorius said.
The ten-year-old start-up founded in 2013 by Njonjo
and Grant Brooke
secured an undisclosed amount of funding in late November from its existing investors
Creadev, Juven, TLcom Capital Partners, and DOB Equity.
This
came just weeks after the company faced a $261,878 (Ksh.40 million) debt
collection lawsuit from cloud services vendor Incentro Africa.
The
company has been in a tussle with Incentro and the cloud services provider previously
sought to liquidate the e-commerce venture, to which Njonjo obtained temporary
orders blocking the liquidation plan, disputing the debt.
“The
statutory demand is made in bad faith and with ulterior motives,” Twiga said in
response to Incentro’s petition, arguing that the lawsuit was motivated by an
ulterior motive.
Twiga
said Incentro was filing in retaliation after it reached out directly to Google
Ireland, the ultimate provider of the cloud services, to protest the billing.
However,
Twiga later confirmed it was in talks with Incentro to settle the debt.
Following
last month’s funding, Njonjo said in a now-deleted post on Medium “We have sent
over 100 letters informing suppliers that we have now finalised our
restructuring and refinancing and they will finally have their long outstanding
dues paid.”
Twiga sources farm produce directly from
farmers and delivers it to urban retailers. The company laid off a third
of its staff in August
after
another round at the close of last year, which saw the company send home 21 per
cent of its workforce.
The
restructuring, the company said, was part of its plan to slash costs
by up to 40 per cent and achieve what they called a lean, agile and
cost-effective organization.
Njonjo said they were investing more in technology to
make sure the move wouldn’t affect its strategy.
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