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A young entrepreneur who wants others to follow her lead



ON the breezy shores of Coco Beach you will find several booths selling sugarcane juice to thirsty beach goers. There on the sandy, eastern coastline of Oysterbay, Pili Maguzo started her business selling sugarcane juice in January 2014.

The Oysterbay Farmers Market is a monthly market held the last Saturday of every month at the Oysterbay Shopping Centre. The Market specialises in fresh, local and organic produce and products. It is managed by the Italian NGO CEFA and sponsored by United Nations World Food Programme.

“The Farmers Market also helped me get more sales and – more importantly – to find new outlets to set up shop,” said Pili, owner and manager of Pili’s Sugarcane Juice.

“Customers started trying my juice and asking me if I was available for parties and other events.” After only two Farmers Markets, Pili had made enough money to buy another juice machine and double the number of events at which she could work.

Pili had to hire more staff to keep up with the increased event and party work. She now has six workers and a fruit juicing machine so that, in addition to sugarcane juice, customers can have juice made with carrot, pineapple, mango, passion fruit or whatever else is in season.

Pili’s Tips for Young Entrepreneurs:

1) It is fine to start small.

2) To grow your business balance your budget and reinvest profits in something your business needs.

3) It can be hard at the beginning, but that is OK. You can endure. Offer the best quality in whatever you do and you will get regular customers.

4) I want to wake up women to get out there and start their own businesses. Women are just as capable as men of going into business. In the Dar es Salaam market, good ideas are often imitated with new enterprisers often becoming your next-door competition.

According to Pili, you need to be able to adapt and change or else you risk growth stagnating or even regressing. To stay ahead, Pili goes to Tandale Market two days before an event to get the details on the incoming sugarcane and fruit shipments. “I want fresh and top quality everything so I do my own research,” Pili said. One event organiser who works with her appreciates these qualities in Pili.

“It’s important to be able to count on people,” said Tim Johnston, the General Manager of Wonder Workshop. Pili is one of the few regular food and beverage vendors invited to sell at Wonder shop’s handicraft market. “When I book Pili for one of my events, I’m not just booking her to give her space, she’s bringing something to the event that helps draw customers,” Tim added.

Her strong business sense started in an unexpected place. When she was 13 years old Pili became a member of the Lumumba Theatre Group where she learned to dance various styles.

With the group, Pili was able to practice and learn. After picking up the necessary skills, she began dancing solo. Being a dancer has afforded Pili the opportunity to travel to Kenya, Mozambique, Poland, and Denmark for contests and exhibitions. It was through dance that Pili began learning how to network and to run a business.

“As a dancer you have to know how to promote yourself to get asked to do events and to keep the audience happy,” said Pili. “It’s similar to business in that you want people to be able to depend on you and to want you to keep coming back.”

These days Pili is still busy with her dancing as well as with her businesses. Seldom idle, she is only satisfied when she is out there, working and growing.

In May of this year, with profits from Pili’s Sugarcane Juice, she opened a new hair salon in Kinondoni named Pili’s Salon. That’s not all. Pili’s aspiration is to keep reinvesting and growing her businesses.


Next I would like to find a place where we could set up shop and sell juice every day. After that I want to buy my own farm to plant sugarcane to cut down costs,” said Pili.

Ugandan socialite Zari is undeniably hot and Diamond Platnumz cannot be blamed for going kookoo for her, Besides her looks, she is also ambitious and rich. Born on 23rd of September 1980, Zari grew up in Jinja and after high school she moved Kampala where she performed karaoke in hang-outs. She later moved to London and acquired a diploma in cosmetology. She now lives in South Africa where she runs cosmetics shop while pursuing a career in music. She shared some of her never before seen photos from back in the day and she was still hot. Check her out

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