UA-8884037-5 Natasha NaidooAs CEO of Azisa Consulting, Natasha Naidoo leads a busy life. Asked about her journey, she is candid. "I got this far through hard work, long hours and being prepared to make sacrifices in my personal lifeAs CEO of Azisa Consulting, Natasha Naidoo leads a busy life. Asked about her journey, she is candid. "I got this far through hard work, long hours and being prepared to make sacrifices in my personal life. When you want something badly enough, and you're prepared to fight for it, you'll find a way to make it happen." Things haven't come easily to Natasha. Brought up by a single mother, she says she knows what it's like to go without. "My mother is an inspiration. She's always had to fight to keep her head above water, and it's her strength that made me who I am today. We grew up knowing what it's like to not to have lights and water, and sometimes even food." As a schoolgirl, she dreamed of being a lawyer, but there was no chance of studying after school. While her brother left school early to help support the family, she was lucky enough to complete matric. Natasha was only recently able to study safety management and construction. "Life doesn't always work out exactly as you'd hoped but that doesn't mean you can't achieve great things - if you're prepared to put in the effort." When Natasha finished school there wasn't money to learn to drive. "I need to renew my driver's licence for the very first time this month," she smiles. "I only got my first licence five years ago!" It's harder for women Today, as CEO of her own business, things have changed considerably. Competing in diverse business sectors, her focus is on construction safety consulting, safety management and telecommunications. She's responsible for marketing and business development, and spends much of her time with clients. She loves the operational side of the business and can be found on site two or three days a week, often presenting training courses on construction safety. "The construction industry is tough, and I believe it's harder for women in this industry. We constantly must prove our expertise, and that can be disheartening. But for me, that makes me try harder. I'm a firm believer in the importance of customer service, and I think that's helped greatly." Natasha's head office is based in Durban but, after only five years in business, the company has extended operations to Johannesburg. "I planned to expand into other regions, but I had to put that on hold for a while." Natasha's brother was murdered in 2017, and for almost two years her priority was the fight to get justice for him. "The two men who killed my brother were convicted in August, and now we have closure. Hopefully I can put this behind me and focus on my business and begin the expansion project." Natasha's business has grown dramatically from her beginnings. Her move into construction safety and telecommunications has borne fruit, but making the leap from salaried employee to entrepreneur is always a risk. A year of planning "I was clear that I wanted my own business but I knew that there were no guarantees that I'd generate an income immediately. It took a year of planning and I was terrified. We have two children, and I wouldn't jeopardise their security, so I saved almost my entire salary for several months before resigning. This gave me a cushion and covered essential expenses until I could draw a salary from my business." Asked about her support structures, Natasha says her husband is the foundation she stands on. Highlighting the truth that most successful business people achieve success despite failures along the way, she notes that if you want success, you can't give up when things get tough. "Whenever I fail, he picks me up and dusts me off, so I can start again." Natasha is very grateful to her mother. Admitting that she has no real work-life balance, working long hours most days, she is fortunate to have her mother's help daily. "My mother is up and active at 6am, and I rely on her for a home-cooked dinner most nights too. I couldn't do what I do without her support and I'm lucky to have someone who loves my children, helps me take care of them, and is a big part of their lives." An understanding partner But the long hours aren't relentless, and Natasha does enjoy precious time with her family. "I do steal time to fetch the children from school and spend a few hours with them. I can't do it every day, but I love that time." She also points out that it helps to have an understanding partner. "It takes a great man to support his wife unconditionally, and not every husband is willing to bath kids and feed them. If you don't have a good support system, it must be exhausting trying to do it on your own." Asked what advice she'd give her younger self, she responds instantly: "Fight harder, be stronger, be better." When it's suggested that she's a bit hard on herself she's quick to explain. "I don't ever want to have to go without again, so I fight harder. I want to be heard." She admits to one legacy of the hard times. "I tend to over-buy. It might be a bit paranoid, but I want to make sure I have the things I need. But I'm proof that you can change your life. You may need to make some sacrifices, but if you're prepared to fight for what you want, nothing is impossible." If you're prepared to fight for what you want, nothing is impossible
top of page
Bar Chart

Cheryl Govender

CHERYL GOVENDER is the founder and owner of The Cake House in Pietermaritzburg. She is a qualified chef and professional cake artist. The Cake House has become a leading provider of designer cakes including engineered life-size cakes. Cheryl's exceptional cakes, each a masterpiece, have been featured in magazines and on television, and The Cake House is recognised as a leader in new age sugarcraft.

Cheryl is inspired by successful bakeries and cake artists. She explains, "This is a tough industry and requires not only talent, but a business mind, people skills, market insight, tenacity, and continuous learning and growth."

One of her biggest inspirations is Buddy Valastro, an American baker who is the star of the reality television series 'Cake Boss'.

Be clear about what must be achieved

Cheryl believes she got to where she is now and reached her goals by being clear about what she needed to achieve and why she needed to achieve them. She says her career started when she was fourteen when she was handed down decorating tools that her sister no longer needed. "Although I was a real tomboy, beating the boys at their own games in the streets, I did girly stuff when I went home, like playing with cake decorating tools and my dolls," she laughed.

Cheryl learned about sugar art by reading books from the municipal library and often left the kitchen in a mess after experimenting. Her Consumer Studies teacher recognised Cheryl's talent; arranged for her to attend a cake decorating course, and gave her a toolset, which she treasures to this day.
This teacher, now a retired school principal, adopted Cheryl as a daughter, helped her to believe in herself, and became her mentor to this day.
Cheryl won a Consumer Studies Inter School Award in matric due to her passion for cake decorating, but at that time she considered it a hobby, not a career.

After a year at college, Cheryl married and became a mother. She joined the corporate world but kept on making decorated cakes as a hobby to supplement her income. When her son was two years old, Cheryl entered and won the Pietermaritzburg Royal Show sugarcraft competition. This led to her teaching sugarcraft on a part-time basis at the now FET College in Northdale, something she continued passionately for 25 years. This Cheryl said, was fulfilling: "empowering women has always been close to my heart".

Focus on one thing and do it well

Cheryl gained wide experience in the corporate world, including ten years in shipping and international travel, before she started her own export business. This business crashed during the worldwide financial crisis of 2008 and she "fell back on her hands", starting a food catering business that also provided cakes. Cheryl made a few designer cakes assuming there was little market for these due to the high prices, but word of her quality and expertise spread and orders increased.

A traumatic divorce, the demands of being involved in catering, wedding décor, training and making cakes at the same time, made her realise that she needed to streamline her activities. In 2012 she decided to focus on one thing only and do it well and opened The Cake House. Cheryl, a single mom had herself, her mother's assistance, two children, and a house. As she had lost her vehicle, Cheryl went everywhere in running shoes while carrying cake ingredients and other items in a backpack.

Nothing was handed to her; she had no money and could not get a bank loan. Cheryl understood the risks involved but her faith and trust in God helped her. She managed to buy all her industrial baking equipment from a helpful appliance store on a three-month cash basis. Her business remains debt-free to this day.

Business skills are unrelated to gender

In Cheryl's view, women and men need the same business approach, as the skills required for a successful business are unrelated to gender. "Tenacity, hard work, honesty, patience and endurance are equally required from men and women." She does, however, concede that women face more challenges. She has had to face abuse, being a mother, and a divorce.

Achieving a work-life balance boils down to discipline for Cheryl. "It is necessary to make time for your family and yourself, and also to rest, but not working can be scary for a business owner with much to do," she says. "I've had to learn to set boundaries, say no, and cut myself off from work when it's time to relax and unwind." Gardening, time with her family and puppies, and doing things outside of the business help create a balance.

Brand ambassador

Cheryl is happy with what she has accomplished thus far and readily give others credit. Without her mother, she could not have set up The Cake House. Without the help of her husband Alan, her family, and staff members, she would not have been able to grow the business. She feels honoured having recently being appointed a brand ambassador with royal status, for Rolkem Colours, one of the world's largest food colourant providers.

While Cheryl is satisfied with the place she has reached, she is not comfortable about remaining there. Cheryl dreams of making the province proud of The Cake House as a tourism attraction. With a growing support structure in place, she is prepared to take risks within her means and take the business to the next level.

bottom of page