Says Mashele: “We need to identify business models that are owned by black entrepreneurs, that have the potential to be franchised, and that can be geographically located in both the township and urban areas… We cannot just complain and say that all franchises are white-owned. We have to do something about it. It’s like the black industrialists that many people have spoken about. We have to create them.”

There is already a drive towards the creation of franchisors, between Sefa and Shoprite Checkers’ franchise division ‘OK Franchise’, where the latter company mentors and provides training and access to its pricing structures for stock, while Sefa provides funding of up to R5 million.

Lastly, transformation is already beginning to happen within the Fasa structures – the Fasa council and some of its sub-committees – wherein there are have a representatives from the Department of Small Businesses (DSB) driving transformation within the sector.

“Because it’s important for businesses in Fasa and for government, in the form of the DSB, to work together,” says Mashele.