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At the heart of entrepreneurship is the responsibility to create value. Not just for yourself, but for employees, customers, and the community.
In this episode of Before You Buy or Sell a Business, Jared Johnson sits down with Munashe Makava, an NYU MBA graduate who began his career at Deloitte and Goldman Sachs before stepping into entrepreneurship through acquisition.
Born and raised in Zimbabwe, Munashe shares how his parents instilled an entrepreneurial mindset early on, why the birth of his first child was the push to finally buy a business, and what he learned transitioning from Wall Street to owning two concrete companies in the U.S.
Munashe breaks down how he evaluated opportunities, why geography mattered more than industry, and what he wishes he had done differently during negotiation. He also talks about team building, mentorship, and why the hardest part of being an entrepreneur is people—not the numbers.
Main Takeaways:
Episode Highlights:
Connect with Munashe:
https://www.linkedin.com/in/munashe-makava-fcca-2728372a/
More from Jared:
If you have questions for Jared, visit: https://jaredwjohnson.com
https://www.linkedin.com/in/jaredwjohnson/
DISCLAIMER:
The views and opinions expressed in this program are those of the guests and host. They do not necessarily reflect the views or positions of my employer.
Keywords:
entrepreneurship through acquisition, ETA, buying a construction business, concrete pumping business, asset sale vs stock sale, SBA acquisition financing, seller notes, raising capital for acquisitions, building an entrepreneurial team, immigrant entrepreneurship, mentorship networks, employee ownership mindset, small business transition, growth after acquisition, business acquisition strategy
By Jared W. Johnson4.6
1414 ratings
At the heart of entrepreneurship is the responsibility to create value. Not just for yourself, but for employees, customers, and the community.
In this episode of Before You Buy or Sell a Business, Jared Johnson sits down with Munashe Makava, an NYU MBA graduate who began his career at Deloitte and Goldman Sachs before stepping into entrepreneurship through acquisition.
Born and raised in Zimbabwe, Munashe shares how his parents instilled an entrepreneurial mindset early on, why the birth of his first child was the push to finally buy a business, and what he learned transitioning from Wall Street to owning two concrete companies in the U.S.
Munashe breaks down how he evaluated opportunities, why geography mattered more than industry, and what he wishes he had done differently during negotiation. He also talks about team building, mentorship, and why the hardest part of being an entrepreneur is people—not the numbers.
Main Takeaways:
Episode Highlights:
Connect with Munashe:
https://www.linkedin.com/in/munashe-makava-fcca-2728372a/
More from Jared:
If you have questions for Jared, visit: https://jaredwjohnson.com
https://www.linkedin.com/in/jaredwjohnson/
DISCLAIMER:
The views and opinions expressed in this program are those of the guests and host. They do not necessarily reflect the views or positions of my employer.
Keywords:
entrepreneurship through acquisition, ETA, buying a construction business, concrete pumping business, asset sale vs stock sale, SBA acquisition financing, seller notes, raising capital for acquisitions, building an entrepreneurial team, immigrant entrepreneurship, mentorship networks, employee ownership mindset, small business transition, growth after acquisition, business acquisition strategy

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