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The career path that has led me to becoming a food entrepreneur has been anything but typical. It is a bit of a running joke between my friends and I that I was always doing something new every time they saw me, and I am sure my parents have prayed many times that I would settle down and stick to a job. But I never did.
Funnily enough, I have always had entrepreneurial blood in my veins. I remember one of my first creative ventures in the early ’90s was walking around the neighbourhood, knocking on doors, asking people what they wanted to buy, finding it somewhere and then selling it to them at enough of a profit to get myself something good from the tuck shop at school.
Fast forward almost 20 years and I had finished uni and gotten myself a part-time job working in public relations for an electronics start up. Whilst the job I was working in was a lot of fun, what really got me inspired was watching how a start-up worked and being part of its growth. I remember seeing the owners celebrating their wins and running the company the way they wanted to and I thought to myself, “I want this for me”. So I began working on what I thought would be my side hustle. I had always loved baking, and out of my group of girlfriends I am always the one who is nominated to bring a dessert to a BBQ.
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