Episode 58 - The True Moringa Resilience Story with Kwami Williams
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These are the 3 beliefs that drive Kwamiโs passion. (1) poverty is an injustice, (2) we have a responsibility and a joy to solve this man-made problem, and (3) every problem presents an opportunity for business.
If that doesnโt get you excited to hear about what Kwami has to share, then we donโt know what will.
Listen in to hear how Kwami Williams is discovering entrepreneurial solutions that tackle the challenges faced by the poor and marginalized in our world today, especially on the African continent.
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Episode Transcript
Some listeners have found it helpful to have a transcription of the podcast. Transcription is done by an AI software. While technology is an incredible tool to automate this process, there will be misspellings and typos that might accompany it. Please keep that in mind as you work through it. The FDI movement is a volunteer-led movement, and if youโd like to contribute by editing future transcripts, please email us.
Kwami Williams: So much of my question of life has been a God, can you give me this gift to open this door for my company? You bless my wife and I to let our pregnancy be successful. And these are amazing, good things that a good father wants to give. But I realize that God wasn't enough for me. And this season has got me to a place where God has become enough for me, where adversity has adversely. I can pause and I can just say, God, I love you. I believe and I know that you are good even without this good gift.
Henry Kaestner: Here with my co-host, partners in crime, Rusty and William, greetings, brothers.
Rusty Rueff: Hey, hey, hey, hey. Good to see you guys.
William Norvell: Good to be here.
Henry Kaestner: And today, our travels take us to Accra, Ghana. One of the unique things about our podcasts, of course, is that over the last hundred and twenty one hundred twenty five episodes, maybe we didn't do it for the first 10. But William has asked the same question at the end of every podcast. And this will be a heads up for Kwami. We always ask our guests, what is it that you're hearing from Guy through his word? What most of our listeners don't know, because we actually don't usually ask it after we started recording, is that we also ask each one of our guests what they think is the best global sport and what city in the world plays that sport the best. And so I want to ask our guest from Accra, Ghana. Kwami, please tell us what your answers to both of those would be.
Kwami Williams: Henry, this question is super easy.
It is lacrosse and it definitely plays sport. Baltimore, Maryland, we have hands down all the way from Accra, Ghana.
Henry Kaestner: You heard it here first on the Faith Driven Entrepreneur podcast. What a treat it was for us to be on that call with [...] together. And [...], for those of you who don't know, is maybe a look at it through the lens of like it's a Y Combinator for the very best entrepreneurs. They're coming out of the African continent. And it was so cool to be on this call with these brilliant entrepreneurs from over that continent and find out that Kwami and I had that passion in common. And so for us to get back on this call together, a super special for me. Great to see you again.
Kwami Williams: Great to see you again, Henry.
Henry Kaestner: So thanks for being with us. And we want to hear about your entrepreneurial journey is a great one. Your life starts off in Baltimore. Maybe we'll start there. Give us a little bit of an autobiographical sketch. Who are you? Where do you come from? And then we want to hear all about True Moringa, what Moringa is, what God has taught you about your entrepreneurial journey.
Kwami Williams: Absolutely. And it's a pleasure to get to meet you. Will, and Rusty really excited about this time together, and I'll dive right in. My story starts in Accra, Ghana. As you mentioned, Henry, I was born into a home that loves Jesus, my parents at a very early age.
I was involved in church learning the books of the Bible, all of that. And probably in my formative years as well, I was super excited and passionate about aviation. Anything that got me like I would run outside when planes fly overhead and when butterflies and birds flew. And that curiosity got me really into the spirit of tinkering, more like destroying everyone's toys, trying to figure out how to work. But we're going to call it tinkering for all intents and purposes.
And I just sort of grew up just passionate about engineering ultimately, and was blessed with the opportunity to emigrate to the US when I was in the fourth grade. It's two thousand, my parents believe, gone on April Fools Day two thousand. We landed in JFK Airport. My first meal is a Happy Meal at McDonald's and I'm thinking it's just amazing.
I get to play house not knowing that the future as an immigrant in the US would actually be extremely challenging.
And we settled in Baltimore, Maryland, and that's the connection to La Crosse in high school, got into two things lacrosse and robotics. So I'm sort of this job by day and robotics, married all other our and I got the chance to learn the sport, got excited about sports in general.
And by the end of my time in high school, I realized that I could use this passion for building robots and this passion for aviation and a discipline called aerospace engineering. And I realized that my team was one of the best places to learn that. So I set my sights there and God opened up the door for me to get into MIT and pursue my dream, which was to become a rocket scientist.
Henry Kaestner: Did you play lacrosse at MIT? Does MIT even have a lacrosse team? Does have a lacrosse team?
Kwami Williams: I played one semester really actually just fall ball. Unfortunately, I realized that I just couldn't keep up with school, which I'm drinking from a fire hose and then my team setting. Right. Science, I bet.
So I stuck with intramural sports as my sports outlet.
So everything ultimate Frisbee, soccer, football, dodgeball, whatever, got me moving.
And my time in my team was just this beautiful experience because I thought I was going MIT to learn about aerospace engineering. And it actually became this formative experience in my spiritual journey for so much of my life. Because I grew up in the church, they had just become second nature and I spent the first two years at MIT actually wrestling with that God exists. And if he does, fate has it right.
I join a fraternity to explore, like, OK, I'm away from home. I just want to experience what freedom looks like without immigrant parents who are watching your every move.
And God really. Just use my time at MIT to help me make my faith real, for me to get to a point where I was old enough with clarity to say that I love Jesus and that I want to live my life in a way that shares his love with others.
And in that same way, MIT was transformative and moving me ultimately from aerospace engineering to a lot of what I do now, which is agriculture. And I love to kind of talk about that journey with you as we talk about the Moringa tree.
Kwami Williams: Good. We'll talk about that. And I think that much of the switch there, the transition came from meeting your co-founder. Meeting somebody else was a formative relationship and he saw a different opportunity to walk us through that transition. Walk us from meeting your partner, Emily, and then, yes, tell us what in the world Moringa is. I don't think I've heard the word Moringa before, maybe nine months ago. And now it feels like every week somebody is saying something about Moringa, feels like it was ringing the kale of today or something like that.
Kwami Williams: Precisely. It's, yeah. More nutritious than kale with even more antiinflammatory benefits than tumeric. It's kind of the buzz words right now around Moringa. But yeah, let me take you back in time. So in 2010, as blessed with the opportunity to join the Campus Crusade for Christ now crew movement to visit, not on a mission trip.
And that trip took me to the northern part of Ghana. And that was really my first introduction to rural poverty. I've realized that it's so easy for us to be desensitized by development statistics. But once those numbers become names and faces of people you do life with, you share life with, it changes everything.
And for me, it moved me from this place of saying, I want to go back and intern at NASA to how can I leverage what I've been blessed with to actually start making a difference in the lives of the rural poor in Ghana and what are the resources and opportunity around them that we can start capitalizing on to transform their lives? So it's not just sort of a poverty lens, but really an opportunity lens. And I was stuck with this question until my final year identity when I took a course called Lab Development. And this is the course in which I met Emily, my co-founder and business partner, and as well, Daisy, my wife and my partner.
And so this course takes everything. And it started through a trip back to Ghana.
And this time we are working alongside real farmers and they're telling us about this tree called Moringa. They've seen Moringa is this miracle tree locally.
And I'm saying, OK, hold up, slow down. Let's talk about some numbers and some science here. And they're like, OK, so the more we researched, the more we raise.
The farmers were right. The release of the tree contain more iron and more calcium in milk, protein, yogurt, more vitamin C than oranges. And so we those this nutrient powerhouse in the release of the tree and then we looked at the size of the tumor around it. It also contained is deeply moisturizing oil that outperforms, again, coconut and shale oils, which we know of in the cosmetics sphere. And when we took a layer back and we looked at the marketplace where there was a five billion dollar market opportunity. And so it became very clear to us as students in 2012 in Ghana that there was more to Moringa than getting an A on a class project that we really need to think about, connecting the dots, helping farmers as we like to joke, prove that money grows on trees. The money that they need to transform and improve their livelihoods is right there in their backyards. And so my co-founder, Emily and I, from that point on to start to research Moringa personally and we were fortunate enough to win some grant capital out of team that helped us launch through Moringa, our consumer facing and vertically integrated brand metering and Moringa products powered for our health and wellness today.
Rusty Rueff: And as I understand it, the Moringa tree is also good for farming. Right? It's not one of those trees where like the palm oil trees where they go in and it messes everything up, it actually helps.
Kwami Williams: You've got it perfectly right, Rusty. So Moringa one, it grows and in arid climates. So it's a really climate smart, sustainable tree too.
It helps the crops around it grow better. Three, it can be in a crop. And so you don't put farmers in a position where it's an all or nothing like grow Moringa and cut everything else down. And then for it grows extremely fast compared to other fruit trees. So Moranda fruits and about 12 to 14 months. And that compares, for example, to Shey, which takes fifteen years to give you its first fruit or even mango trees, fruit trees that are three to five years before they give you the first fruit. So in Moringa you have this climate resilience opportunity for real farmers. You also have a. Dual income opportunity from the seeds in the leaves, and then you have the opportunity to support and integrate into what farmers are already cultivating rather than replace that.
Rusty Rueff: That's very cool. I feel like we're just this far away from Moringa smoothies right down here at Jamba Juice.
Kwami Williams: You know, it's it's like it really is coming. It really is. It's I mean, in different parts of the US, it's already there.
Rusty Rueff: It's very cool. So tell us about your vision and mission of True Moringa. I mean, what's the problem? You're talking to both Faith Driven Investor and Faith Driven Entrepreneurs here. So what's the problem that you're trying to solve?
And how does planting these trees actually do that?
Kwami Williams: Yeah, so True Moringa today serves five thousand women and farming families all across Ghana, and we've planned it two million trees across the country of forest and communities and combating malnutrition.
And we are adding value to the seeds of the tree and have created a line of natural personal care products. And as well, we're taking the lease of the tree and have created a line of health and wellness products. And we built this vertically integrated supply chain really because we have a bold vision. And that vision is that there are a plethora of underutilized high value crops here on the African continent. And what's missing are really the rails to connect these underutilized crops to a global marketplace where they can be enjoyed and appreciated and to build those rails in a way that improves the lives of farmers that cares for the planet as well as ultimately is sustainable by generating a profit. And so we like to say that our mission is to improve the lives of our farmers and to improve the wellness of our customers, all powered by this Moringa tree.
Rusty Rueff: That's very cool. If I can paraphrase somebody that we all not only admire but follow, you're not only teaching them to use a tree, you're teaching them how to plant a tree. Right? You know.
Kwami Williams: Precisely, precisely. That's good.
Rusty Rueff: So there must have been some disconnect in the market, though, because Moringa trees have been around for a long time and somebody didn't see the market opportunity. But yet you have. So how did you see it and what's your fix for that disconnect?
Kwami Williams: Yeah, so we realized that a big part of the disconnect revolved around the initial positioning of Moringa. It was largely being championed by non-profits and aid organizations working on the African continent, focused on rural malnutrition prevention.
So they would go into communities and they'll say, hey, farmers here, soem Moringa Seeds, plant them, eat the leaves, your life will be better. Goodbye. And of course, farmers will receive seeds, plant them, and ultimately became jaded because they're saying, OK, we've plant this amazing tree. We can't eat all the leaves from hundreds of trees. And we know from everything you've taught us that there's a market value to both the leaves and the seeds of my tree.
And so we realized what was missing was a for profit social impact focus to the supply chain. So we now have come in and said, right, we're not just going to educate you on how to plant Moringa and how to consume it to combat malnutrition at home. We're going to help you scale your five 10 trees to five hundred on an acre with your other crops. We're going to now add value here in Ghana, transforming Moringa into ingredients like the seed oil and the leaf powder. And then we're going to take these two key ingredients and create everyday products that people can enjoy. So there's an economic engine behind the social impact work and environmental impact work that Moringa presents naturally. And so that's been the differentiator that we brought into the marketplace. And so even now, when you go to our truemoringa.com Website and you make a purchase, we built the [...] ability to allow you to know there's where my products came from, the community in Ghana they came from. And as you buy one, you plant one. And so we've really connected the dots all the way from sort of the souls of Ghana to the shelves of Whole Foods and as well to the smartphones that we have as we shop online in the US.
Rusty Rueff: That's cool. And we know you're not only sowing Moringa tree seeds, we also know you're sowing seeds of your faith. And so take us through, you know, the spiritual integration of your work, your project, your mission. And then while you're there, talk to us about why Ghana and what harvests are you hoping to see spiritually through your work in Ghana?
Kwami Williams: Yes, such good questions, Rusty, I sort of go in order, so as I think about sowing seeds beyond Moringa seeds, it really comes down to how do I as the co-founder and CEO, I connect, share my fate and display and walk my faith out in a hopefully winsome way in our organization. And what's been so special is that from the very beginning, God has been the foundation of everything we've done, actually. I remember when I first moved back to Ghana, we launched an Indiegogo crowdfunding campaign to kick start the business and we had a twenty five thousand dollar goal and we had raised something like four thousand dollars.
And it's Christmas Eve. Nineteen thousand more to go. And I get an email from a couple in Sweden saying, hey, we don't know you, but God told us to fill in the entire round. So you meet your goal.
Rusty Rueff: Sweden, you said Sweden and Sweden. So how to connect those dots for me to Sweden?
Kwami Williams: And I share this story because when I open up that email, this is Christmas. And I just started crying. And as I was crying, you there's no voice in heaven. But I just felt in that moment God saying this is to show you and remind you that I am building this business with you and that I am the foundation of this. So your highs and lows are all going to have to be rooted in me in building this together. And really, there is no direct link between us and this incredible couple that are now still investors in our company. Seven years later, they saw our work online. They followed it and they were obedient to God in their giving. And I share this because it set the tone for the rest of our journey as a company. Today we start every meeting and every meeting and prayer. We create the space in our hiring process to say Colossians three twenty three is going to be our guiding sort of light and framework. And it challenges us to say, let's work as something done for God, not for our human paycheck and not for any accolades. We create the space as well personally to fast weekly. And I do that because fasting has been a powerful physical expression of saying, God, I need you, but I want to work with you in building this organization. And we haven't been perfect in modeling our, you know, our faith in God. And not everyone in the organization is a believer, but we've created the space that really invites God's presence into our day to day decision making.
Rusty Rueff: That's really great. When are we going to dove more into that? But I just have one more question for you. So I'm looking at your product lines here. And you have one product called the Tranquility Face. Now, you can see all of us here. Nobody else can.
Do you think that product could actually work on us? I mean, could it make us better?
William Norvell: And who have all of us needs it the most.
Kwami Williams: So let me just put myself in this and say that I use our oils and the tranquility. Oil is one of our scented oils every day, so I need it. And so I think all of us should use it.
And I personally use it as a beard oil to reduce irritation before and after shave. My wife is using as a lovely facial oil. My mom is using it as a hair oil. So it's just as powerful. All-Purpose Moisturizing oil for your hair, face and body. I'm going to say we all need it and that's why you should try it out.
Rusty Rueff: I just want someone to look at me and go, Hey, look at the tranquility in your face. I mean, that would just be a beautiful thing, especially right now at twenty twenty. All right. So William is all yours.
William Norvell: Has the as the only member of the team with a full beard, I take that as a backhanded way of saying William needs it the most.
Kwami Williams: But, you know, that's it.
William Norvell: That's all right. That's all right.
Kwami, I want to dig a little deeper. And one thing we probably haven't done on here in a while, I want to reread our mission statement, a Faith Driven Entrepreneur, because I think you are going to help us in this. And on the front page of our site, you read our mission to help entrepreneurs who are hard at work on the trail, who are often tired, exhausted, under-resourced and confused. They need rest, support, guidance and provisions as they get ready to head back on the trail to fight dragons. And in no time or is during this pandemic that we are all dealing with in different ways. And God is orchestrating his ways in different ways across the world. But I do know twenty, twenty years been a tough year in some ways for you and the company. And you've been so gracious to tell us that you wanted to share that with our audience. And I just think it's going to be something they need to hear. And so if you could just share what challenges do you guys have faced and how God has walked with you through those.
Kwami Williams: Thank you so much, William. And. I just love the foundation that this mission statement sets, because we are living that to paint the picture for our audience today, starting January 20 19, we start to basically experience our own version of Job's story. And for color, we've been growing at sort of seventy five percent CAGR as a business since inception. Twenty nineteen was supposed to be this big year. We had multimillion dollar contracts to supply companies and Whole Foods and Costco that retail Moringa products. And so there was just this year filled with so much hope and anticipation. And from the first day I come home from of in Ghana, you pray all throughout the night into the new year.
Come on. Supercharges during the first twenty nineteen and I get a call when I wake up on New Year's Day that fifteen thousand trees were literally burning, that a wildfire had gone to our largest farm here in Ghana four months later in April twenty nineteen.
I also get another message saying that our factory was burning down to the ground and with it went over a million dollars worth of lost revenue assets and as well the livelihoods of job creation opportunity for over one hundred and eighty of our people on our team. And then fast forward a couple more months. A colleague passed away due to health complications and the very next month, the dam that's upstream from our nuclease farm had an uncontrolled release and ultimately flooded parts of our farm. And to kind of end the year, a burglar broke into our office on Boxing Day the day after Christmas and stole a bunch of stuff. So twenty, nineteen, even before we get to twenty twenty years challenges, global challenges. Twenty nineteen was literally just like hell for us. And twenty twenty as we've all experienced. Covid pandemic hit everyone from the rural farmer to the biggest corporates. And for us during the lockdown months they passed about 90 percent of how we make money. It also touched me personally. In July of twenty twenty I got sick with covid. My wife and I both got sick with covid and we actually ended up having a miscarriage as well in that same month and then in September thinking that, OK, that hopefully that's that's it. That's the last thing. In September of twenty twenty in one of our rural communities, three armed gunmen robbed three of my colleagues. They shot into our pickup truck and two were ultimately hit by the heavy ammunition. But by God's grace, miraculously, they survived the shotgun heads and the AK 47 heads and are recovering post surgery.
And this specific attack is just it's not Ghana. Ghana is extremely safe and it's not even in this community. So it's just a series of events where we have to pause and say, oh, God, what is happening?
Why is that happening? How do we even talk about this?
And so I think God has put not just myself, but our entire company on this sort of crash course of resilience and also of a reclarification and redefinition of our faith and so our love to maybe share some of the lessons that we've learned through these back to back adversities.
William Norvell: Thank you so much for sharing. And yeah, definitely. And I ask you to do that. And just that is a wilderness season and they're littered through the scripture. I don't know if this is from the Lord or not, but somebody once told me when I was going through a long one that, you know, God uses those mightly that he has taken to the wilderness first. And I don't know if that hits where you are not. So take it from the Lord if it is and not if it's not. But all of our heroes from the Bible have experienced things like this. And then I just am grateful for you sharing these stories with our listeners. And yeah, if you would, what has God taught you from these challenges and just. Yeah. Thank you for sharing.
Kwami Williams: Yeah. Thank you so much for joining me and the happiness of all of this. And for that word, I do think that there's truth in that because so much of this season has been challenging me with a couple big questions. So I know the first one is what's more important to me? Is it God or is it his gifts? And one of my colleagues, Peter Neila, always knows just the right things to said to me at the right time. He and my mom have that gift and he sent a video to me, I feel this year from 2010. And he shared C.S. Lewis, quote, says he has God and everything else has no more than he who has God alone.
And the day I first heard that, it just changed everything for me because I was so, so much of my Christian life has been a God. Can you give me this gift? He open this door for my company.
You bless my wife and I to that pregnancy will be successful. And these are amazing, good things that a good father wants to give, but I realize that God wasn't enough for me and this season has got me to a place where God has become enough for me, where I adversity after adversity I can pause and I can just say, God, I love you. I believe and I know that you are good even without this good gift. And I think a related question that I've had to wrestle with in this season has been, you know, is God good in my life or in our lives as believers because he protects us from bad things or because his presence with us and I think is right.
So if he protects us from our pain or present with us in our pain and I think honestly, for most of my life, I just chose I want the keep the bad thing away.
And God has used this season to challenge me to get to a place where every day I get to say that your presence is what I want is what I desire.
And that has impacted where I find my identity. So is my identity. And walking in this calling to use botanicals to improve the lives of people or as my identity and just being loved by God.
And I think the last kind of high level question that has helped bring out some lessons for me is around this idea of am I working as as a slave or as a son of God? And I share that the point to the fact that most of the past seven years I've drank the Kool-Aid of grind and hustle as a founder, you know, days off and my phone is with me when I'm having dinner with my wife.
And there were seasons I remember when we first won the Forbes 30 under 30, I'll sleep in with my laptop every day because I'm like, I have to do even more. And when the factory burned and when we that we had to completely restructure our business God said, I need to start resting.
I need you to start taking a sabbatical and you just start setting better boundaries for work. And, you know, it's been twenty four months almost of back to back adversity, but and I have not perfected it.
But I can say that by God's grace, I'm progressing in this and setting better boundaries and my wife will call me out if I stray too far. And so just to kind of some that up, I think the big lessons are around really loving God and pursuing God for him, not his gifts. Secondly, being excited and acknowledging that God is good because of his presence and our pain, not simply the times when he protects us from pain. And then I think a big lesson has been how do I work alongside God as a son who rests rather than a slave who is constantly striving and grinding and hustling without his loving father guiding him.
So I think those are the big things that have come out of this season for me as I think about my faith journey in the face of so much adversity.
Henry Kaestner: Wow. You know, I had thought that we'd hear about Ghana in an entrepreneurial story and learn about Moringa, but it's really powerful just to hear that we all got something much, much more than we expected and grateful for your faithfulness and sharing your story and a lot of transparency and vulnerability and just really seeing faith at work. And I know that that's an inspiration, encouragement to all of us.
William Norvell: I'm in and I love what you said. I would love to have this pastor. I'd like to have read a book, a new book by a guy named John Mark called The Ruthless Elimination of Hurry. And so I don't know if it's one to send you. I'll happily buy it for you. It's an incredible book, but he does a section on the word hustle and how it's been co-opted. And, you know, the word actually, the definition means to move hurriedly or unceremoniously in a direction that's not something to aspire to. The words the words been co-opted a little bit and like it's definitely not biblical. And I love how you reframed that. And John, Mark does an incredible job. I'd love to hear him talk to entrepreneurs, but it's all about trust. It comes from a quote from Dallas, Willard, that he asked one time and said, you know, what's the biggest thing we should do to pursue Jesus?
And he said ruthlessly eliminate her. He said he said there he's like, OK, what else? He's like, that's it. I'm done. So I thank you for that. And but you so you also have an interesting view there. I mean, so that's your personal journey and what God's taking you through. You're also the leader of a company that has gone through these stresses. Not and I'm sure it sounds like just from getting to know you, that they probably walked alongside you through the personal struggles as well as the business struggles and the business is going through issues. How has that affected your organization and how is God equipped you to lead through this?
Kwami Williams: So first, my brother in Christ and colleague Peter Bieler, who I mentioned, always knows just the right thing to say, just yesterday was talking about the ruthless elimination of poverty. So he's there with you. And I checked out the devotional in the Bible. So I got to taste a little bit of the book. But I think it's worth diving in and actually reading it.
And to talk to your question about professionally how we've sort of navigated adversity and build resilience. I think the first thing is that the senior leadership team, we realized that we needed to self care because we were burning out or will burn out. And so for that, some of the biggest things that we did practically is create space. My co-founder Emily Create Space for a mindfulness meditation for me was a lot around writing down things I'm grateful for every day because I just changed my lens beyond sort of the caring for a mind. All of us have gone into wellness and fitness and so caring for our bodies just so we can actually endure the emotional, physical, mental, intellectual toll of what's happening. And then in the organization itself. And we really double down on two simple frameworks. So one is start, stop, continue says what can I start today? That is going great. What do I need to stop? That's not working. And what should we continue? And then a second framework, the growth framework. What's our goal? What are the options that we have? And then what is the reality on the ground and what's the way forward? And we took these frameworks as a way to just sit down and dissect our business. It meant we had to lay off our staff who were connected to the factory. That's the most painful thing I've ever had to do as a leader. But then in that pain, we also created opportunities for those who knew how to sew, started making masks to support covid. And we raised our own capital. We really donated our savings to create an unemployment fund to serve those who don't have a safety net. On the product side, we launched a couple of new skills and these skills actually became the trigger to get into Whole Foods in New England. So in our grocery at the worst possible time, the expansion of our product line doubling down or triggering a brand, companies getting to Whole Foods at the end of twenty nineteen and at the end of twenty twenty, that's helped us get into Costco. And I think that basically taking these frameworks ultimately has helped us run lean experiments that have unlocked opportunity. And as we end twenty twenty, we've grown revenue by almost three times that of twenty nineteen. So we're really excited that God has blessed these small efforts to really say, what can I start, what can I stop, what can I continue. And as well, how do I grow even in the face of adversity?
William Norvell: Amen, amen. And as we come near to our close, I would love to know as someone who's on the ground working with entrepreneurs, I know you're involved with so many. I think it's a group of us, I think speak for the three of us. We've just collectively been inspired by the continent of Africa and what is going on there and just, you know, shame on us for missing it and not seeing the amazing opportunity and growth and looking past it. And so I would love for you maybe to give a pitch as well while you're on this podcast. What's your vision for the future of Ghana specifically? And maybe if you have one for Africa, what could entrepreneurship do for the country of Ghana and the continent of Africa?
William Norvell: That's a great question. I think it's been said that, you know, talent is everywhere, but opportunity isn't that thing. That's really the case. When you think about Ghana on the African continent, my sort of vision is to unleash the entrepreneurial capacity of people on the African continent.
I believe that Africans should be the one in the driver's seat to solve the injustice of poverty, to create opportunities that improve the livelihoods of their communities, their cities, their countries. And we need allies from around the world in that partnership. But I think that it's basically saying if the right acting come alongside African entrepreneurs, if they're the coaching the capital, the community, the connections can create a conducive ecosystem, that we can transform this continent and take it from the economist, call it a hopeless continent to one that's actually a beacon of excellence across every industry that we can imagine. And for me, the poorest demographic in our world today, our real farmers. And so, so much of how I think we can do this is creating opportunities that increase the income and improve the livelihoods of women and farming families all across the African continent.
William Norvell: Oh, that's amazing. Thank you. And that's Henry alluded to in the beginning. We are going to come to a close and we're going to ask our favorite question. And we've recently been led by the spirit to ask a second question. So if you haven't listened to the recent podcast, this may be new, but we'd love to invite you to share with our listeners. Where God has you in his word right now, where he has you in his scripture and what he may be teaching you, it could be something that you've been studying this season, could be something that he told you this morning through your mom or your business partner. And then secondarily, how can we be praying for you and how can we be praying and our listeners be praying for True Moringa?
Kwami Williams: A funny story is that my mom did send this verse to me this morning. It was her verse of the day, but it has been the verse that I have found so much comforting in the season.
And it's Isaiah. Forty three, one to two. And I love to just sort of read it. And when I do, I insert my name just to make it as powerful as possible. And it's the same. But now, Kwami, listen to the Lord who created you, Kwami, the one who formed you cells. Do not be afraid for I have sinned. You I have called you by name. You are mine when you go through the deep waters, I will be with you. When you go through the rivers of difficulty, you will not drown. When you walk through the fire of oppression, you will not be burned up. The flames will not consume you. And it resonates because we've literally gone through the flood, the fire, the oppression in a physical sense, and God has been faithful to it all. And so I hope this speaks to anyone who is going through any difficulty, especially with what twenty, twenty and covid-19 has brought to the world and just know that God is real. He loves you and he is presence in the most painful things.
William Norvell: Amen. And how can we be praying for you and your company?
Kwami Williams: True Moringa is at an inflection point. We're grateful to God for the ability to be growing over one hundred and fifty four percent year over year. And so the keeper now is for like minded investors to partner with us to support our growth beyond this year. And I think that's going to be the biggest sort of catalyst to our future as we work to improve the lives of farmers here in Ghana.