The air in the Prosperity Catalyst Club (PCC) meeting room in Harare hummed, not just with the overhead fan battling the afternoon heat, but with a palpable energy. Takudzwa Neshiri stood before a rapt audience of young faces, many reflecting the same anxieties he knew intimately. “Ten years of decline,” he began, his voice steady, “left us feeling like options were buried deep. But sometimes,” he smiled, “the spark comes from the darkest smoke.”
Takudzwa’s story is PCC folklore, a testament to their core mission. When the suffocating fog of COVID-19 descended, bringing lockdowns and fear, 19-year-old Taku faced a personal crisis. His father’s passing years earlier meant his mother, unemployed, carried the burden alone. His university fees were a looming cliff edge. Watching her exhaustion deepen, the desperate search for scarce masks ignited an idea.
“People needed protection. My mother needed relief. I saw one problem potentially solving another,” Taku explained. With sheer grit, borrowed capital from his mother’s meagre savings, “TakuMed Supplies” was born in their small living room. He started ordering face masks online, selling locally. But Taku’s vision quickly expanded beyond masks. He saw the crippling gaps in medical supply chains, clinics struggling for basics, families unable to find essentials. Leveraging his growing understanding of logistics, TakuMed pivoted to sourcing and delivering reliable medical supplies across Harare.
“It wasn’t easy,” he admitted. “Capital dried up faster than a puddle in October. Suppliers demanded cash. Doubt was a constant companion.” This was where the PCC, introduced by one of their earlier beneficiary, became his lifeline. The Club, part of a broader Eastern Caucus initiative, wasn’t just about motivational talks. It offered the delicate entrepreneurial skills he lacked: financial literacy boot camps, lean business model workshops, and crucially, access to the “Hustlers Networking Hub.”
“Through PCC, I met Mr Zimunya,” Taku recalled, gesturing to The Eastern Caucas Business development Manager in the front row, a seasoned economist and PCC Lead. “He didn’t just offer advice; he offered belief and guidance. That co-financing model, PCC matching my hustle with mentorship and micro-investment changed everything.”
TakuMed scaled, moving from a living room operation to a small warehouse, employing three other young people.
Today, Taku isn’t just a successful entrepreneur; he’s a Prosperity Catalyst himself. His story embodies the PCC’s broad thrust: co-financing for development that empowers youth to leverage what they have: ingenuity, local knowledge, raw determination to build sustainable prosperity. He mentors new PCC members, showing them how to identify needs within their struggling communities and turn them into viable ventures, from agro-tech solutions harnessing Zimbabwe’s rich land to digital platforms connecting artisans with global markets.
“This club,” Taku declared, sweeping his hand across the eager faces, “isn’t just teaching us business. It’s reigniting Zimbabwe’s spirit, one young innovator at a time. We are the catalysts. We are turning ‘what if’ into ‘what is.’ We are proving that even on the edge of poverty, creativity is our most abundant resource. Let’s build channels of prosperity that flow for everyone.”
Taku’s story is one that the Eastern Caucas has always envisioned changing mindsets from welfarism to productivity, in Taku’s journey from pandemic desperation to medical supply innovator and inspirational leader, the PCC saw its mission crystallized. Prosperity Catalysts clubs are more than platforms, they are growing into “ignition hubs” that are proving to be a memorable stint in Zimbabwe’s long climb, fuelled by the unstoppable energy of young minds learning to turn scarcity into sustainable wealth, lifting themselves and their communities, one ingenious hustle at a time. The fortunes of Zimbabwe is being rewritten in rooms full of youthful faces, by young people like Takudzwa, finally equipped to light the way.
Ideas run the world!