Obroni and the Chocolate Factory: An Unlikely Story of Globalization and Ghana's First Gourmet Chocolate Bar

Obroni and the Chocolate Factory: An Unlikely Story of Globalization and Ghana's First Gourmet Chocolate Bar

by Steven Wallace
Obroni and the Chocolate Factory: An Unlikely Story of Globalization and Ghana's First Gourmet Chocolate Bar

Obroni and the Chocolate Factory: An Unlikely Story of Globalization and Ghana's First Gourmet Chocolate Bar

by Steven Wallace

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Overview

What country makes the best chocolate? Most people would answer "Switzerland," or, if they're discerning, "Belgium" or "France." But, how many cocoa trees grow in Zurich? Lyon? Antwerp? Shouldn't the country known for growing the best cocoa beans be the one that makes the best chocolate? So, captivated by theories of international trade but with precious little knowledge of cocoa or chocolate, Steven Wallace set out to build the Omanhene Cocoa Bean Company in Ghana—a country renowned for its cocoa and where Wallace spent part of his youth—in a quest to produce the world's first export-ready, single-origin chocolate bar. What followed would be the true story of an obroni—white person—from Wisconsin taking on the ultimate entrepreneurial challenge.

Written with sensitivity and devastating self-awareness, Obroni and the Chocolate Factory is Steven's chaotic, fascinating, and bemusing journey to create a successful international business that aspired to do a bit of good in the world. This book is at once a penetrating business memoir and a story about imagining globalism done right. Wallace's picaresque journey takes him to Ghana's residence for the head of state, to the Amsterdam offices of a secretive international cocoa conglomerate, and face-to-face with key figures in the sharp-elbowed world of global trade and geopolitics. Along the way he'll be forced to deal with bureaucratic roadblocks, a legacy of colonialism, corporate intrigue, inscrutable international politics, a Bond-esque villain nemesis, and constant uncertainty about whether he'll actually pull it off. This rollicking love letter to both Ghana and the world of business is a rare glimpse into the mind of an unusually literate and articulate entrepreneur.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781510723665
Publisher: Skyhorse
Publication date: 11/21/2017
Sold by: SIMON & SCHUSTER
Format: eBook
Pages: 256
File size: 3 MB

About the Author

Steven Wallace is the founder and CEO of the Omanhene Cocoa Bean Company, the first company to sustain exports of premium chocolate manufactured entirely in Africa, and credited with producing the world's first single-origin chocolate bar in 1994. Wallace often speaks on economic development, cross-cultural issues, and the challenges of starting a gourmet-food business in Africa. He lives in Whitefish Bay, Wisconsin.
Steven Wallace is the founder and CEO of the Omanhene Cocoa Bean Company, the first company to sustain exports of premium chocolate manufactured entirely in Africa, and credited with producing the world's first single-origin chocolate bar in 1994. Wallace often speaks on economic development, cross-cultural issues, and the challenges of starting a gourmet-food business in Africa.

Table of Contents

Acknowledgments ix

A Note from the Author xii

Foreword Taste the Chocolate xv

Chapter 1 The Omanhene Idea 3

Chapter 2 The Summer of 1978 15

Chapter 3 Dancing Clumsily 45

Chapter 4 Chicken or Fish? 57

Chapter 5 The Waiting Game 75

Chapter 6 Anyone Else Want to Take a Shot at Us? 87

Chapter 7 The Fancy Food Show 105

Chapter 8 We're in Business 131

Chapter 9 Song of Sarpong 147

Chapter 10 Judging a Product by Its Package 157

Chapter 11 Divesting Ghana 167

Chapter 12 Opening Bids 177

Chapter 13 Amsterdam Makes an Offer 185

Chapter 14 Bannerman's Hope 195

Chapter 15 Mr. Wallace Goes to Washington 201

Chapter 16 Back to the Basement 223

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