The smoke that once stained his hands was not defeat. It was preparation. Before Joseph Karanja became the chairman of one of Kenya’s most recognisable breweries, he was a man who burned charcoal — literally and figuratively — feeding himself on the slow heat of trials that would have crushed a lesser spirit.
He tried business after business. He stumbled. He rose. He stumbled again. The years piled up, and still success eluded him like a horizon that keeps retreating. Friends found their footing. Contemporaries built empires. And Joseph? Joseph kept burning coal and betting on tomorrow.
“My dad had tried so many businesses and almost lost hope before he started Keroche Breweries. KB was started when he was 50 years. At the age of 50 is when he got to see some hope. Now he is the chairman of a whole company.”
— Anerlisa Muigai, his daughter
The Pivot That Changed Everything
In 1997, Joseph and his wife Tabitha took their boldest leap yet. Together, they founded Keroche Breweries, making fortified wine for Kenya’s working class. It was modest, unglamorous work — but it was theirs. For a decade they nurtured it, learning the craft of an industry that does not easily yield to newcomers.
Then in 2007, the Kenyan government enacted heavy taxes on locally produced wines. Overnight, a decade of effort was rendered unviable. Shutdown. Start over.
Most people would have walked away. Joseph and Tabitha pivoted. They moved into ready-to-drink gin and vodka — products that would carry Keroche Breweries into the national conversation and eventually command a remarkable share of Kenya’s beer market.
The Timeline
| 1997 | Keroche Breweries founded
Joseph and Tabitha launch fortified wine for Kenya’s mass market. |
| 2007 | Crisis becomes opportunity
Government taxes shut down the wine business. They pivot to gin and vodka — real growth begins. |
| Age 50 | Hope finally arrived
After decades of failures, Joseph found his footing at an age when many would have stopped trying. |
| 2012 | 20% of Kenya’s beer market
From charcoal burner to chairman of a company that defines the industry. |
The Numbers Behind the Story
| 50
Age when hope arrived |
10+
Years of failed businesses before KB |
20%
Kenya beer market share (2012) |
1997
Year the dream was planted |
The Message in the Ashes
His daughter Anerlisa shared her father’s journey not as a cautionary tale, but as a battle cry. She reminded the world that her father was living proof that time is never your enemy — only your impatience is.
“You’re never too young to start an empire and never too old to chase a new dream. Age is just a number. Don’t be in a rush or feel pressured about making it in life.”
— Anerlisa Muigai
There is something quietly radical about Joseph Karanja’s story. It refuses the myth that success is the domain of the young, the connected, or the lucky. It insists instead that the person still standing — still trying — at fifty, after a lifetime of near-misses, is exactly the kind of person who deserves to win.
Tabitha Karanja, who stands beside him as CEO of the company they built together, is her own story of grit. Behind every late-blooming empire, there is often a partnership — two people who refused to let the other give up on the dream, even when giving up would have been the sensible thing to do.
For Everyone Still in the Fire
If you are somewhere in the middle of your story — counting failed ventures, watching the clock, wondering whether the life you imagined is still reachable — consider Joseph Karanja. Consider the years he spent with smoke in his lungs and doubt in his heart, and how none of it had the final word.
His charcoal was not a dead end. It was the beginning of a fire that would not be put out.

