Business Review has launched a new campaign called #makeithappen. Every day, for a month, we will present 30 inspirational entrepreneurial stories of Romanians who turned passion, hobbies and knowledge into successful businesses. We will present the stories of entrepreneurial initiatives of all sizes in all economic fields, underlining the diversity and creativity of the local business environment. Through this campaign, Business Review is strengthening its commitment to be the go-to source for inspiring stories of Romanian entrepreneurship.
Today’s story is about Adrian Vlad, a man from Bucharest who wanted to provide healthy grains for his family, so he bought a gristmill – a mill that uses stones to grind cereal, a rare tool in today’s world – and it quickly turned into a successful business called Moara cu Pietre, which sells wholegrain wheat and other grains to customers throughout Romania, mostly through their website. Adrian says that’s not necessarily what he had in mind – the business opportunity just fell into his lap. “I found someone online who was selling a broken stone mill in Maramures, with no engine. I don’t know why I was so interested – maybe I felt it would be useful for me to buy the mill, so I did,” he recounts.
Adrian’s occupation before Moara cu Pietre had nothing to do with grains and flour. “It’s a long story and many people are surprised when they find out what I did before the business. I studied at the Theological Institute in Bucharest, but nothing caught on so I bought a computer, and from 1994 to 2014 I worked in IT,” he explains.
“When I first saw the mill I was speechless – I didn’t even know where the engine went, I didn’t know anything,” Adrian recounts. But he was ambitious and learned everything on his own, as he couldn’t find anyone to teach him such a skill in Bucharest. “Whenever I heard about someone who worked with a gristmill, I would go straight to them to . I traveled to Vaslui, to Alba, to the Olt Valley.”
The company’s activity is simple, as Adrian says it’s better to do one thing, but do it right. Moara cu Pietre sells ground cereal – regular wheat, spelt wheat, corn and rye. “Many people ask me how much of the stone ends up in a kilogram of flour and I tell them about the Ohaba mill in Brasov – people there have been using the same stones in their mill since 1873 and those stones are not worn out at all, so the answer is obvious,” he says.
The entrepreneur encourages everyone to make their own, healthier bread: “It’s not a big effort. Homemade bread is so important for your health that the effort doesn’t count – and when I talk about bread I mean the one made using sourdough starter, not the ones that contain yeast. If you don’t have enough time to make your own, please go buy sourdough bread from small bakeries, it’s a good alternative,” he says.
Read another #Makeithappen story here: MI7 Plus, the Romanian financial start-up founded with Wall Street ambitions: “OK! Let’s build a product and sell it!”
Moara cu Pietre is a family business: while Adrian works on distribution and transport, his wife and son take care of packaging. They have two other employees at the mill, and the output is about 40 kilograms of flour per hour.
“Clients find us, not the other way around. We haven’t put any money into promotion since we barely have time to fulfil our current orders. Before Christmas or Easter, some customers order as far as three weeks in advance to make sure they get the flour they need before the holidays.”
“Our customers are well informed, they know what they’re looking for and they are glad to find exactly what they wanted – a product that is clean and made with love.”
70 percent of Moara cu Pietre’s sales are made online, 5 percent are made straight from the Bucharest warehouse and the rest is sold in stores around the country, in Bucharest, Brasov, Constanta, Bacau, Iasi or Roman. “We don’t have a sale point in Cluj, but there is an artisanal bakery called Brutaria Camelia there that makes sourdough bread using only our flour,” Adrian says.
The entrepreneur says he has had a good experience with his business and even in dealing with the state: “Since I started the business, all the doors have been open. Everywhere I went, I found people who were curious about how I’ll manage to be successful with this mill – and I was. I only had one issue with a permit that took a long time, but otherwise everything went smoothly,” he explains.
Read other stories in our #Makeithappen series:
One-IT, the Romanian company using augmented reality to get global business
AROBS, the IT company building blockbuster products after three “almost disastrous” initiatives
Cut the sugar! The cake shop in Iasi that makes healthier versions of all our favourite sweets
Sometimes success comes smoothly: Bilka, the EUR 86 million dream of a first-time entrepreneur
Success has a lavender scent! Bicicleta cu Lavanda, the business that puts the natural in cosmetics
Meet the young Romanians using blockchain to disrupt the USD 25 bln global scientific market
Exploring nature for a living. The business created out of love for traveling
Romania-based Gateway VR Studio, among the first 10 Virtual Reality companies in the world
Creating a community you want to be a part of – aSpace, the new co-working hub in Bucharest
Meet the third-generation barrel-maker supplying the best Scottish whisky brands
The Romanian entrepreneur making millions from high-tech massage chairs
Sometimes success comes smoothly: Bilka, the EUR 86 million dream of a first-time entrepreneur
Proumin, the Romanian metal equipment company supplying big industrial players in Europe since 1990