Tag Archives: entrepreneurship

Business you can start with less than UGX 100,000/= (US$ 30) – Part 1


I am a firm believer in starting business the simplest way possible. While one may have this big vision about where they want to go, a journey of 1000 miles always begins with one step. Most times, we want to start that journey with 100 steps and hence get paralysed at the mere thought of gathering those 100 initial steps.

Recently, while reading through #FridayBusinessUnusualWithDM on Facebook run by my OB Dickson Mushabe, the issue at hand was to do with this person who had lost his job, had only UGX 100,000/= left and wanted to invest in a business without spending on consumption activities. That is when I realised that it was high time I shared on how one can start business with less than UGX 100,000/= (US$ 30).

The assumption in all this is that;

  1. You already have some requisite skills
  2. You are based in Uganda
  3. You are ready to operate below the radar
  4. You don’t despise work
  5. You have been pushed hard enough that you want to make a positive change in your life
  6. You are ready to work with others
  7. Above all, you are tired of talking and ready to act.

It is kind of unbelievable when one tells you that you can start business with such a seemingly measly sum of money which others easily spend on a lunch time outing. The fact is that it is very possible.

After listing down all possible business opportunities, I decided to group them in three categories (and this is to say that my list is not necessarily exhaustive). They are;

  • Food
  • Household
  • General

Due to the detail each category needs, I shall split them into three posts with the first one dealing with Food.


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Food

If there is any industry in Uganda that provides you with ready income without so much hustle, it’s this one. The food business is less likely to expose you to the rampant corruption and opportunity politicisation that is faced by most other industries. People need to eat food, you don’t have to bribe them to buy your food nor do they have to know what political party you subscribe to before they can purchase. Some of the business ideas here include;

Snacks: These sell alot. They are needed for home and school consumption. Many parents with school going children always have to buy snacks for the children to take to school daily. Offices need snacks daily for their tea breaks. You could choose to sell directly to the consumers or to retailers like shops and supermarkets. Some of the most popular snacks I always see around are; Chapati, Sumbusa, Mandazi, Cookies, Cakes, Pop  Corn, Daddies, Roasted Groundnuts, Dried fruits like Mangoes, fried Silver Fish (mukene), Crisps among others.

Let us take the example of the Chapati Snack. To start off, all one needs is; A frying pan, A charcoal stove, Charcoal, Cooking Oil, A roller, Baking Flour, Baking Powder and a location. Depending on where you buy them, the frying pan, Charcoal Stove and Roller shouldn’t cost you more than UGX 60,000/= especially if you can settle for second hand equipment. Charcoal worth UGX 2000/=, Cooking oil (half a litre) at UGX 3,500/= , Baking Flour (1Kg) at UGX 7000/= and Baking Powder at UGX 1000/=. Choose a roadside location that has some decent human traffic and you probably pay nothing for it or a daily rental fee of utmost UGX 2,000/= . Rent a small table for UGX 1,500/= a day. Purchase packaging material to last you close to three days for UGX 2,000/=.  So far, you have spent a total of UGX 79,000/=. This should enable you start off from day one and thereafter, the returns from the business are expected to provide the initial cash flow required to re-invest.

This example shows us that going forward from day zero, the operating costs will be centred around Purchasing Cooking Oil, Charcoal, Baking flour, Baking powder, Table and location rental. This implies that you need to raise at least UGX 17,000/= from sales daily to have operational capital. As demand grows, you get an opportunity to sell more by procuring more raw material. I did talk to my favourite Chapati vendor and he confessed that profitability for him comes in after he has used at least 1.5 Kilograms of Baking flour. He has two key demand periods during the day and they are from 6am to 8am in the morning and 5pm to 9pm in the evening. In each of those periods, he uses up at least four (4) kilos of baking flour. Through my own judgement, this gives him revenues in the region of UGX 80,000/= to UGX 150,000/= daily.

Produce: This is one hell of a cash cow that many educated urbanites have never understood well hence leaving it for the others to exploit. The volume of food produce transacted in Uganda on a daily basis is simply massive and the margins usually made by the middle men are outrageous. Every food product you find in the market or supermarket has a supply chain associated with it. It probably emanates from some peasant’s garden, then is amalgamated by a village trader who purchases from the different peasant farmers in order to accumulate substantial volumes that are then sold to a larger trader who transports the produce to urban areas for eventual wholesale to retailers.

Products in this category that are easy to chance upon include; Maize, Millet, Rice, SimSim, Onions, Bananas, Tomatoes, etc. By simply identifying a place to purchase the produce, all one does is to ensure it arrives safely in an urban centre and you will make a decent margin selling to the Shop keepers or directly to consumers.

Take the example of Rice, during its season, one can buy a Kilogram of Milled rice for as low as UGX 1,400/= in the rice growing areas. Simply transporting that rice to an urban area like Kampala would guarantee you a wholesale price of not less than UGX 2,300/=. This gives you a margin of at least 60%. An investment of UGX 80,000/= in rice should yield you not less than 130,000/=. Should you choose to retail the rice like my sister does, the margin gets even much bigger.

I once tried my hands in the Tomato Processing business and this involved me and my wife leaving home at 4am just to ensure that we were at Nakawa Market by 4:30am to buy Tomatoes straight from the farmers who had delivered. At that time of the day, a crate of Tomatoes then cost UGX 40,000/=. However, what intrigued me was that by 6am, the same crate would cost not less than UGX 75,000/=. Come 7pm, no one would be selling in crates anymore, they split up the tomatoes into small basins and as a result, a crate worth would fetch you at least UGX 130,000/=. Studying these trends showed me that one could as well choose to simply work for three hours daily i.e. from 4am to 7am and retire for the day comfortable. With such an idea, all you need is to invest UGX 70,000/= in purchasing tomatoes today from the farmers who deliver and you will be able to multiply your money by at least 40% daily.

Doubling Your Productivity

Outside Catering: People eat food everyday, in offices, on occasions and everywhere. Many like me do not like leaving office to look for food to eat. However, if the food found us in the office, we wouldn’t mind buying. As a shrewd entrepreneur, you can position yourself as someone who identifies the market, have customers place orders with you and then establish restaurants or food vendors that you deal with to supply. As a ‘retailer’ you negotiate for a preferential rate per plate served, add your markup and offer such a much needed service.

Notice that you do not need to invest in cooking utensils and a heavy workforce that will keep you always on your toes. It’s a Do It Yourself kind of business that will only warrant taking on extra hands as it grows. You don’t even need UGX 50,000/= to embark on this.

To find out about opportunities in the Household sector, continue to Part 2 of this post.

James Wire is a Small Business and Technology Consultant based in Kampala, Uganda

Follow @wirejames on Twitter

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Fear Failure? Here’s how to overcome it


Jjumba (not real name), has tried his hands at a number of entrepreneurial partnerships with disastrous conclusions, now he is considering going it alone but has some inherent fear which is all summarised in this statement; “What if my capital is not enough or I don’t get clients for a long time?

Nancy (not real name) always excitedly builds business ideas, romanticises about them, gets peer approval and then stops dead in her tracks when it comes to implementation. She confessed to me that she usually gets gripped with the fear about what people will say and the potential financial setback she is likely to experience if the business idea doesn’t work out.

Many times we get so occupied worrying about the future based on our past experiences or knowledge and end up not acting in the present. This disease is of a similar trait to the procrastination that afflicts almost all human beings at various points in their lives.

So, Yes we fear to;

  • Lose money

  • Get into debt

  • Drop out of our circles of friends

  • Appear non-conformist i.e not doing what society expects of us

  • Rock the boat of stability we have built

  • Be seen as having failed

and many other fears that am sure you can add onto this list.

While fear seems to come naturally to us, it’s crucial that we find ways of overcoming it. Fear is probably a major reason the number of entrepreneurs is limited in the world today. These are some of the ways you can overcome fear of failure as an entrepreneur;

What’s wrong with me? Am I good enough? You occasionally get into bouts of self doubt and disbelief in your abilities. This breeds a level of inadequacy that makes you believe that something is not right. Everything is right about you and you only need to realise that many other success stories would never have been if feelings of inadequacy had been allowed to take over.

Bill Gates, the World’s richest man started a business called Traf-O-Data that failed miserably and he even ended up dropping out of Harvard University in the process. He however held onto his passion and vision for computers to later found Microsoft. The rest is history. It doesn’t matter how many times you have failed, you only have to be right once,Mark Cuban.

Avoid personalising failure. Failure should not be viewed as your identity. Take the case of this example from the Forbes Website; “There was a man who failed in business at age 21; was defeated in a legislative race at age 22; failed again in business at 24; overcome the death of his fiancée at 26; had a nervous breakdown at 27; lost a congressional race at 34; lost a senatorial race at age 45; failed to become Vice President at age 47; lost a senatorial race at 49; and was elected as the President of the United States at the age of 52. This man was Abraham Lincoln. He refused to let his failures define him and fought against significant odds to achieve greatness.”

Any entrepreneurial journey you embark upon will always have stumbling blocks along the way, this however doesn’t mean that you are the problem, all it means is that you have not found a successful way of doing that something you are passionate about.

Keep Mistakes alive. In rural Uganda, land ownership demarcation is largely done using plants (usually fast growing trees). Back in my village, we use one called ehiroowa which happens to be the Jatropha plant. Mistakes in business need not necessarily be buried and forgotten as soon as they are made, but should instead be used to act as boundary markers on what not to do along your entrepreneurial journey. By letting them play this role, they will always act as your GPS towards avoiding repeated failure in the same area. “Failures, repeated failures are finger posts on the road to achievement. One fails forward towards success,” to quote C.S Lewis.

Watch out for Perfectionism. Psychologists refer to Perfectionism as, “a personality trait characterized by a person’s striving for flawlessness and setting excessively high performance standards, accompanied by overly critical self-evaluations and concerns regarding others’ evaluations”. While it has its positives, the downsides tend to be manifested as fear of failure and depression which are closely linked to people who personalise failure.

One thing we all have to accept is that life can never follow the script that we design for it, there are always twists and turns along the way towards your goals. The same is true in business and it’s the reason we shouldn’t throw pity parties when hit by failure in business. When something fails to work out, move on to the next modification and quickly find out if that too can or can’t work.

At its root, perfectionism isn’t really about a deep love of being meticulous. It’s about fear. Fear of making a mistake. Fear of disappointing others. Fear of failure. Fear of success.” – Michael Law

Desist from Comparisons. The public and sometimes your very family are usually quick to make judgement when you fail. This concern tends to fill your mind with questions like; “What will my parents think about me?; Will my friends still want me around them?; Can I afford to maintain my lifestyle amidst the failure?” Concern for public opinion definitely can keep you in static mode and you need to disengage from it. Considering Abraham Lincoln’s numerous setbacks, he without doubt must have been a trending topic in the gossip corridors on a number of occasions but that didn’t deter his determination.

Worst Case Scenario. If the business doesn’t work out, what will happen to me?” This is a big concern for many going into business and unfortunately it’s further exacerbated by the images painted in our minds of what is likely to happen. Oftentimes our mental thought on this issue tends to veer to the extreme.

The best way to avoid being enslaved by this ‘Worst Case Scenario’ disease is to take time and assess it in detail, you might be surprised to find out that it might not be as bad as it looks.

Reach Out. When faced with failure, it always helps to reach out to people you either feel are already experienced in what you are attempting to do or even those that you could consider mentors. No man is an Island, so avoid bottling up all those questions and challenges. Alexis Carrel once said, “All of us, at certain moments of our lives need to take advice and to receive help from other people.”

I have found sharing a problem or fear with the right audience to be so beneficial and in most cases solution generating.

Rosa Parks, the famous American activist once said, “I have learned over the years that when one’s mind is made up, this diminishes fear; knowing what must be done does away with fear.”

Is your mind made up?

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