Tag Archives: sme

The Uchumi Supermarket Ponzi Scheme killing Small Businesses


The year was 2002, Uchumi Supermarket opened it’s first retail store outside the Kenyan borders in Kampala, Uganda amidst a lot of fanfare and pomp. The branding alone was enough to attract the trigger happy Kampala elite whose love and admiration for anything new lasts as long as it takes a matchstick to burn. I was among those sucked into the craze of shopping there and indeed the service levels were quite impressive. Little did I know that it was a matter of time before I became a supplier of this very supermarket chain.

In 2009, I was able to get one of my company’s products onto their shelves and honestly, it was such a big break for the business. What begun as a symbiotic affair where we supplied and were paid (albeit after a 45 – 60 day period), eventually became parasitic. The supermarket from as far back as 2010 begun falling back on its payment promises and one had to occasionally ‘go native’ in order to be considered for payment. Eventually we stopped supplying them and as a result accumulated unpaid invoices over two years old.

How did Uchumi respond to our plight as unpaid suppliers? The company simply took on new suppliers who had no idea how much of a bad business partner they were getting in bed with. These new suppliers would also supply for about a year then cease upon realising that they are offering interest and security free loans to Uchumi. The cycle continued to the extent that in one interaction with their Finance Manager a one Richard, I did warn him of the imminent collapse of the Ponzi Scheme they were engaging in. I proposed to him that a meeting between Uchumi Management and Suppliers would help generate ideas on how the situation could be turned around. Unfortunately, some of these powder milk stuffed corporate expatriates for lack of a better term have no clue about what it takes to maintain a business ecosystem and only focus on ensuring that their salaries hit the bank account as well as massaging the egos of their god fathers.

At this point I chose to sit on the sidelines and watch the gradual collapse of a giant. In a matter of just one year, the Uchumi Ponzi Scheme has fallen apart in Uganda. However, what do we learn from all this?

Small Businesses that form the bulk of suppliers to the supermarkets are the biggest victims of such corporate financed misadventures. Businesses that have outstanding payments with Uchumi of between US$ 500 and US$ 5000 are not less than 600. This translates to a supplier debt of at least US$ 1.5 Million. Now these are the businesses that you and me set up with plans of growing into something bigger tomorrow. To be made a fool of by such a major retailer that continued to carry out promotions even when they were at bleeding point is the biggest insult I have ever witnessed. I am only glad that our products are selling in most of the major retail outlets and the loss of Uchumi can’t drive us out of business but what happens to that Mama Mboga (Poor little lady who packs ground nuts and sim sim snacks to supply in order to fend for her fatherless children)? Family incomes are shattered, this has a rebounding effect on individuals’ lives but for the corporate smugglers in form of Managers and owners at Uchumi, it’s business as usual.

Look at this interesting trend, in 2002 when Uchumi came to Uganda, they were already facing teething problems in Kenya that led to the company being put under receivership in 2006 and eventually being delisted from the stock exchange. Uganda gave them a lifeline as it was a cash cow till the same internal thieving and stock control problems that caused the Kenyan collapse caught up with them. Now that Uchumi Uganda is on it’s knees (as expected anyway), they are rapidly opening up branches in Rwanda. One only wonders for how long they will profitably operate in that market before the same cancer that plagues the Kenyan and Ugandan operations permeates there. As of writing this, Uchumi has closed their Freedom City, Garden city, Nateete, Kabalagala and Gulu branches in Uganda. They are neck deep in lawsuits and it looks like this time round, the Kenyan Government just might not bail them out like it did in a politically brokered deal when the Kenyan operations had hit rock bottom.

The scene of this has been in the Supermarket space but similar cannibalistic attributes are being witnessed in different industry sectors. A friend that runs a small business that offers services to Advertising Companies keeps lamenting about the delayed payments that take at least six months to come through.

Why then should the Small Business owners always be blamed for the horrendous statistics quoted that “90% of Ugandan businesses never live to reach 5 years?” The major cause is clear and it is a cash flow problem usually induced by supposedly professionally run big businesses. The Uchumi Ponzi Scheme is a case in point.

Without appearing to be a prophet of doom, if Uchumi doesn’t clean up house right from the top (A fish starts rotting from the head – Acholi Saying) the Rwanda operations will bite the dust within two years from now leaving many small business owners destitute. Word coming in indicates that Uchumi Tanzania is likely to close shop soon too with suppliers and workers are already protesting.

Like the Telexfree fraud, Uchumi Supermarket is taking Suppliers on a wild goose chase.

Someone stop Uchumi’s Ponzi Scheme. NOW!!!

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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