Tag Archives: start-up

How much money do I need to start business?


A week hardly goes by without being asked how much money it takes to start a business. On each occasion, I labour to explain why you just can’t sit and come up with a figure out of the blue.

Prior to August 2008, Mr. David Kabiswa was leading a near peasant life in Masaka district. As a wood curver, he made some income by selling crafts while complementing his meagre income with subsistence farming and occasional moonlighting as a teacher in a Primary school. Life was slow and money that others spend on an average shopping visit in a supermarket was a pipe dream to him.

One day, he was invited by a Women’s Group to an event in Kitaka, Nyendo. That is where he met a team from the Uganda Health Marketing Group and Base Technologies (now Barefoot Power Uganda Ltd). His interaction during that event earned him an opportunity to attend a Solar Micro Entrepreneur training that had been scheduled by Base Technologies. This training was a very big eye opener for him as he was able to realise the potential that lay in extending clean energy solutions to his rural environs.

Armed with UGX 110,000/= that August, Mr. Kabiswa invested in his first purchase of Solar Lamps to kickstart his new venture. What started as a ‘let me try and see‘ kind of activity turned into serious business which is now fully registered as Kabiswa Genuine Solar Solutions operating in over three districts with five branches located in Bukuya, Maddu, Bukomansimbi, Kiwangala and Bijjaba. Six years down the road, his operation earns him at least UGX 11,000,000/= (Eleven Million) monthly and offers direct and indirect employment to hundreds.

Now I know the debate begins here on whether actually he started off with what he claims or not. We could choose to get as detailed as we can if we want to, however, the moral of his story/experience is that from an insignificant financial investment he has been able to get so much. Just like a seed, what he invested has given birth to much much more.

We therefore don’t need to always focus on the financial outlay of our intended businesses otherwise we are likely to become non starters. Business is dependent on Opportunity and Resources. How well one harnesses the resources around them determines how far they get. It’s important for one to appreciate that money isn’t the only resource required to start a business. Resources come in-kind like skills attained, property, network of people, location among others.

Have you identified a challenge in your community? Are you passionate about addressing it? Lets take the case of the ever growing rural-urban migration. It has a direct impact on food demand and production. One might want to tap into the supply of beans since it is a commonly consumed sauce in Uganda. If you looked at the opportunity in its entirety, you’d stop dead in the tracks. Questions like;

  • How much do I need to purchase the beans from the farmers?
  • How will I store them and at what cost?
  • How will I transport the beans to Kampala?
  • What do I need to bypass all the traffic officers along the way that need bribes?
  • Where will I store the beans once they reach Kampala?
  • What sales outlet will I use to wholesale/retail the beans?

Depending on your mindset, you would be led to imagine that this opportunity requires at least UGX 15 Million simply because you are considering purchasing a tonne of beans for starters, hire/rent a store in the village, hire a truck to bring your beans to Kampala, hire a warehouse in Kampala to store the beans and finally rent a sales outlet. This might freak you out and cause you to either postpone implementation of the venture or abandon it entirely. Whenever you’re preoccupied with the money as you plan for that new business then know you aren’t ready yet. Don’t focus on the money, focus on the opportunity before you. Identify ways of pulling it off with the least use of financial resources as possible.

  • Do you for example have a rural home with some empty rooms that you could use as a store for the purchased produce?
  • Are there suppliers you can deal with on the basis of trust and pay them after selling off the products?
  • Can you bargain for a discount when it comes to upfront cash payments?
  • Can you partner with other produce dealers and share transport costs by hiring a single truck?
  • Have you explored the option of reducing the initial quantities purchased?
  • You could market your produce in advance such that its delivered to the customer(s) upon arrival in Kampala (This could save you urban storage costs)

From another perspective, you might be planning to set up a business in the City that offers services. Looking at your Business plan, the financial outlay could freak you out as it involves renting an office (6 months upfront rent), buying furniture, acquiring relevant licenses, hiring employees, day to day costs of the business, salaries, the list is endless. Don’t get held up by these figures. Think of ways you can avoid certain cost centres for starters. Case in point;

  • If your customers don’t need to visit your office, can you operate without fixed office premises for starters?
  • Do your parents, friends or acquaintances have an abandoned garage in their home that you can use as an operational base?
  • Can you hold on hiring staff and carry out multiple tasks until the cash-flow situation improves?
  • Can you opt for some cheap furniture especially through the second hand market?
  • Can you use the online world especially social media to build your business and interact with potential clients?
  • Can you get a friend with accounting skills to help you with finances on a pro bono basis in the meantime as you also counter offer them some services?
  • You may consider parking that car and using public means to move around as you work.
  • Consider scaling down on your personal expenses so they don’t hurt the potentially available money to incubate the business.
Business is usually rugged but there-in lies a crevice leading you to success

Business is usually rugged but there-in lies a crevice leading you to success

Will it be as easy as I just stated? Of course not. In such situations, one should be ready for a bootstrap approach. Spend minimally, delay the outflow of cash if possible, try as much as possible to sell on cash basis, you might be required to compromise on your comfort e.g. travelling on the back of the truck in the night as your cargo is making its way to Kampala, among other measures. They may seem mean but hey, who said entrepreneurship is a roller coaster? Its the reason we have more Worker bees than Queen bees.

St Francis of Assisi said, “Start by doing what is necessary, then do what is possible and suddenly you are doing the impossible.”

Mrs Enid Tuzaire a member of CELAC Bushenyi is an enterprising farmer who decided to save the UGX 2000/= that she had been paid as transport allowance to attend a workshop and use it for purchasing Tomato Seeds. She initially planted on a small piece of land but today boasts of 5 acres of Tomatoes.

If you believe in yourself, anything is possible,” once said Miley Cyrus.

Don’t be bothered by the money. There are always ways around it.

Want to start a business? Just do it !!


A while back, a lowly educated young man looking for what to do chanced upon the idea of selling fish. With a measly investment, he set up a table next to the Jinja Road Highway at Kigunga Trading centre armed with a panga, knife, weighing scale and a charcoal stove. He bought his first Nile Perch fish and displayed it for sale. By the end of the day, he had sold half of it and conveniently decided to deep fry what was left selling it off as a snack to the residents of the nearby shops and homes. Today, he comfortably sells not less than two fish of which each is likely to weigh at least 20 Kgs. As a result he’s been able to cater for his livelihood needs as well as engage in some investments outside this business.

In Uganda, we have three categories of entrepreneurs according to my observation. They are;

Necessity Entrepreneurs; These are people who have no choice and become entrepreneurs as a survival strategy. They are largely uneducated and can’t easily get jobs in the formal sector while the options in the informal sector cant allow them to effectively survive. They are the ones you find engaging in what is considered ‘petty’ work like hawking, shop keeping, slashing compounds e.t.c. They are the largest by number. The young man mentioned above lies in this category.

Innovative Entrepreneurs; This is the smallest subsection and usually is characterised by educated people who either have traveled widely (internationally) or are widely read. Others are also educated and tend to have some level of comfort zone financially that allows then to dream without being pre-occupied by the need to survive. They look at the society’s challenges and come up with possible solutions. Some fail from the word go while others hit with a big bang. You’re likely to find these in the mushrooming innovation hubs of Kampala and lately Universities.

Security Entrepreneurs; If you anonymously interviewed working professionals in Uganda, you’ll find many of them confessing that they don’t trust their employers enough to stake their lifeline on the job. This has led to working people trying to have a side business. It is known and now even acceptable to see an Engineer of a Telecom Company by day turning into a Chicken farmer and Egg vendor over the weekend. This has been borne out of our weak labour laws and history of insecurity in all spheres that made us adapt to these individual survival instincts.

I have been led to share this simple story because of a tendency I see among the educated elite. While many nurse entrepreneurship ambitions, are able to identify business opportunities, have the relevant knowledge or access to resources to carry out studies on the investment, can attract significant funding especially through the readily available salary loans, they hardly get started.

In most cases they get entangled in what I refer to as Paralysis of Analysis. They have a tendency to over analyse the opportunity at hand thereby getting stuck in calculating figures and trying to conform to economic theories. All this in the name of Calculating Risk. The eventual result is getting stranded like a dazed sheep on the road struck by headlights of an oncoming car in the middle of the night.

Others having read all these investment and entrepreneurship books usually authored with the Developed economies in mind tend to have a preference for wastefully spending money before even generating that first income.

I had this client that wanted to set up a spice packaging business and on probing him further, I realised that he had made up his mind to fly to China to identify the kind of machine he needs to package the spices. The cost of this discovery trip alone was estimated at close to US$ 5000. When asked if he had already come up with the product and sampled it through relatives and friends to establish his chances, he responded in the negative. He had already employed the services of a Financial Advisor/Consultant who had laid out an investment plan for him of close to US$ 30,000 complete with how he can borrow the money. I shed a tear for him because I could clearly see the roadblocks that were being put before him prior to realising his dream. As someone who has set up small businesses over time, I fully understood where he was coming from and what he wanted to do but the path he was taking was likely to lead him into a ditch. He hadn’t even considered issues like Distribution which are key to the success of such home consumables.

Eventually, I gave him my honest analysis of his situation and showed him how he could start off that business with less than US$ 100 and grow organically. Unfortunately, he’s never returned and last I heard he’s still planning to start the business (Our interaction was eight months ago).

While I appreciate the need to mitigate risk when embarking on a business investment, we shoudn’t be overwhelmed by the analysis around these factors. Its important to apply a leap of faith and start. Often times starting in a lean manner is the best way as it allows you to take a calculated risk. Just like the example of my client, losing US$ 100 would be less impactful on him than losing US$ 35,000. Besides, sometimes starting small allows you to grow into the business and master the loopholes. This is one of the reasons that explains why for a long time the leading business people in Uganda were mainly uneducated people. Having started off as Entrepreneurs by necessity, they had no choice but to DO. While they may have burnt their fingers (an experience each entrepreneur must face) on a number of occasions, they eventually pulled through.

So, are you educated? Holding on to a job? Toying with entrepreneurship? Spend less time eulogising and romancing with your idea. Strike a middle ground between Detailed Analysis and Just Doing. START NOW !!!