I helped a friend set up her business email last month. She’d been putting it off for a year, convinced it was complicated. The whole thing took twelve minutes.
Here’s the exact process, no tech background required.
What you need before you start
- A domain name (like yourbusiness.com or yourbusiness.rw). If you don’t have one, register it first — takes five minutes and costs around RWF 15,000/year for .com
- A credit/debit card or MoMo for payment
- About 15 minutes of uninterrupted time
Step 1: Choose your email provider
Three solid options for businesses in Rwanda:
- Google Workspace — RWF 8,400/month per user. Gmail interface, 30GB storage, Google Docs/Drive included. Best if your team already uses Gmail personally
- Zoho Mail — Free for up to 5 users (5GB each), paid plans from RWF 1,500/month. Good budget option
- Bundled with your website — providers like Kisimenti include email with website packages. Simplest setup since everything is in one place
Step 2: Add your domain
Every provider asks you to verify that you own the domain. This usually means adding a small text record (called a TXT record) to your domain’s DNS settings. The provider gives you the exact text to copy and paste.
If that sounds intimidating: it’s literally copy, paste, save. Your domain registrar’s dashboard has a DNS section. Go there, click “Add Record”, paste the text, done. Most providers have a step-by-step guide with screenshots.
Step 3: Create your email addresses
Start with these:
- [email protected] — general enquiries
- [email protected] — friendlier alternative to info@
- [email protected] — your personal business address
You can always add more later. Most plans allow at least 5–10 addresses.
Step 4: Update your MX records
MX records tell the internet where to deliver emails sent to your domain. Your provider gives you the exact MX records to enter. Same process as the TXT record — go to your DNS settings, add MX records, save.
This step takes about two minutes. The records can take up to 48 hours to propagate globally, but in practice it’s usually working within an hour.
Step 5: Send a test email
Log into your new email, send a message to your personal Gmail or Yahoo account. Then reply from that account. If both arrive, you’re done.
Common mistakes to avoid
- Don’t create info@, hello@, support@, sales@, and admin@ on day one. Start with two and add as needed
- Don’t use your ISP’s email (like [email protected]) as your business email. It’s tied to your internet provider
- Don’t forget to add your new email to your phone. Every provider has an app or supports IMAP/POP3 setup
- Don’t skip the email signature. Set up a professional signature with your name, title, phone, and website
That’s it. Fifteen minutes, most of which is waiting for DNS to propagate. Your business now has a professional email that matches your brand, works on every device, and doesn’t have @gmail.com at the end.