Short answer: yes.
Long answer: almost certainly yes, but it depends on what kind of business you run, where your customers find you, and whether you ever plan to grow beyond word-of-mouth. Letâs go through it honestly.
The numbers are clear
84% of consumers say a business with a website is more credible than one with only a social media page. 81% research a business online before buying. 62% will straight-up ignore a business that has no web presence at all.
Those numbers come from markets more digitally mature than Rwanda, sure. But Rwandaâs trajectory is moving fast. Internet penetration is growing. Mobile data is getting cheaper. Google searches for Kigali businesses are climbing every quarter. The consumers who donât check you online today will be checking tomorrow.
âBut I have Instagramâ
Instagram is not a website. Itâs a rented storefront on someone elseâs platform.
When Instagram changes its algorithm â and it does, constantly â your visibility drops overnight. You have zero control. You canât customise the layout. You canât add a booking form. You canât rank on Google. You canât even put a proper menu or price list thatâs easy to navigate.
80% of e-commerce sales happen on websites, not social media. Instagram is great for awareness. Itâs terrible as your only digital presence.
âBut I have WhatsAppâ
This is the big one in Rwanda. So many businesses run entirely on WhatsApp â and honestly, WhatsApp is brilliant for customer conversations. But it has a fatal flaw: Google canât find it.
When someone searches âbest salon in Remeraâ or âcatering services Kigali,â your WhatsApp number doesnât show up. A website does. A Google Business Profile does. WhatsApp is invisible to everyone who doesnât already have your number.
WhatsApp also has a response problem. 67% of customers will move to a competitor if they donât get a response within 60 minutes. A website works 24/7. It answers questions, shows your portfolio, takes bookings, and displays your prices while youâre asleep.
When you might NOT need a website (honestly)
There are a few situations where a website genuinely isnât necessary:
- Youâre a solo freelancer whose clients come exclusively through personal referrals
- Youâre running a small market stall with no plans to expand
- Youâre doing contract work for a single client
But even in those cases, a simple one-page website costs so little that itâs worth having just for the credibility bump. Think of it as a digital business card that works when youâre not in the room.
What a website actually does for you
- Gets you found on Google â People searching for what you sell can actually find you. This is free, ongoing traffic.
- Builds credibility â It signals that youâre a serious, established business. Not a side project.
- Works 24/7 â Your website answers questions, shows your work, and takes enquiries while you sleep.
- Gives you a professional email â A domain means you can have [email protected] instead of [email protected].
- You own it â Unlike Instagram or TikTok, nobody can change the algorithm and make you disappear.
âBut itâs too expensiveâ
It used to be. A custom website from a freelance developer in Kigali would run you RWF 500,000 to RWF 2,000,000. And then youâd need hosting, maintenance, updates, and youâd be stuck whenever you wanted to change something.
Today there are services â Kisimenti being one â that build and maintain your website as a monthly package, starting from around RWF 30,000/month. That includes design, hosting, updates, and support. No massive upfront cost. No technical skills needed.
For context: RWF 30,000 a month is one dinner for two at a mid-range Kigali restaurant. Thatâs the cost of your business being findable, credible, and professional online.
The real question
The question isnât âdo I need a website?â The question is âhow many clients am I losing right now because I donât have one?â Youâll never know the exact number. Thatâs the problem â the cost of not having a website is invisible. The clients who didnât contact you, the Google searches that didnât find you, the proposals that didnât feel credible enough.
62% of consumers ignore businesses without a web presence. If even a fraction of that applies to your market, a website isnât an expense. Itâs the cheapest growth investment youâll make.