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The Hidden Cost of Not Having a Business Website

You’re not saving money by not having a website. You’re losing clients you’ll never know about — the ones who searched, didn’t find you, and called your competitor instead.

Daniel Karenzi · Business technology writer based in Kigali
Published Updated 7 min read

A restaurant owner in Gisimenti told me she didn’t need a website. “All my customers find me through word of mouth,” she said. “Why would I pay for something I don’t need?”

I asked her how she knew. How did she know how many people had searched “restaurant Gisimenti” on Google, found her competitor’s website instead, and never walked through her door? She paused. She didn’t know. That’s the thing about the cost of not having a website — it’s invisible.

The customers you’ll never meet

When someone searches for a product or service you offer and you don’t show up, they don’t leave a message. They don’t try harder. They click on whoever does show up. Your competitor gets the call. You don’t even know it happened.

31% of consumers have decided against buying from a business because it lacked a website. Not because the business was bad — because they couldn’t verify it was real. 62% will ignore a business without any web presence at all.

31%
of shoppers
decided against a business because it lacked a website

The credibility tax

Without a website, every new client interaction starts from a deficit. You have to work harder to prove you’re legitimate. You can’t point them to a portfolio. You can’t show testimonials. You can’t demonstrate past work. Everything is verbal, which means everything depends on how good you are at selling yourself in a conversation.

With a website, the selling happens before the conversation starts. By the time a client contacts you, they’ve already seen your work, read your services, maybe checked your pricing. They’re 80% convinced before they pick up the phone.

What it actually costs to not have one

Let’s put rough numbers on it. Say your business could attract just 5 additional enquiries per month through Google search. If you close 20% of those, that’s one new client per month. If your average client is worth RWF 200,000, that’s RWF 2.4 million per year in revenue you’re not getting.

A website costs RWF 30,000–80,000 per month. Annual cost: RWF 360,000–960,000. Against RWF 2.4 million in potential revenue, the payback is obvious. And those are conservative numbers — many businesses see far more traffic than five enquiries a month.

The compounding effect

Here’s what most people miss: SEO compounds over time. A website that’s been live for two years ranks better than one that went up last week. Every month you delay is a month where your competitor’s website is getting older, building authority, and becoming harder to overtake.

Starting today means you’ll be ranking for your keywords a year from now. Starting a year from now means you’ll be ranking two years from now — while your competitor has a three-year head start.

“I can’t afford a website”

You can’t afford not to have one. But I understand the concern. The old model — paying a developer RWF 500,000–1,000,000 upfront — was genuinely prohibitive for many small businesses.

The new model is different. Services like Kisimenti offer professionally designed websites on a monthly subscription — starting from about RWF 30,000/month. That includes design, hosting, maintenance, and updates. No upfront cost. No technical skills needed. Cancel anytime.

RWF 30,000 a month. That’s a meal at a nice restaurant. That’s the cost of being findable, credible, and professional online. The cost of not paying it is every customer who searched, didn’t find you, and never came back.

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The Hidden Cost of Not Having a Business Website — Kisimenti Blog