I see this all the time. A business has a great website at yourbusiness.rw. Professional design, good content, clear branding. Then they send you an email from [email protected]. The branding disconnect is jarring.
If you already own a domain, youâre sitting on an unused asset. That same domain can power your email â and the setup takes less time than your morning commute.
Why your email should match your website
When someone visits yourbusiness.rw and then gets an email from [email protected], everything is consistent. The domain reinforces the brand at every touchpoint.
When they visit yourbusiness.rw but get email from [email protected], it raises questions. Is this the same company? Is this legitimate? Did they just not bother?
How to set it up
You have two options:
Option A: Add email through your hosting provider
If your website is hosted with a provider that offers email (like Kisimenti, cPanel hosts, or Plesk-based hosts), you can usually add email mailboxes from the same dashboard. No separate DNS work needed â the MX records are already pointed at the right place.
Option B: Use a standalone email provider
Sign up for Google Workspace, Zoho, or Microsoft 365. Theyâll ask you to verify your domain (add a TXT record) and point your MX records to their servers. Your website stays where it is. Only the email routing changes.
Either way, the process is:
- Choose email provider
- Verify domain ownership (add TXT record)
- Update MX records (the provider gives you the exact values)
- Create your email addresses
- Download the app on your phone
- Update your email signature, business cards, and website contact page
What if I use a website builder?
Wix, Squarespace, and WordPress.com all offer email add-ons or partnerships with email providers. Check your platformâs email section â thereâs usually a built-in option.
You have the domain. You have the website. The email is the missing piece that ties everything together. Ten minutes of setup gives you brand consistency that lasts for years.