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How to Stay on Top of Your Supply Chain

Unreliable suppliers can cripple your business. Here’s how to build strong supplier relationships, negotiate better terms, and never run out of critical stock.

Daniel Karenzi · Business technology writer based in Kigali
Published Updated 6 min read

A bakery in Kimironko had one flour supplier. When that supplier had a stock issue for two weeks, the bakery couldn’t produce. Two weeks without bread. Customers went elsewhere. Some didn’t come back.

One supplier = one point of failure. Here’s how to avoid that.

Rule 1: Never depend on a single supplier

For any critical input, have at least two suppliers. The primary handles 70–80% of your needs. The backup handles the rest or stands ready. When (not if) your primary fails, you have a fallback.

Rule 2: Track everything

Keep records of:

  • What you ordered, when, and at what price
  • Delivery dates — were they on time?
  • Quality — did you have to reject or return anything?
  • Payment terms — what’s the credit period?

A simple spreadsheet works. Review it quarterly. Patterns emerge: this supplier is always late, that one’s quality has been slipping, this one consistently delivers. Act on the patterns.

Rule 3: Negotiate with data

When you have three months of order history, you can negotiate from strength:

  • “I’ve been ordering RWF 2M/month from you consistently — what volume discount can you offer?”
  • “I’ve had three late deliveries this quarter. Can we agree on a penalty clause for late delivery?”
  • “I’m considering splitting my orders with another supplier. What would keep me consolidated with you?”

Rule 4: Pay on time (or use terms strategically)

Pay your suppliers on time and they’ll prioritise you during shortages. But don’t pay early unless there’s a discount — cash flow matters.

Negotiate 30-day terms if possible. This gives you breathing room between receiving goods and paying for them — critical for cash flow management.

Rule 5: Build relationships, not just transactions

In Rwanda’s business culture, relationships matter enormously. Know your suppliers personally. Visit their operations. Understand their challenges. When you’re more than just an order number, you get better service, advance warning of price changes, and priority treatment during shortages.

Track your suppliers and orders using a business dashboard or even a dedicated tab in your accounting spreadsheet. The businesses that manage their supply chain proactively are the ones that never have to tell a customer “sorry, we’re out of stock.”

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How to Stay on Top of Your Supply Chain — Kisimenti Blog