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Business Networking in Rwanda: Events and Groups

In Rwanda’s business culture, relationships come before transactions. Here’s where to build the network that builds your business.

Marie-Claire Uwimana · Digital marketing and business growth, Kigali
Published Updated 6 min read

My best clients didn’t come from ads or cold emails. They came from people I met at events, coworking spaces, and through introductions. In Rwanda, business is fundamentally relationship-driven. Your network isn’t just nice to have — it’s your primary growth channel.

Regular networking events

  • PSF Business Breakfasts — Private Sector Federation hosts regular breakfast networking events. Good mix of established and emerging businesses
  • Impact Hub events — weekly or monthly gatherings focused on entrepreneurship and social impact
  • Norrsken community events — tech-focused networking, investor presentations, founder stories
  • Chamber of Commerce events — sector-specific networking through AmCham, British Chamber, and others
  • Rwanda Tech Community meetups — for tech-focused businesses and developers

Annual conferences worth attending

  • Transform Africa Summit — the big one. Technology, innovation, government. Good for visibility and high-level connections
  • Africa CEO Forum — when held in Kigali, attracts continental business leaders
  • YouthConnekt Africa — youth entrepreneurship focused. Great for under-35 founders
  • AWEIF — women entrepreneurs specifically

Online networking

  • LinkedIn — Kigali’s professional community is active on LinkedIn. Share insights, comment on posts, build your profile
  • WhatsApp groups — industry-specific groups are the backbone of Kigali’s business communication. Ask your contacts to add you to relevant ones
  • Twitter/X — Rwanda’s tech and policy community is active here

Networking tips for Rwanda

  1. Follow up within 24 hours — send a WhatsApp message after meeting someone. Reference the conversation
  2. Give before you ask — make introductions, share useful information, help first
  3. Be consistent — show up regularly to the same events. Familiarity builds trust
  4. Have your digital presence ready — when someone Googles you after meeting you, a professional website and matching email reinforce the impression you made in person
  5. Join one or two groups and go deep — don’t spread across ten groups. Be known in a few

Kigali is a small city with a tight business community. Your reputation compounds quickly — for better or worse. Show up, be genuine, give value, and the business will follow.

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Business Networking in Rwanda: Events and Groups — Kisimenti Blog