It starts innocently. One Gmail address. All enquiries go there. You check it on your phone between client meetings. It works.
Then you hire someone. Now two people need access to the same inbox. Your assistant replies to a client you already replied to. A supplier’s quote sits unread for a week because you each thought the other would handle it. An important booking request gets buried under forty notifications from Facebook.
Sound familiar? It’s the most common growing pain I see in Kigali businesses.
The signs you’ve outgrown one inbox
- Client emails are getting missed or double-replied
- You can’t tell who on your team handled what
- Personal and business emails are mixed together
- Your inbox has become a to-do list you’re losing
- Clients complain about slow response times
The simple solution: separate addresses, one domain
With your own domain, you can create targeted inboxes:
- info@ — general enquiries (checked by reception or your assistant)
- bookings@ — appointments and reservations
- accounts@ — invoices, payments, financial correspondence
- hello@ — marketing and partnership enquiries
- yourname@ — your personal business address for direct client communication
Each inbox has a clear owner. No confusion about who’s responsible. No client messages lost in the noise.
Shared inboxes vs individual inboxes
For a team of 2–5, shared inboxes work well. Your assistant and receptionist both have access to info@ and bookings@. They can see each other’s replies, assign emails to each other, and nothing falls through the cracks.
Google Workspace and Microsoft 365 both support shared inboxes natively. It’s included in the standard business plan — no additional cost. For most Rwandan SMEs, this is more than enough.
What about WhatsApp?
I know. Half the business communication in Rwanda happens on WhatsApp. But WhatsApp has the same problem: one number, multiple people, no audit trail, no assignment system. If you’re using WhatsApp Business API (the multi-agent version), you get some of these features. But for formal communications — quotes, contracts, invoices — email is still the standard.
The best approach: WhatsApp for quick conversations, email for anything that needs a paper trail.
Getting started
The setup is straightforward:
- Get a domain (if you don’t have one)
- Set up business email with a provider that supports multiple inboxes
- Create 2–3 inboxes to start (info@, accounts@, your personal @)
- Set up email on everyone’s phone
- Agree on who checks what
Providers like Kisimenti include team email setup as part of their business packages. Google Workspace charges per user (around RWF 8,500/month each). Pick whatever fits your team size and budget.
Your business has outgrown one inbox. That’s a good problem to have — it means you’re growing. Now fix the inbox situation so you can keep growing without losing clients in the noise.