Kenya’s small and medium enterprises employ over 15 million people. James Ngugi explains why empowering SMEs with technology is the fastest path to economic transformation
Walk through any town in Kenya and you’ll see the real engine of our economy. The mama mboga selling vegetables. The agrovet supplying farmers. The salon with three chairs and a dream. The hardware store that knows every contractor in the neighbourhood.
Kenya has over 7 million small and medium enterprises. Together, they employ more than 15 million people. That’s more than the public sector, more than the multinationals, more than the tech startups that dominate headlines. SMEs are our economy.
Yet most technology solutions aren’t built for them.
The Gap Between Promises and Reality
Visit any tech conference and you’ll hear about enterprise solutions, digital transformation, and Industry 4.0. The case studies feature banks and telcos. The pricing assumes corporate budgets. The features require dedicated IT teams.
Meanwhile, the retailer in Kitengela is tracking inventory in a school exercise book. The salon owner in Kawangware pays staff based on memory and trust. The agrovet in Nakuru has no idea which products are actually profitable.
This is the gap we should be obsessing over. Not because SMEs can’t afford technology – many are spending more on inefficiency than software would cost. But because the technology being built doesn’t speak their language or solve their actual problems.
What SMEs Actually Need
After years of building products for small businesses, I’ve learned that SME technology must be three things: simple, affordable, and immediately useful.
- Simple means no training manuals. If a business owner can use WhatsApp, they should be able to use your product. Every extra step is a barrier to adoption.
- Affordable doesn’t mean cheap – it means priced to the value delivered. A POS system that saves three hours weekly in reconciliation is worth paying for. A HR system that eliminates payroll errors pays for itself.
- Immediately useful means solving today’s problem today. Not promising transformation in six months. Not requiring behaviour change before benefits appear. Day one should feel better than day zero.
The Multiplier Effect
Here’s why this matters beyond individual businesses. When an SME becomes more efficient, they hire more people. When they track inventory properly, they reduce waste and increase margins. When they access proper financial tools, they can plan and grow.
Multiply this across 7 million enterprises and the impact is staggering. We don’t need a few tech unicorns to transform Kenya’s economy. We need millions of small businesses operating just 10% more efficiently.
That’s the vision driving our work at Deadan Group. With dPOS serving over 135 SMEs and HimaHR supporting thousands of employees, we’re seeing the multiplier effect firsthand. But we’ve barely scratched the surface.
“We don’t need a few tech unicorns to transform Kenya’s economy. We need millions of small businesses operating just 10% more efficiently…”





The Opportunity Ahead
Kenya’s economic future will be built by its small businesses. The question is whether technology will accelerate that journey or remain inaccessible to those who need it most. For those of us building solutions, the opportunity – and responsibility – is clear. Build for the 7 million, and you build for Kenya.