Monday, 26 September 2011

KPLC and power

A solar Panel - not sure what they are powering here though!
A typical and serious enterpreneur need to keep records; these maybe on paper or electronic. For a normal kenyan, there is also a need to power.

For a country situation at the equator and has on average 12 hours of sunlight throughout the year, you would think there was a lot of awareness and usage of clean energy - solar energy

I would be the first one to admit that it is easy to get comfortable in what we know rather than venture into 'unnecessary hustle' of getting into something new. However, here is a list of some websites with the information on solar energy products; i havent used them personally, but it surely will be better than having black outs 7 days a week.
http://www.solanterns.com/ - they dont say where you can buy the products but i am sure somewhere in Industrial area would play home for them; at best just email them via the contact details for where to buy their products. A lantern cost KES 2,000; a lot yet little enough to enable some kind in a disadvantaged family/situation do homework and keep up in school for a better future. They do have many more products as well

Toughstuff is another - http://www.toughstuffonline.com/pages/toughstuffs-modular-product-range their product are also affordable for the intended market. Am not sure they do large scale solar panel but i suppose if you need energy for your phone, general basic lighting and minimal computer use their kit would do. Once again am not sure where their products are sold in Kenya but it looks like they have adopted TOMS model of buy one and donate one!

others - http://portablelight.org/about and barefoot energy - nickg@barefootpower.com

obviously the big boys like Multichoice Kenya etc might have bigger more expensive products for the solar needs.

Friday, 23 September 2011

Case 1 - The farmer cashing in!

In the last couple days I have been writing down some good business ideas I would like to get into. I have searched the internet for endless amount of hours and there seems to be a lack of ideas or information in Kenya. The reason I don’t know but I thought well, I will get sharing what I have found in my others source. 

My first case is close to home; actually it is from home. I had an interesting chat with my Uncle about his farming. He is a qualified accountant just below age of 50 and no longer wants to wear a suit and go to ‘work’ every day 5 days a week. He lives on my grandmothers’ land rent free as it is the custom with the Kikuyus. He used to farm cash crops which he has now given up for a rather lazy but very profitable venture as he call it. 

The usual cash crops for this area (Nyeri) are baby corn, French beans, onions, leeks, peas, flowers and other quick growing back breaking crops that the locals tend not to consume. The fact that the locals don’t consume the produce leads to volatile pricing further deteriorated by the fact that all the above favoured crops are perishables. Needless to say, there are no fridges/freezers in this household and many others and thus the produce goes off in a day after harvest. The real reason they grow the crops is the fact that the land is small and there are many mouths to feed. It thus makes more sense to the locals to farm cash crops for export and spend the money for food. The same piece of land would not produce enough food to feed the entire family. 

So what is the lazy more profitable option to growing cash crops? Well, fish farming. To this I was not quite sure this was a viable idea, but he had his facts right. 

He needs water, and not too much of it. A pond measuring about 3 meters deep and 5meters by 5 meters wide and long. The pond is not permanently walled i.e. it is a simple dug out hole on the ground with a way for water to get in and get out occasionally. He then bought 2,000 fingerlings for KES 3,000 and then hoped for the best. The feedS are quite simple; he feeds the fish ¼ kilo of fish meal twice a day. A 50 kg bag costs him KES 2,800. The fish food portions would increase as the fish grow bigger to about 1 kilo of food twice a day. After a cool 8 months he will be ready to sell his fish. The fish is Tilapia and it lays eggs and reproduces in the same pond without much help. The down side is that you cannot see the fish in the pond as the water is murky; but this doesn’t kill the fish apparently. 

So here are the figures 

A pond – 3 meters deep, 5 by 5 meters wide and long, supplied by a river – this is a week job for 4 men – say a cool KES 7,000 

Fingerlings – 2000 of them costing KES 3,000; approx KES 1.5 each 

Feeds – approximately 300 kilos i.e. 6 bags of the 50 kilo bags – KES 16,800 spread over 8 months 

Labour – Not much as just finding and the occasional cleaning say a generous KES 5,000 a month 

Overall cost (ignoring cost of capital and pond digging cost) = KES 66, 800; Lets say KES 70,000 

Revenue

Fish sale – There is a ready market for fish at KES 300 per kilo; the company buying the fish fillets for export

I fish is ¾ a kilo – so KES 225 a fish

Assuming he sells only a 1000 of the fish and ¾ kilos the sale revenue would be KES 225,000 in 8 months. Less the cost of KES 70000, he would have made KES 155,000 in 8 months and still has the pond and another 1000 fish to breed.

That is an approximate KES 20,000 a month; not bad, in fact very good for someone with no monthly rent or high transport bill to pay.

With this kind of idea well documented to the taste of the branch loan manager, I think Equity bank or any other micro finance lender would be more than willing to offer an unsecured loan of a reasonable amount. 

Food for thought!




The fish Pond and the feeding! Simple ha!

Thursday, 22 September 2011

Kenyan Law - slippery like a trout!

http://uk.news.yahoo.com/second-man-charged-over-brits-kenya-attack-154205206.html

In the recent news a British Lady has been taken hostage by the Somalis (Allegedly/suspected) who also murdered the husband. I can only imagine the trauma this has caused the family and all involved!

In the court are two Kenyans who at gun point helped this attackers access the hotel.

I for one I fail to logically reason with the scenario, if the Kenyan Government didnt provide security to the villagers who were attacked and forced to help a raid, why should they then prosecute the same citizens they didnt provide security with? I know that the Commissioner did say he didnt have a clue what happened or who attacked or where they took the lady. In fact his words were that they will wait it out until the pirates contacted the police or the British High Commissioner for a ranson. Great!

So what changed? Well, the BBC and other international media agencies found their way to the secluded resort and started showing photos of the to die for kenyan White Sand with the tag line - come visit here and die!  Then some action had to be taken by the Kenyan Government and the police or anyone who legally held a gun - so they made some arrests. Unfortunately the guys who should be getting some professional help on their welfare thanks to the trauma they had to endure are the suspects and they are 'guilty until proven innocent' .

Well if you think this is anything new in the Kenyan Law scene, You are wrong! This is the case for construction permits, business licences and just about anything else that is guided by the Kenyan Law. The law is loud and clear, its application is very much hit and miss depending on who you are, how much you got and what you offer. Just have a look at the Ocampo and now the arrest of these guys who never planned for the kidnapping, knew nothing about it and all they did was just lead the criminals on the bush tracks on gun point to the resort.

Kenyan Law, Slipperly like a trout!

Wednesday, 21 September 2011

Day one

Day one
My name is Jane, 28 years old and a business graduate working in an office environment. I Am Kenyan and brought up by a mother who is both a primary school teacher and a thriving entrepreneur; she also has very high hopes for me to progress in the career I am in. I don’t want to make money for anyone else anymore and want to be an entrepreneur.

Over the last 4 years I have researched several interesting business ideas online. I have used such resources as http://www.entrepreneur.com and others. The thing is I either don’t have the time to research the ideas in the local market or I think that the per capita income in Kenya and moreso my favoured location is too low to sustain the business ideas they have outline in the blog listed above. The other issue is the capita; I only seem to make enough for my existence and if there is one thing I know is that promotion is not coming up and there is no chance in life I will be able to do all those many expensive things I need to do in life with this kind of wage. So there you go, there is my push out of my job and into something with a much better pay.

In this blog I will outline the ideas I have come up in the past, steps I have taken and what made me not make the move. I am hoping that by getting this out of my system will help someone out there as well as help me make the move I so need. I sure hope my manager doesn’t get wind of this before I am ready to make the jump!

Jane