Geopolitical tensions from Venezuela to the Middle East are forcing Nairobi's startup founders to adapt financing strategies and accelerate revenue timelines.
As capital pours into Nairobi's innovation districts, economic indicators reveal both explosive growth and structural challenges that investors must navigate carefully.
As household expenses soar, a new generation of financial apps and services targeting stretched middle-class budgets is attracting venture capital and reshaping how the city manages money.
As delivery-first dining models explode across the city, hospitality workers face a new reality of fewer front-of-house roles and higher digital skill demands.
As commercial property values shift across Westlands and the CBD, savvy investors are decoding what rental trends and vacancy rates reveal about Kenya's investment appetite.
As inflation pressures mount across the hospitality sector, your favorite restaurants and food vendors are passing costs to consumers—here's what's happening and how to navigate it.
As global companies embrace distributed teams, Nairobi's skilled workforce is commanding premium salaries while traditional office corridors in Westlands face a reckoning.
As supply chains fracture from Venezuela to the Middle East, Nairobi's consumers face hidden costs in everything from cooking oil to smartphone prices.
As cost of living pressures squeeze middle-income earners, one entrepreneur's savings app is proving there's a market—and a margin—in financial inclusion.
As small traders across the city's prime neighbourhoods navigate rising rents and shifting consumer habits, understanding their margins could reshape how you spend your shillings.
Rising rents in prime locations, a shift toward hybrid work spaces, and growing demand in emerging hubs are reshaping where Nairobi's companies choose to set up shop.
As demand for residential units outpaces supply across the capital, early movers in the real estate sector are capturing outsized returns while ordinary Kenyans grapple with rents that have surged 18% in two years.
As global capital flows shift amid geopolitical tensions, Nairobi's business leaders are decoding what commodity prices and currency movements mean for local prosperity.
As consumer spending rebounds and foot traffic returns to Nairobi's commercial hubs, established operators and new entrants are reaping rewards from a structural shift towards experiential dining.