KAMPALA, Uganda — Success stories dominate conversations about entrepreneurship. Failed ventures rarely receive the same attention.
Across Uganda, thousands of small businesses open every year with the hope of creating jobs, generating income and building long-term wealth. Many never survive beyond their first few years.
For entrepreneurs who experience failure, the challenge often extends beyond financial loss. It can mean rebuilding confidence, finding new opportunities and deciding whether to start again.
The story of entrepreneur Mr. Ssekaayi Simon reflects a reality that is becoming increasingly familiar in Uganda’s business landscape: success is rarely a straight line.
The difficult road to self-employment
Like many Ugandans, Mr. Simon’s entry into business was not driven by access to capital or formal training.
His early years were spent earning a living as a boda boda rider before he moved into shopkeeping, gaining practical experience in customer relations, stock management and the day-to-day pressures of small-scale trade.
For many entrepreneurs, these informal sectors serve as the first classroom.
According to studies on Uganda’s labour market, a significant proportion of the workforce operates within the informal economy, where individuals often create their own employment opportunities rather than securing formal jobs.
The challenge is that informal business experience does not always translate into sustainable enterprise growth.
Many small businesses remain vulnerable to limited financing, fluctuating demand and weak business systems.
Building a media business
As his interests evolved, Mr. Simon became involved in entertainment through a disco sound events business.
The experience exposed him to event organisation, marketing and audience engagement, skills that would later influence his decision to venture into media.
In 2008, he established Horizon Media Uganda, a company focused on video production, event coverage and local news reporting in Ssumba, Wakiso District.
At the time, demand for community-based media services was growing as businesses, families and institutions increasingly sought professional video and communication services.
The venture gradually built visibility through local coverage and production work.
Yet the media industry presented challenges that many first-time investors underestimate.
Running an independent media company requires continuous investment in equipment, transport, staff salaries, editing facilities and content production.
Advertising revenue, often the lifeblood of media businesses, can be unpredictable and highly competitive.
Why businesses fail
The eventual collapse of Horizon Media Uganda became a turning point.
While every failed business has its own circumstances, experts say several recurring factors contribute to business closures in Uganda.
These include:
- Limited access to affordable financing
- Weak cash-flow management
- High operating costs
- Market competition
- Dependence on a single revenue stream
- Poor business planning
- Economic shocks
Research by entrepreneurship development organisations has repeatedly shown that many small and medium enterprises struggle to survive beyond their early years.
Some close because they expand too quickly.
Others fail because they cannot adapt when markets change.
For entrepreneurs, failure often arrives gradually rather than suddenly.
“It is usually not one big mistake,” says Vincent Mukasa, one Kampala-based business consultant. “It is a series of pressures that build over time until the business can no longer sustain itself.”
The challenge of starting over
Business failure can have significant psychological consequences.
Entrepreneurs frequently invest not only money but also personal identity into their ventures.
When a business collapses, many experience feelings of disappointment, embarrassment or self-doubt.
Yet some choose to start again.
Rather than abandoning entrepreneurship altogether, Mr. Simon shifted his attention to other opportunities, including property development in Buddo.
The transition reflected a common strategy among entrepreneurs who reassess risk and redirect resources into sectors they consider more stable.
Economic analysts note that reinvention is often a defining characteristic of long-term entrepreneurs.
The ability to recognise changing circumstances, abandon unsuccessful models and pursue new opportunities can determine whether an individual remains economically active after a setback.
A broader lesson for Uganda’s entrepreneurs
The significance of stories like Mr. Simon’s lies less in the individual and more in what they reveal about Uganda’s entrepreneurial environment.
Many public discussions focus on startup success while paying little attention to business survival.
Yet sustainability remains the real test of entrepreneurship.
A profitable business is valuable.
A business that survives market fluctuations, leadership transitions and financial pressures is even more important.
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As Uganda continues to encourage entrepreneurship as a solution to unemployment, experts argue that greater attention should be paid to business support systems, mentorship, financial literacy and long-term planning.
The goal should not simply be helping people start businesses.
It should be helping them build businesses capable of surviving.
Beyond success and failure
Today, Mr. Simon remains involved in entrepreneurial activities while balancing family responsibilities as a father of three daughters.
His experience mirrors that of countless entrepreneurs whose careers have been shaped by both achievement and disappointment.
The story is not ultimately about one businessman.
It is about a reality many entrepreneurs encounter but rarely discuss openly.
Failure is common.
Reinvention is difficult.
And in an economy where uncertainty remains constant, the ability to begin again may be one of the most valuable entrepreneurial skills of all.







