By Head of Human Resources, NCBA Bank Uganda
As we observe Women’s Month, it is important to pause and celebrate the resilience, innovation, and determination of women who are shaping Uganda’s economic future.
Across the country from market stalls and farms to classrooms, offices, and boardrooms women entrepreneurs are not only building businesses but also transforming livelihoods and strengthening families.
In Uganda today, Small and Medium Enterprises (SMEs) account for nearly 70 percent of the economy, and women run close to 40 percent of these enterprises.
This is no small achievement. It represents a powerful force driving productivity, employment, and inclusive growth.
However, beyond economics, empowering women entrepreneurs is fundamentally about justice and opportunity.
It is about ensuring that women have equal access to the tools, knowledge, and financial resources necessary to build sustainable businesses and secure long-term prosperity.
Uganda’s economic outlook presents a remarkable window of opportunity.

With sustained economic growth averaging between 6 and 8 percent annually across key sectors such as agriculture, services, and manufacturing, the potential for entrepreneurship continues to expand.
Emerging value chains, particularly in oil and gas, coupled with a rapidly growing and youthful population demanding housing, transport, education, and financial services, create fertile ground for business growth.
For women entrepreneurs, the next five to ten years could define a generation of scalable businesses capable of creating jobs, strengthening communities, and building intergenerational wealth.
Yet opportunity alone does not guarantee success.
From our experience working closely with entrepreneurs across the country, one important lesson consistently emerges: financial discipline is often the difference between businesses that thrive and those that struggle to survive.
Many promising enterprises fail not because the idea itself was weak, but because their internal financial structures were fragile.
Poor record-keeping, mixing personal and business finances, unmanaged cash flow, and the absence of clear financial planning can gradually undermine even the most promising ventures.
For many women operating within informal markets, the demands of daily survival often take precedence over long-term financial planning.
A common example is the market vendor who borrows money early in the morning to purchase produce, sells during the day, and repays the loan by evening.
Digital lending platforms have made this process faster and more accessible, enabling many women to sustain the flow of business activity.
However, while access to credit provides liquidity, liquidity alone does not guarantee growth.
Without tracking revenues and expenses, without reinvesting strategically, and without maintaining clear financial records, businesses can remain trapped in a cycle of survival rather than progress.
Turnover may easily be mistaken for profit, and expansion may occur without a sustainable financial plan.
Sustainable growth therefore requires discipline, structure, and financial awareness.
Another significant challenge facing many women entrepreneurs is access to finance.
Traditional lending systems often require collateral such as land or property assets that many women historically have not owned due to entrenched cultural and structural barriers.
This is where innovative financing models become essential. At NCBA Bank Uganda, we continue to support entrepreneurs through solutions designed to meet real business needs.
Asset financing, for instance, allows the asset being purchasedwhether vehicles, machinery, or equipmentto serve as collateral.
A school proprietor who needs buses to transport pupils can therefore use those buses as security to access funding, enabling expansion while aligning financing with actual business needs.
Short-term working capital solutions are equally important.
Businesses may have confirmed revenues for example, a school with enrolled students and confirmed tuition fees yet still struggle to cover operational costs before payments are received.
Structured financial facilities that bridge this gap help ensure that businesses remain operational and financially stable.
Even with these solutions, financial discipline remains the foundation for long-term success.
Financial institutions assess not only ambition but also credibility. A clear banking trail, consistent deposits, and well-maintained financial records demonstrate stability and reliability.
Each transaction processed through a bank account becomes part of a formal financial footprint, providing evidence of revenue patterns, growth, and responsible financial management.
For women transitioning from informal trade to structured enterprises, this financial footprint can unlock access to larger credit facilities, strategic partnerships, and investor confidence.
Financial discipline also extends to governance practices. A clear business plan serves as a roadmap for growth.
Insurance provides protection against unforeseen risks. Separating household finances from business finances strengthens transparency and sustainability.
These practices are not merely administrative requirements; they are powerful tools of empowerment that enable women to build resilient and scalable enterprises.
At NCBA Bank Uganda, we also recognize that individual effort alone is not enough. Building a supportive ecosystem is equally critical.
Partnerships between financial institutions, regulators, training institutions, and private sector stakeholders can strengthen financial literacy, improve access to capital, and expand mentorship opportunities for women entrepreneurs.
When women are equipped with the right knowledge, networks, and financial systems, their businesses grow faster, create more jobs, and contribute more meaningfully to national development.
As we celebrate Women’s Month, supporting women in business is not only an economic imperative but rather it is also a matter of fairness and justice.
When women succeed at work or business, families prosper, communities grow stronger, and economies become more inclusive and resilient.
With financial discipline, mentorship, and access to innovative financial solutions, women can move beyond survival toward sustainable success.
They can build enterprises that generate employment, create wealth, and leave lasting legacies for future generations.
Supporting and empowering women entrepreneurs today is therefore not just an investment in businessit is an investment in Uganda’s future.
