If you sit in any kombi, coffee shop, or boardroom in Harare, you will hear the same phrase repeated in different ways:
“I’m just waiting to see how the currency stabilizes first.”
“I’ll start that project when the regulations are clearer.”
“Let’s wait for next year, maybe things will open up.”
We have become a nation of professional waiters. We are waiting for the exchange rate to flatten. We are waiting for ZESA to be perfect. We are waiting for a “boom.” But here is the hard truth that might make you angry: The perfect conditions you are waiting for are never coming.
The “Waiting Room” Trap

There is a dangerous comfort in waiting. It absolves us of responsibility. If we fail, we can blame the economy. If we don’t start, we can say it wasn’t the “right time.”
But look at the data. In 2025, while many sat on their hands, the diaspora poured over $2 billion into the country—not in donations, but in investments. They are building flats in Ruwa, starting logistics companies, and buying farming inputs. Why? Because they know that by the time the economy is “perfect,” the opportunity will be gone.
Chaos is a Ladder (If You Climb It)
Some of the biggest Zimbabwean success stories didn’t happen during the stable times; they were forged in the fire of difficulty.
- Econet was built when having a phone was illegal.
- Mukuru was built when the banking system had collapsed.
- Solar Installers are making fortunes right now because the grid is unstable.

Every problem you complain about is a business model for someone else. No water? Someone is selling boreholes. No internet? Starlink resellers are booming. Expensive food? Urban farmers are cashing in.
The “One Day” vs. “Day One” Mindset
The difference between the person who thrives in Zimbabwe and the person who just survives is their relationship with time.
The survivor says: “One day, I will start.”
The thriver says: “This is Day One.”

You don’t need to wait for the government to fix the roads to start an online business that sells digital products globally. You don’t need to wait for a loan to start selling a service on WhatsApp. You need to stop looking at the macroeconomic news and start looking at your own micro-economy.
The Verdict
We are not saying the challenges aren’t real. They are valid, and they are exhausting. But waiting is not a strategy. It is a slow form of giving up.
Start the side hustle. Buy the solar panel. Learn the skill. Do it scared. Do it broke. But for the love of your own future, stop waiting for permission to succeed.

