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Nairobi Business Monthly
Home»Opinion»Here are some uncommon jobs in Kenya
Opinion

Here are some uncommon jobs in Kenya

NBM CORRESPONDENTBy NBM CORRESPONDENT10th June 2024Updated:10th June 2024No Comments3 Mins Read
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Tout calling for passengers in Nairobi. Photo: Aly Khan Satchu
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You have just defaulted on your loan. Or you need to pay up for some important items. This gets you into serious problems, so you go ahead to think of “uncommon jobs” to get the much-needed cash, if all goes well, manage to deal with the challenging situation. Here is how to get started:

1.Coin Vendors

There are people who exchange coins for notes. For every Sh100 note, a customer would in return receive Sh90 coins.

The Nairobi Law Monthly September Edition
  1. Personal Shoppers

Did you know that there are “human glovos”? Instead of adding your items to a cart, you can contact a personal shopper to get whatever you want and bring it to wherever you are.

  1. Egg Donors 

For a substantial amount of cash you can ethically sell your ovum. In some institutions, one can fetch up to Sh50,000.

  1. Dog walker

People get paid to walk dogs around lavish neighbourhoods.

  1. Matatu Fillers

Get paid to sit in a matatu. In most bus stops, there are guys who pose as passengers; they would disembark from a bus, one by one, especially when it is almost full, but making some cash at the end of it all.

  1. House Sitters

Their work is to sit as away to keep a house safe when the owner is not around.

  1. Professional Mourners

At a fee they offer deafening wails to give your loved one a “heroic” send off. They are generally hired by family members to grieve at funerals – this activity is popular in Western parts of Kenya and the intention is mainly to push up number of participants in a funeral while providing new faces as well as showing support for the deceased.

  1. Sperm for Cash

While donation is mostly done anonymously partly because it is not regulated by law, for a substantial amount of money you can sell your sperm, with beneficiaries splashing from as low as Sh15,000 to at least Sh100,000 depending on the beneficiary.

  1. Surrogacy

Women earn money by carrying a baby for another person or couple. They get compensation for their time, effort and the physical demands of being pregnant and giving birth.

  1. Traffic car cleaners

Enterprising people, especially younger people clean cars and windshields during traffic snarl-up and ask for as little as Sh20 or Sh50 once they are done.

  1. Matatu and ‘tukutuk’ passenger loaders

They are stationed at bus stops and their work is to help the touts to  call passengers into the matatu or tuktuk.

  1. Packing Boys

They direct you on how to pack mostly in tight spaces .

  1. Traffic Marshalls

They direct drivers on which routes to use in order to avoid traffic at a small cut.

  1. “ Ferries” and piggybackers

People use carts popularly known as  mkokoteni or carry  people on their backs to get people from one point to another mainly during the rainy season .

Compiled by Barbara Owano Lubukha and Hilda Wanjiku

The Nairobi Law Monthly September Edition
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