Do I Need a Website to Sell Fashion Online?
If you sell fashion online in Kenya, you’ve probably heard this advice more times than you can count: “You need a website.” It’s often said with good intentions, but rarely with context. For many fashion sellers who operate mainly on Instagram and WhatsApp, the question is not whether websites are useful in general, but whether a full website is the right tool for their current stage of business.

If you sell fashion online in Kenya, you’ve probably heard this advice more times than you can count: “You need a website.”
It’s often said with good intentions, but rarely with context. For many fashion sellers who operate mainly on Instagram and WhatsApp, the question is not whether websites are useful in general, but whether a full website is the right tool for their current stage of business.
The answer is not a simple yes or no. It depends on how you sell, how often you sell, and what problems you are actually trying to solve.
This article looks at when a full website makes sense, why many small fashion sellers struggle with them, and what practical alternatives exist for sellers who are already making sales through social media.
The belief: “To be serious, I need a website”
Among online fashion sellers, having a website is often seen as a sign of legitimacy. A website feels official. It looks professional. It suggests growth.
This belief is understandable. Large fashion brands, established boutiques, and international stores all have websites. It’s natural to assume that following the same path is the next logical step.
However, most Kenyan fashion sellers do not operate like large brands. Many sell dresses through Instagram posts, announce thrift drops on WhatsApp Status, or take custom shoe orders via DMs. Their customers already know where to find them and how to pay. The challenge is usually not visibility, but managing orders and payments smoothly.
When a full website does make sense
There are situations where a full website is the right choice.
A website can be useful if you:
- Run a larger fashion brand with a stable catalog
- Have many product categories, sizes, and variations
- Need detailed product pages, filters, or search
- Invest consistently in ads that send traffic directly to product pages
- Have someone managing the site, stock updates, and content
For example, a brand selling dozens of shoe designs year-round, with consistent sizing and restocks, may benefit from a website that customers can browse independently. In such cases, the structure and control a website offers can support scale.
The key point is that websites work best when the business already has complex needs and the capacity to manage them.
Why many small fashion sellers struggle with websites
For many solo sellers and small teams, websites introduce new problems rather than solving existing ones.
Common challenges include:
- Setup and maintenance: Product uploads, price changes, stock updates, and images require ongoing attention.
- Cost: Domains, hosting, plugins, and occasional technical help add up.
- Mismatch with real workflows: Sellers still end up answering questions on WhatsApp, even after building a site.
- Low usage: Customers often prefer to ask questions before buying, especially for dresses, thrift items, or custom orders.
It is also common to see websites built and then rarely updated. New arrivals are posted on Instagram, while the site quietly becomes outdated. In these cases, the website exists, but it does not reduce daily workload or improve order handling.
Simpler alternatives many sellers already use
Most Kenyan fashion sellers already rely on a combination of:
- Instagram for discovery
- WhatsApp for conversation
- M-Pesa for payment
This approach works, but it becomes inefficient when every order requires manual steps: price confirmation, payment follow-ups, and matching transactions to customers.
A simpler alternative some sellers explore is social selling supported by checkout links. Instead of replacing Instagram or WhatsApp, this approach adds a structured step at the point where a buyer is ready to pay.
A seller might:
- Post a dress on Instagram
- Answer questions on WhatsApp
- Share a checkout link where the buyer selects the item and pays
The promotion and conversation stay the same. Only the final step changes.
Website vs social selling with checkout links
The difference between these two approaches is not about being “better” or “worse,” but about fit.
Time
- A website requires regular updates and monitoring.
- Checkout links typically focus only on items currently being sold.
Cost
- Websites involve recurring costs beyond payments.
- Checkout-based tools are usually simpler and cheaper to maintain.
Setup
- Websites can take days or weeks to configure properly.
- Checkout links can often be set up quickly.
Daily effort
- Websites do not remove the need for WhatsApp conversations.
- Checkout links can reduce payment confirmation back-and-forth.
For sellers doing thrift drops, limited shoe stock, or custom orders, the ability to quickly share a link and see which orders are paid can be more useful than a full catalog website.
Addressing common fears
“Will customers trust me without a website?”
Trust is often built through familiarity. Customers who already follow your Instagram page, see your posts, and chat with you on WhatsApp usually base trust on responsiveness and clarity, not whether you have a full website.
“Can I still use WhatsApp?”
Yes. In most cases, WhatsApp remains the main communication channel. The checkout step simply replaces manual payment requests.
“What about M-Pesa?”
M-Pesa continues to be the payment method. The difference is how payments are initiated and tracked, not how customers pay.
Choosing what fits your stage
A full website is not a requirement for selling fashion online. It is one option among several.
If you are running a larger brand with consistent stock and the ability to manage a site, a website may support your growth. If you are a solo seller managing dresses, shoes, thrift drops, or custom orders through Instagram and WhatsApp, a simpler system that reduces manual payment follow-ups may be more practical right now.
The most important question is not “Do I need a website?” but “What part of my selling process is slowing me down?”
Answering that honestly will point you toward the right tool for where your business is today.
