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What to look for, what to avoid, and the questions you must ask before signing a contract with any software development firm in Kenya. A no-nonsense guide from practitioners who have seen what goes wrong.
Nairobi has a growing technology sector, and with it, a growing number of firms claiming to offer world-class software development. Some are excellent. Many are not. And when your business depends on the software being built correctly, the difference between choosing well and choosing poorly can cost you six figures and six months you will not get back.
This guide is written from the perspective of practitioners — people who have been hired to rescue projects abandoned or badly executed by other firms. We know what the warning signs look like because we have inherited the consequences.
Nairobi's tech scene is genuinely impressive. There are skilled engineers, modern practices, and firms doing excellent work for global clients. There are also:
Understanding which category you are dealing with before signing a contract is the entire challenge.
The difference matters. A firm will select references who will speak well of them. Ask to see a fuller client list and choose who you want to speak to. Pay particular attention to clients who had difficult projects — delays, scope changes, technical challenges. How did the firm perform when things got hard?
If a firm refuses or cannot produce a meaningful client list, that tells you something important.
Sales teams and delivery teams are often entirely different people. The senior engineer who impressed you in the pitch may have no involvement in your project. Ask to meet the actual team — the project manager, the lead developer, the person who will write your code.
If the firm is evasive about this, or if the team you meet has significantly less experience than the people who pitched, adjust your expectations accordingly.
This question is surprisingly effective at separating firms. Acceptable answers include: threat modelling during design, OWASP guidelines in code review, penetration testing before launch, dependency scanning, secrets management practices.
Unacceptable answers: "We take security seriously" (without specifics), "We can add security later", or a blank look.
In 2025, every web application is a target. Building without security by design is not acceptable.
Daf-Devs delivers production-grade web and mobile applications — senior engineers, fixed price, full source code ownership.
Firms without structured code review produce inconsistent, unmaintainable code. Ask specifically: does every commit go through peer review? Are there automated quality gates (linting, static analysis, test coverage thresholds)? Who is responsible for maintaining standards?
You should receive a codebase with a meaningful test suite — not just some unit tests written to satisfy a checklist. Ask what types of tests they write (unit, integration, end-to-end), what coverage they target, and whether you can inspect the test suite on an existing project.
Software without tests is software that breaks silently in production.
If you ever need to move to a different firm, or bring development in-house, what do you receive? You should expect: full source code ownership, complete documentation, deployment runbooks, database schemas, API documentation, and a knowledge transfer session. Firms that make handover difficult are creating dependency by design.
Scope creep and timeline extension are the most common sources of conflict in software projects. Understand upfront how the firm handles this: fixed-price contracts with change order processes, time-and-materials with budget controls, or something else. Neither model is inherently better — but both require clarity before work begins.
Extremely low pricing. Software development is skilled, labour-intensive work. If a firm's rates are dramatically below market, they are either using inexperienced developers, offshoring to lower-quality resources, or planning to make margin somewhere else (scope creep, ongoing support lock-in).
No questions about your users or business goals. A firm that jumps straight to technical architecture without understanding who will use the software and what problem it is solving will build the wrong thing, correctly.
Resistance to agile working or progress visibility. You should be able to see working software regularly — every 1–2 weeks. Firms that prefer to "go away for three months and come back with something" are almost always not operating at an adequate standard.
Vague contracts. If the contract does not specify deliverables, acceptance criteria, IP ownership, data handling, confidentiality, and termination rights in clear language, do not sign it. Every ambiguity is a future dispute.
No post-launch support terms. Every software system has post-launch issues. Understand exactly what support is included, for how long, and what the commercial arrangement is if you need ongoing maintenance.
A trustworthy software development partner will:
Daf-Devs has been building production software from Nairobi and London since 2015. Our delivery model is built around the problems described above because we have seen them fail projects for other clients.
What we bring:
Daf-Devs is a Nairobi and London software engineering firm. 10 years. 75+ global clients. ISO 27001 certified. View our work →
Our team can help you design and deliver software, security infrastructure, and automation solutions.
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