Every Thursday, traders come from Turkana, Samburu, Baringo and beyond for the livestock auction — the town's real heartbeat. RumuLink keeps that same energy going every other day: at the stage, on Duka Street, and on the baraza board.
Instead of generic categories, RumuLink is organised the way Rumuruti already works — around the real places people already go.
Cattle, goats, maize, and produce — listed all week, with Thursday auction-day listings flagged.
Boda riders, electricians, tailors, tutors — the people you'd find gathered at the stage, now searchable.
What the shops and traders on the main street are selling — new stock, secondhand, and clearance.
County notices, jobs, houses to rent, lost & found — the things you'd hear announced at a baraza.
Posted by a seller in Marura, ready for auction day.
A rider nearby already offering livestock transport that morning.
This week's county notice on auction gate times and fees.
A goat listing doesn't just sit in a marketplace silo — it surfaces the transport and the auction-day notice that go with it, the way a neighbour would just tell you.
Not an invented "verified" badge — trust routed through the people already trusted in town.
Official notices posted directly to the Baraza Board.
Boda riders and fundis known to the stage leadership.
Sellers vouched for by a group they already belong to.
How long a seller has been active and transacting on RumuLink.
RumuLink exists so anyone in town can find what they need — goods, services, news, or a job — the way it already works here: through the auction, the stage, Duka Street, and the baraza.