الثورة الصناعية الرابعة.. كيف تلعب الشركات الناشئة دورًا محوريًا في توطين الذكاء الاصطناعي بالسعودية؟

Sep 15, 2025

محمد رمزي 

 

تتبنى المملكة العربية السعودية رؤية طموحة للتحول الرقمي ضمن إطار رؤية 2030، بهدف ترسيخ مكانتها كمركز عالمي للابتكار التقني والتكنولوجيا المتقدمة. تعتمد هذه الرؤية على الثورة الصناعية الرابعة، التي تجمع تقنيات متطورة مثل الذكاء الاصطناعي، إنترنت الأشياء، والبيانات الضخمة، لدفع عجلة التنمية الاقتصادية والاجتماعية.

 

وتشير التقديرات إلى أن الذكاء الاصطناعي وحده قد يسهم بـ135.2 مليار دولار في الناتج المحلي الإجمالي للمملكة بحلول عام 2030، مدعومًا باستثمارات حكومية ضخمة تصل إلى 40 مليار دولار.
 

وتمثل الشركات الناشئة الناشئة في المملكة العربية السعودية ركيزة أساسية في توطين هذه التقنيات ضمن الإطار العام لرؤية المملكة الرامية لتنويع الاقتصاد وتعزيز التنافسية، وخلق فرص عمل جديدة، مما يدعم تحقيق التنمية المستدامة.

 

يستعرض هذا التقرير التوجهات السعودية نحو تبني مفاهيم الثورة الصناعية الرابعة، مع التركيز على إسهامات الشركات الناشئة في تعزيز هذا التحول الاستراتيجي.

 

 

ما تعريف الثورة الصناعية الرابعة؟

 

ظهر مصطلح الثورة الصناعية الرابعة لأول مرة رسميًّا عام 2015، ويغطي هذا المصطلح الآن كلاً من أنشطة التواصل الشبكي وتحليات البيانات المتقدمة، إلى جانب التقنيات المتطورة والذكاء الاصطناعي والتصنيع التجميعي والواقع المعزز.

 

وتشمل الثورة الصناعية الرابعة تطبيق مجموعة من التقنيات الناشئة كالذكاء الاصطناعي، وتقنيات النانو، والحوسبة الكمية، والتقنيات الحيوية، وعلوم المواد، وتخزين الطاقة، وإنترنت الأشياء، بالإضافة إلى الروبوتات المتقدمة وغيرها.

 

 وتتمحور الثورة الصناعية الرابعة بالأساس حول المفاهيم الآتية:

 

ـ الذكاء الاصطناعي (AI): وهي تقنيات معقدة تعتمد على خوارزميات متقدمة لتحليل البيانات واتخاذ قرارات ذكية، مما يعزز الأتمتة وتحسين الكفاءة في قطاعات مثل الصحة والتعليم والصناعة.

 

ـ إنترنت الأشياء (IoT): انترنت الأشياء هو مصطلح يقصد به ربط العديد من الأجهزة في وقت واحد من خلال الإنترنت، وهذه الآلية تسهم في تسهيل عملية جمع البيانات وتحليلها بشكل دقيق وفعال.

 

ـ البيانات الضخمة (Big Data): تتيح معالجة كميات هائلة من البيانات لاستخلاص رؤى دقيقة تدعم اتخاذ القرارات.

 

الثورة الصناعية الرابعة والاقتصاد السعودي

 

أدركت الحكومات حول العالم أهمية المفاهيم المرتبطة بالثورة الصناعية الرابعة، وأطلقت البرامج والمبادرات الاستراتيجية للاستفادة من القـدرات ووضع برامج خاصة للاستثمار الناجح فيها.

 

ونتيجة لذلك، بلغت قيمة السوق العالمية للثورة الصناعية الرابعة أكثر من 114 مليار دولار في عام 2021، ومن المتوقع أن تتجاوز 370 مليار دولار بحلول عام 2029، بحسب تقرير من صندوق التنمية الصناعية السعودي.

 

وفي المملكة العربية السعودية، تمثل الثورة الصناعية الرابعة أهمية قصوى للاقتصاد الوطني، وذلك في ظل مساعي المملكة لتوطين التكنولوجيا من أجل تنويع الاقتصاد، خاصة مع بدء الاستثمار وتفعيل الإمكانات الكاملة لتقنيات الثورة الصناعية الرابعة في شتى القطاعات.

 

ومن بين محركات الثورة الصناعية الرابعة، تشير التوقعات إلى أن الذكاء الاصطناعي وحده سيسهم بنحو 135.2 مليار دولار في الناتج المحلي الإجمالي للمملكة بحلول عام 2030.

 

ويمكن تفسير هذه المؤشرات في ضوء الاستثمارات التي أعلنت عنها الحكومة السعودية في مجال الذكاء الاصطناعي والبالغة 40 مليار دولار، هذا بالإضافة إلى ارتفاع محتمل بقيمة 11.7 مليار دولار في حجم الأرباح التشغيلية لقطاعات التقنية والإعلام والترفيه، والاتصالات، والرعاية الصحية في المملكة، وفق دراسة "الذكاء الاصطناعي التوليدي في أعمال الحكومة الرقمية"، الصادرة عن هيئة الحكومة الرقمية السعودية.

 

رؤية السعودية 2030 ودورها في تقديم استراتيجية الثورة الصناعية الرابعة

 

تُعد رؤية 2030 الإطار الاستراتيجي الذي يوجه جهود المملكة نحو التحول الرقمي، وتتضمن الرؤية مبادرات مثل الاستراتيجية الوطنية للبيانات والذكاء الاصطناعي التي أطلقتها الهيئة السعودية للبيانات والذكاء الاصطناعي (سدايا)، والتي ترتكز على ست ركائز: الطموح، المهارات، الشراكات، الاستثمارات، التنظيم، والنظام البيئي. 

 

وتهدف هذه الاستراتيجية إلى جعل المملكة ضمن أفضل 15 دولة عالميًا في استخدام الذكاء الاصطناعي بحلول 2030، كما تدعم الرؤية بناء بنية تحتية رقمية قوية، مثل توسع شبكات الجيل الخامس ومراكز البيانات، وتشجع الشراكات بين القطاعين العام والخاص لتعزيز الابتكار.

 

وفي هذا السياق، قال عبد الله السواحة، وزير الاتصالات وتقنية المعلومات السعودي، إن الثورة الصناعية الرابعة تعد ممكناً أساسياً في تحقيق رؤية المملكة 2030.

 

وأضاف السواحة في تصريحات سابقة نقلتها وكالة الأنباء السعودية "واس"،  أن الثورة الصناعية الرابعة تتطلب صياغة نماذج عمل وآليات تنفيذ جديدة تحتكم لقواعد التنافسية العالمية الجديدة والمبنية على الانتقال من التركيز على الأصول والخبرات إلى الاعتماد الكلي على الوقود الجديد للصناعة والمتمثل فيّ البيانات والذكاء الاصطناعي وبناء المحرك الجديد.

 

شركات سعودية رائدة

 

تُعد السعودية موطناً لعدد متزايد من الشركات الناشئة التي تعمل على تطوير وتوطين تقنيات الذكاء الاصطناعي ضمن الإطار العام لاستراتيجية السعودية لتوطين التكنولوجيا والانتقال نحو عصر الثورة الصناعية الرابعة، ونورد فيما يلي أمثلة على أبرز تلك الشركات:

 

ـ الشركة السعودية للذكاء الاصطناعي "سكاي": وهي شركة مملوكة بالكامل لصندوق الاستثمارات العامة، تأسست لتكون الذراع التقني للصندوق في مجال الذكاء الاصطناعي والتقنيات الناشئة.

 

وتركز الشركة على تقديم حلول ذكية في قطاعات مثل المدن الذكية، والطاقة، والرعاية الصحية، والخدمات المالية، بهدف جعل المملكة مركزاً تنافسياً عالمياً.

 

ـ إنتلماتيكس: وهي إحدى الشركات السعودية الرائدة التي تعمل على تمكين الشركات والمؤسسات من الاستفادة من الإمكانات الكاملة للذكاء الاصطناعي، ومعالجة التحديات المعقدة، وتذليل العقبات أمام تبني الذكاء الاصطناعي في قطاعات البيع بالتجزئة والخدمات اللوجستية والتصنيع والرعاية الصحية وغيرها من القطاعات الحيوية.

 

وتم اختيار الشركة ضمن قائمة "رواد التقنية 2025"، التي تصدر عن المنتدى الاقتصادي العالمي "دافوس"، وتقدّم الشركة منتجها الرئيسي "EDIX"، للذكاء الرقمي المؤسسي، لدعم التحول داخل المؤسسات، وهي منصة تمثّل الجيل القادم من منصات الذكاء الاصطناعي.

 

ـ يونت إكس: تأسست شركة "يونت إكس" عام 2018، وهي شركة روبوتات متخصصة في تقنيات الفحص البصري المدعوم بالذكاء الاصطناعي في قطاع التصنيع، يوفر نظام "يونت إكس" أفضل دقة في مجال الفحص المباشر، مما يُمكّن من معالجة أكثر تحديات الفحص تعقيدًا في بيئات الإنتاج المتنوعة.

 

وتطمح الشركة للمساهمة بنسبة 20% من الناتج المحلي الإجمالي العالمي من خلال الأتمتة الذكية، وتوسيع الاعتماد على الروبوتات في المجالات الصناعية.

 

ـ منصة "عُمق": شركة ناشئة سعودية متخصصة في تقنيات الذكاء الاصطناعي، تسعى لتطوير حلول تقنية مخصصة للجهات الحكومية تركز على خفض التكاليف ورفع الكفاءة التشغيلية باستخدام الذكاء الاصطناعي. 

 

وكشفت الشركة عن أول منتجاتها "alPlatformai"، وهو منصة تتيح للجهات والشركات وصولًا آمنًا ومحكومًا لنماذج الذكاء الاصطناعي، بهدف تمكين الاستخدام المؤسسي لتقنيات الذكاء الاصطناعي ضمن بيئات تتطلب معايير عالية من الأمان والتحكم.

 

ـ "هيوماين إيه آي": هي شركة تابعة لصندوق الاستثمارات العامة تأسست في 2025، لتقود جهود المملكة في مجال التحول الرقمي والتوجه نحو تعزز الاعتماد على الذكاء الاصطناعي.

 

وخلال مدة وجيزة من انطلاقها رسمياً في مايو الماضي، أعلنت الشركة عن مجموعة من الاتفاقيات الهامة، كان أبرزها توقيع اتفاقية مع "إيه إم دي" (Advanced Micro Devices) لاستثمار 10 مليارات دولار على البنية التحتية للذكاء الاصطناعي خلال السنوات الخمس المقبلة.

 

ستشرف "هيوماين" على تطوير مراكز البيانات وأنظمة الطاقة المستدامة والاتصالات العالمية بالألياف الضوئية، في حين ستوفر "إيه إم دي" مجموعة كاملة من حلول حوسبة الذكاء الاصطناعي ونظام "AMD ROCm" للبرمجيات المفتوحة، وفق بيان.

دور الشركات الناشئة السعودية في الثورة الصناعية الرابعة

 

الشركات الناشئة السعودية تؤدي دوراً حيوياً في الثورة الصناعية الرابعة، حيث تعزز الابتكار والتحول الرقمي من خلال تبني تقنيات مثل الذكاء الاصطناعي، إنترنت الأشياء، والبيانات الضخمة، ومن أهم أدوارها:

 

ـ الابتكار التقني: تقدم الشركات حلولاً مبتكرة في مجالات مثل التجارة الإلكترونية، التكنولوجيا المالية (FinTech)، والصحة الرقمية، مما يعزز الكفاءة ويحسن جودة الخدمات.


ـ دعم رؤية 2030: تسهم منظومة المشاريع الناشئة والشركات المتوسطة والصغيرة في المملكة العربية السعودية في دعم رؤية المملكة 2030 من خلال فتح المجال أمام القطاعات الواعدة بما ينعكس على التنوع الاقتصادي في المملكة وخلق فرص العمل وتعزيز التنافسية في القطاعات غير النفطية.


ـ ريادة الأعمال: تدعم بيئة الشركات الناشئة من خلال مبادرات مثل "منشآت" و"وادي الرياض"، مما يشجع الشباب على تطوير حلول تقنية.
التكامل مع الصناعات: تعمل على ربط القطاعات التقليدية بالتقنيات الحديثة، مثل التصنيع الذكي والمدن الذكية.

 

برنامج الإنتاجية الوطني.. "مصانع المستقبل"

 

وانطلاقا من إيمانها العميق بمدى أهمية الشركات المتوسطة والصغيرة كمحرك أساسي للاقتصاد، أطلقت وزارة الصناعة والثروة المعدنية من خلال الهيئة العامة للمدن الصناعية "مدن"، مبادرة "مصانع المستقبل"، ضمن برنامج "الإنتاجية الوطني".

 

ويهدف البرنامج إلى مساعدة الشركات الصناعية الصغيرة والمتوسطة في تحقيق أعلى معدلات الكفاءة الإنتاجية عبر تقديم خدمات استشارية مجانية و تقييم مستوى النضج و وضع خطط لتطبيق مبادئ التميز التشغيلي و تقنيات الثورة الصناعية الرابعة.

 

تحديات توطين الذكاء الاصطناعي 

على الرغم من الدعم الكبير الذي توليه المملكة للتحول في عصر الثورة الصناعية الرابعة تواجه سياسات توطين الذكاء الاصطناعي بعض التحديات مثل:

 

ـ ندرة المواهب المحلية المتخصصة: مازال السوق السعودي يواجه فجوة في توفر الكوادر المؤهلة في مجالات الذكاء الاصطناعي وتحليل البيانات الضخمة، وتسعى الجهات الحكومية في المملكة للتغلب على هذا الأمر من خلال تقديم المبادرات والبرامج التدريبية مثل برامج "سدايا" والأكاديمية السعودية للذكاء الاصطناعي.

 

ـ التنافسية العالمية: تواجه السعودية منافسة شديدة من دول رائدة في الذكاء الاصطناعي مثل الولايات المتحدة، والصين، وأوروبا، مما يتطلب استثمارات ضخمة ومستمرة في البحث والتطوير للحفاظ على مكانة تنافسية.

 

ـ بطء التبني التكنولوجي في بعض القطاعات: بعض القطاعات التقليدية، مثل الصناعات الصغيرة أو القطاعات غير التقنية، قد تواجه تحديات في دمج حلول الذكاء الاصطناعي بسبب نقص البنية التحتية أو المعرفة التقنية.

 

ـ تكاليف التطوير والتمويل: يتطلب تطوير تقنيات الذكاء الاصطناعي استثمارات مالية كبيرة، وقد تواجه الشركات الناشئة تحديات في الحصول على تمويل مستدام، خاصة في المراحل المبكرة.

 

ـ تكامل البنية التحتية الرقمية: تتطلب تطبيقات الذكاء الاصطناعي بنية تحتية رقمية متقدمة، مثل مراكز البيانات والاتصالات عالية السرعة، وهذه التطبيقات تحتاج بدورها إلى استثمارات إضافية لضمان التكامل والكفاءة.

 

فرص واعدة للمستقبل

يحظى الذكاء الاصطناعي وتطبيقات الثورة الصناعية الرابعة بفرص واعدة للمستقبل في ظل مجموعة من المحفزات أهمها:

 

ـ الدعم الحكومي: في هذا السياق، تجدر الإشارة إلى أن المملكة خصصت نحو 20 مليار ريال في ميزانية 2025، لدعم الذكاء الاصطناعي والابتكار الرقمي، ما يتيح الفرص أمام الشركات لتقديم أفضل ما لديها في هذا المضمار.

 

ـ الشراكات الدولية: كشفت المملكة العربية السعودية عن حجم هائل من الشراكات الدولية في مجال التطوير التقني وتبني توطين التكنولوجيا مع كبرى الشركات العالمية، بما ذلك "انفيديا" و"مايكروسوفت"، و"أمازون ويب سيرفسيز"، و"آي بي إم"، وغيرها، وهذه الشراكات ستنعكس بشكل أو بآخر على مناخ العمل في المملكة.

 

ـ تزايد الطلب: من المتوقع أن ينمو سوق الذكاء الاصطناعي في السعودية بمعدل 29% سنوياً حتى 2030، بينما سترتفع نفقات الخدمات السحابية بنسبة 23% حتى 2029، وفقاً لتقرير "رولاند بيرجير".

 

تعكس هذه الأرقام الآفاق الرحبة والإمكانات الهائلة للنمو التي يحظى بها قطاع الذكاء الاصطناعي والتقنيات المتقدمة مع تسارع خطوات المملكة نحو التحول الرقمي وتبني استراتيجيات الثورة الصناعية الرابعة.

 

ختامًا، تعد الثورة الصناعية الرابعة أحد التوجهات الرئيسية للمملكة العربية السعودية في إطار رؤية 2030، وتمثل الشركات الناشئة ركيزة أساسية في الوصول إلى المستهدف، وذلك من خلال توطين التقنيات المتقدمة مثل الذكاء الاصطناعي وإنترنت الأشياء وغيرها من التقنيات التي تقود التحول الرقمي في المملكة.

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Latest Experts Thoughts

When and why mature startups raise Series E funding

Noha Gad

 

Every fast‑growing company goes through a capital journey that usually starts with seed and pre‑seed funding, where founders test an idea, build a product, and find early customers. Then come Series A and B rounds, which focus on proving the business model, refining unit economics, and scaling the core operations. By the time a startup reaches Series C and D, priorities shift from survival to growth at scale, market expansion, and operational maturity.

Series E funding round marks the late‑stage phase of a startup’s capital journey. By this stage, the company is no longer trying to prove its product or business model; instead, it’s focused on scaling quickly, consolidating market leadership, or preparing for an IPO or a major exit. 

Unlike earlier rounds that prioritize survival and product‑market fit, Series E is usually about big moves: international expansion, heavy hiring, large acquisitions, or building a balance sheet robust enough to weather public‑market scrutiny. It tends to attract institutional investors, private‑equity players, and other late‑stage funds that expect a clear path to liquidity.

The Series E round is a signal of maturity and proof that the company has products and a business model with real customers, and has reached a significant revenue or valuation level where the next moves require serious capital.

 

How do Series E rounds differ from other rounds?

Early-stage rounds usually focus on products, validation, and product-market fit. At this stage, investors support the founding team and a promising concept, not a proven business. The checks are relatively small, the metrics are qualitative, and the goal is to iterate fast, find early users, and head toward product‑market fit. 

Mid-stage rounds (i.e., Series C and D) focus on scaling operations, expanding markets, and improving unit economics. At these stages, the company is no longer a project but a real business with meaningful revenue, clear unit economics, and often a presence across multiple customer segments or regions. Investors here are growth‑stage VCs and sometimes corporate or hedge‑fund‑style players, and the capital is used to expand into new markets, build more infrastructure, or even acquire smaller competitors. 

Late-stage and pre-exit rounds are often much larger and target aggressive expansion, major hiring, cross‑border scaling, or laying the financial groundwork for an IPO or strategic sale. Investors at this stage are mainly late‑stage VCs, private equity firms, and large funds that expect a clear path to liquidity, stronger governance, and more sophisticated financial reporting. 

 

When and why do companies need to raise a Series E round?

Series E is a strategic move for companies that have already proven their model and are ready to make a big leap. Founders typically consider Series E when their ambition and opportunity outpace the capital they currently have. At this stage, founders shift their focus to how fast they can scale and how far they can dominate the market. The round is usually about accelerating growth and strengthening the balance sheet. Another main reason to raise Series E is to prepare for an IPO or public listing. Many companies use this round to build a cash buffer, professionalize governance, and clean up their financials to handle the scrutiny and volatility of public markets. It also gives them time to refine their narrative for public investors while operating with the flexibility of a private company. 

Series E can also be used to consolidate market leadership. It can be the fuel needed to outspend rivals on customer acquisition, product development, and hiring. Additionally, companies that want to stay private longer may use this round to fund a multi‑year runway without going public immediately.

Finally, the decision to raise Series E should be driven by clear, capital‑intensive goals, whether that is scaling aggressively, consolidating dominance, or preparing for an IPO or major exit, rather than a reflexive desire for more money. Used wisely, Series E can turn a strong scale‑up into a market‑defining business; used poorly, it can lock a company into a high‑pressure, high‑expectation path without the fundamentals to back it up. Founders and investors, understanding when and why to raise Series E is the key to making it a powerful accelerator, not an unnecessary gamble.

AI Agents and the Future of Work: Inside THAKAA’s Enterprise Vision

Ghada Ismail

 

As artificial intelligence rapidly reshapes business operations across industries, companies are increasingly exploring how AI agents, enterprise solutions, and localized language models can transform decision-making and efficiency.

In this interview, Anas Elkhatib, Co-Founder and CTO of THAKAA AI Decision Support System, discusses how AI is redefining enterprise operations, the rise of agentic AI, and why Saudi Arabia is positioning itself as a key hub for artificial intelligence innovation.

 

How is AI transforming your core business operations, products, or services?

AI is truly the revolution of this era. One of the clearest ways we see its impact is in how it improves efficiency and return on investment across business operations.

For example, processes such as generating reports used to take weeks. Companies would need to gather data from multiple sources, organize it, and analyze it before producing meaningful insights. With AI solutions like the ones we provide at THAKAA AI Decision Support System, this entire process can now be completed in seconds.

Instead of manually compiling information, a user can interact directly with an AI agent. You can even have a phone call or a video call with the AI. During the interaction, the AI can present dashboards, answer questions in real time, and provide insights or recommendations.

It can also extract market data and compare a company’s performance with broader industry benchmarks within seconds. In practical terms, AI allows organizations to transform decision-making cycles from weeks into seconds while saving significant time and effort.

 

What recent AI innovations are you most excited about?

The speed of innovation in AI is remarkable—every day, there seems to be something new. Chatbots were the earliest and simplest stage of AI interaction, but today, the most exciting development is the concept of Agentic AI.

Agentic AI involves multiple AI agents with specialized knowledge communicating with one another. It works almost like a virtual team.

For instance, in our demonstrations we present what we call a virtual CXO team. Under each executive role—such as a virtual CFO—you can have supporting functions like financial planning and analysis or cost control. These AI agents communicate with each other. If one agent receives a question it cannot answer, it can consult another agent, such as a CHRO or CFO agent, to provide the necessary information.

In this way, AI agents collaborate internally to deliver more comprehensive responses and insights.

 

Does that mean AI will eventually replace human workers?

AI may replace certain roles, but it is important to emphasize the concept of human-in-the-loop.

Every recommendation produced by AI should be supervised by humans. In our systems, we do not allow AI to act independently. Instead, we control issues such as hallucination through enterprise-level solutions that ensure the AI only responds using trusted data.

Rather than relying on public information, the generative AI model is trained on the organization’s own internal data. This makes the system more reliable and secure.

At the same time, it is realistic to say that some jobs may change as AI becomes more widespread. However, new opportunities will also emerge. AI can increase productivity and create new economic activity, which ultimately leads to new roles and industries.

The key for individuals is to continue developing their skills and adapting to new technologies.

 

Are there any collaborations or partnerships your company is building in Saudi Arabia?

Yes, and we actually consider all of our customers in Saudi Arabia to be partners.

At THAKAA AI Decision Support System, we work with several public-sector entities, including the Ministry of Agriculture, the Ministry of Finance, and the Saudi Data and AI Authority. On the commercial side, we collaborate with organizations such as Jabal Omar in Makkah and other private-sector clients.

Our approach is based on knowledge exchange. When we implement our solutions, we share our technical expertise and lessons learned from previous projects. In return, our customers share their knowledge about their own industries and operational needs.

Because of this exchange of expertise, every client becomes a strategic partner that contributes to improving the overall solution.

 

Which sectors in Saudi Arabia are most ready for AI transformation?

Saudi Arabia is generally a very dynamic and rapidly developing market for AI adoption. However, if we look at industries that are particularly ready for large-scale implementation, I would highlight oil and gas and banking.

Enterprise AI solutions can require significant investment. Industries with strong financial resources are therefore often the earliest adopters. Oil and gas companies and financial institutions have the capacity to absorb these costs and implement AI at scale.

As technology becomes more accessible, we expect adoption to expand across many other sectors as well.

 

How does THAKAA approach responsible and ethical AI deployment?

Responsible AI is a key priority for us. From the beginning, our solutions have been designed with strong privacy and security frameworks.

Our platform is built as an enterprise solution rather than a consumer AI tool. This means that protecting company data is central to the system architecture.

For example, we apply several techniques to control AI hallucination, including advanced prompting and retrieval-augmented generation methods. We also implement strict security protocols when dealing with personally identifiable information (PII).

Sensitive information—such as employee names or contact details—is encrypted and masked to ensure it cannot be leaked or misused.

Additionally, we comply with regulatory frameworks issued by authorities such as the Saudi Data and AI Authority (SDAIA) and the National Cybersecurity Authority. In some cases, the system is deployed on-premises to ensure that all sensitive data remains fully secure within the organization.

 

Do your AI solutions support Arabic, including Saudi dialects?

Yes, and that is one of the key differentiators of our platform.

THAKAA was developed with Arabic language capabilities from the beginning. The system can communicate naturally in Arabic, including the Saudi dialect.

For example, we use the technology in call center environments. In many cases, people speaking with the AI cannot easily distinguish whether they are interacting with a human agent or an AI system.

The interaction feels very natural, which demonstrates how far conversational AI technology has evolved.

 

How do you see AI shaping the broader business landscape in Saudi Arabia?

AI is already becoming a central part of Saudi Arabia’s long-term economic vision.

The Kingdom is forming strategic partnerships with global technology companies to build advanced data centers and GPU infrastructure. These investments will support the development and deployment of large language models.

If LLMs are hosted locally in Saudi Arabia, government institutions, banks, and other organizations will be able to adopt AI technologies more easily and securely.

From my perspective, the AI ecosystem can be divided into three categories. The first includes companies that focus on hardware infrastructure. The second includes companies developing large language models. The third includes companies building practical AI applications and solutions—like what we do at THAKAA.

Saudi Arabia is supporting all three layers of this ecosystem. The country is investing in infrastructure, supporting LLM development, and encouraging the growth of AI startups.

Startups are particularly important because they form the backbone of any AI economy. When governments create supportive regulations and provide resources for startups, the long-term economic impact can be significant.

Saudi Retail 2030: How Technology and Startups Are Rewiring the Kingdom’s Consumer Economy

Kholoud Hussein 

 

Saudi Arabia’s retail sector is undergoing a profound structural transformation, one that extends far beyond the shift from physical stores to online shopping. What is emerging instead is an entirely new retail ecosystem—one driven by data, intelligent automation, frictionless payments, and a generation of startups building tools that are quietly redefining the consumer journey. This evolution represents more than digital modernization. It signals a deeper economic recalibration that positions retail as a pillar of the Kingdom’s diversification strategy under Saudi Vision 2030.

As one senior official at the Ministry of Commerce recently put it: “Saudi retail is not simply expanding. It is industrializing—becoming smarter, faster, and more integrated than at any time in the Kingdom’s history.”
This framing captures the shift underway. Retail is no longer a passive consumer-driven sector. It is a strategic domain where technology, logistics, and financial innovation converge to create new economic value.

 

A Market Entering Its Most Transformational Phase

Saudi Arabia’s retail market is expected to surpass SAR 600 billion by 2030, making it one of the largest consumer markets in the Middle East. Several factors fuel this expansion: rapid population growth, a young demographic with high digital literacy, and rising household incomes supported by economic diversification initiatives.

But the real inflection point comes from behavioral change. Saudi consumers have embraced digital lifestyles with extraordinary speed. Data from the Communications, Space & Technology Commission shows e-commerce transactions rising by more than 32% year over year, a figure that outpaces most global markets. The Kingdom’s consumers are shifting from traditional browsing to algorithm-assisted product discovery, from in-store purchasing to omnichannel shopping, and from cash-based transactions to embedded digital payments.

This accelerating adoption matters because it forces retailers—large and small—to transition into digital enterprises. They must now manage integrated supply chains, unify inventory across channels, deploy advanced analytics, and deliver personalized experiences at scale. Many legacy retailers are not equipped to do this alone. This is where Saudi startups emerge as catalysts, introducing the tools that allow the sector to leapfrog traditional retail development stages.

 

Technology Is Redefining the DNA of Saudi Retail

Across the Kingdom, technology is reshaping the retail value chain end-to-end. What once depended on human coordination is increasingly managed by data-driven systems and AI-powered automation. Retailers now operate with real-time visibility across stock levels, customer preferences, supply bottlenecks, and demand patterns—all of which feed into strategic decisions that were previously based on intuition.

E-Commerce Becomes the Engine of Retail Growth

E-commerce is no longer a secondary channel for Saudi retailers—it has become the command center of the retail business model. For many enterprises, the digital storefront is now the primary point of engagement with customers. This shift is particularly visible in sectors such as fashion, beauty, electronics, and groceries, where online purchase frequency has multiplied since the pandemic.

Retailers are responding by investing heavily in backend architecture—cloud-based inventory systems, API integrations, AI recommendation engines, and automated fulfillment networks. A senior official at the Ministry of Commerce explained:
“Digital retail is no longer optional. Customers expect a high level of integration and immediate responsiveness across all channels.”

This pressure has given rise to a new generation of retail-tech startups. Companies like Zid and Salla provide ready-made e-commerce infrastructure that enables thousands of small retailers to enter the digital marketplace with minimal technical expertise. Their platforms have become essential to the Kingdom’s retail digitalization curve.

Payments Become Seamless, Instant, and Intelligent

Few changes illustrate the pace of Saudi retail transformation as clearly as the rapid rise of digital payments. According to the Saudi Central Bank, more than 70% of all retail transactions in the Kingdom are now cashless, surpassing the Vision 2030 target well ahead of schedule.

This transition is not merely about convenience. Digital payments have become a strategic enabler of retail data intelligence. Every digital transaction generates insights—frequency, average order value, preferred channels, peak purchase times—that retailers use to optimize pricing, inventory, and promotional strategies.

BNPL platforms such as Tamara have reshaped consumer behavior by offering flexibility and increasing purchasing power, especially among younger consumers. Digital wallets like STC Pay and Apple Pay have made mobile payments ubiquitous, even in traditional stores. The rollout of open banking is set to deepen this transformation, enabling retailers to integrate financial services directly into the shopping experience.

Logistics Becomes a Competitive Weapon

Saudi Arabia’s geographic scale and the rise of same-day delivery expectations have made logistics technology one of the most critical components of retail competitiveness. The growth of e-commerce has driven retailers to rethink fulfillment from the ground up, investing in automation, hyperlocal warehouses, and multi-node distribution networks.

Local startups have led this evolution. Platforms such as Mrsool and Saee have introduced flexible delivery models that connect thousands of drivers with retailers, expanding delivery capacity on demand. Meanwhile, specialized logistics startups have developed AI-powered route optimization, predictive inventory planning, and real-time tracking systems that reduce operational inefficiencies.

Logistics is no longer a back-office function. It is core to the customer experience—and retail brands are realizing that speed, transparency, and reliability are as important as the product itself.

Physical Stores Are Becoming Data-Driven

While digital commerce surges, physical retail is far from fading. Instead, stores across Riyadh, Jeddah, and Dammam are being reinvented as experiential and data-rich environments. Smart shelves, RFID tagging, in-store analytics, and self-checkout kiosks are increasingly common.

Retailers now analyze heat maps of customer movement, track dwell time at product displays, and personalize in-store promotions through digital signage. This convergence of digital and physical is creating what industry analysts call “phygital retail”—a blended environment where the store becomes as measurable and adaptive as a website.

As one official from the retail modernization program summarized:
“Retail in Saudi Arabia is no longer about aisles and shelves. It is about data, sensors, and experience.”

 

Startups Are the Hidden Architects Behind the Sector’s Transformation

Saudi startups are not simply contributing to retail digitalization—they are shaping the operating model of the sector. Their role can be understood through three core contributions: digital infrastructure, vertical innovation, and omnichannel integration.

Digital Infrastructure for the Entire Retail Economy

Companies like Foodics have built foundational systems—such as cloud POS—that allow thousands of cafes, restaurants, and retailers to digitize operations. Their tools manage everything from sales and inventory to staff scheduling and customer engagement.

These platforms are particularly crucial for SMEs, which make up more than 1 million retail businesses in Saudi Arabia. By giving these companies access to enterprise-grade tools, startups are lifting the technological baseline of the entire sector.

New Retail Verticals Driven by Startups

Startups are also introducing entirely new retail categories—online pharmacies, direct-to-consumer beauty brands, pet marketplaces, and subscription-based grocery models. These categories were either underserved or nonexistent before the digital economy took hold.

Their growth demonstrates how technology unlocks consumer segments that traditional retailers overlooked.

Enabling True Omnichannel Retail

Perhaps the most significant impact of startups is their role in building omnichannel retail—integrating online and offline experiences into a single ecosystem.

Startups now provide unified dashboards that merge inventory, payments, loyalty programs, customer data, and marketing campaigns across all channels. This ensures that retailers can deliver consistent service whether the consumer is shopping online, on mobile, or in-store.

 

Government Support as a Strategic Accelerator

Saudi Arabia’s retail transformation is heavily supported by national policy. Under Vision 2030, the government views retail modernization as an economic multiplier that stimulates SME growth, boosts local content, and expands the digital economy.

Programs from Monsha’at offer financing, grants, and business development services to retail SMEs. The Ministry of Commerce enforces digital invoicing, consumer protection regulations, and fair competition laws that strengthen the sector's integrity. Meanwhile, the government’s aggressive push toward cashless payments has dramatically accelerated digital commerce adoption.

A senior policymaker recently noted:
“Retail is the biggest employer in the Kingdom. Modernizing this sector means modernizing the entire economy.”

 

Saudi Retail Over the Next Five Years

Looking ahead, the Saudi retail sector is set to become one of the most technologically advanced consumer markets in the region. Several forces will define this trajectory:

AI will become embedded in every part of retail—from demand forecasting and customer service automation to product recommendation models and dynamic pricing engines. Retail media networks will emerge, turning retailers into advertising platforms that monetize their digital touchpoints. Physical stores will increasingly integrate Internet-of-Things sensors, computer vision, and predictive analytics, transforming them into intelligent spaces. Logistics will enter a new phase of automation with robotics and drone-supported delivery. Lastly, sustainability will become integral, with energy-efficient stores, optimized cooling, and smart waste management becoming sector norms.

 

To conclude, Saudi Arabia’s retail transformation is not an incremental shift—it is a structural rewrite of how the sector operates. Technology has moved from being a support function to being the organizing principle of retail strategy. Startups sit at the center of this shift, providing the tools, platforms, and innovations that allow the sector to evolve faster than traditional players could manage alone.

The Kingdom’s consumer economy is being reborn—more digital, more data-driven, more efficient, and more aligned with global trends. As Saudi Arabia pushes toward its 2030 goals, the retail sector is emerging as one of the clearest examples of how technology and entrepreneurship can reshape an entire economic landscape.

 

Liquidity Crunch: Why Cash Flow Matters More Than Profit

Ghada Ismail

 

Imagine running a growing business with strong sales and promising prospects, only to realize you don’t have enough cash to pay suppliers or salaries next month. This situation, where money becomes suddenly tight despite an otherwise healthy business, is known as a ‘Liquidity Crunch’.

For entrepreneurs, investors, and managers, understanding liquidity crunches is essential. Even companies that appear healthy on the surface can suddenly find themselves struggling if cash flow dries up.

 

Understanding Liquidity

Before diving into what a liquidity crunch is, it helps to understand the idea of liquidity itself.

Liquidity simply refers to how easily a business can access cash to cover its short-term expenses. These expenses include things like paying employees, settling supplier invoices, covering rent, or servicing debt.

Cash is the most liquid asset a company can have. But businesses may also hold other assets that can be quickly turned into cash, such as short-term investments or marketable securities.

A company might look profitable on paper but still face liquidity problems. This often happens when money is tied up in inventory, unpaid customer invoices, or long-term investments that cannot be quickly converted into cash.

 

So, What Is a Liquidity Crunch?

A liquidity crunch occurs when a company—or even an entire financial system—suddenly finds itself short on cash or easily accessible funds.

In simple terms, it means a business doesn’t have enough readily available money to cover its immediate obligations.

There are many reasons this situation can arise. Customers may delay payments. Costs might rise unexpectedly. Access to credit could tighten. Investors might pull back on funding. Sometimes broader economic shocks or market downturns can also trigger a liquidity squeeze.

When this happens, companies may be forced to make difficult decisions. They might cut costs, sell assets, raise emergency funding, or delay certain payments just to keep operations running.

 

Why Startups Are Especially Vulnerable

Startups are particularly exposed to liquidity crunches. Unlike mature companies with stable revenue streams, startups often rely heavily on external funding from venture capital investors. If a planned funding round gets delayed or investors suddenly become cautious, a startup can quickly find itself struggling to pay salaries or cover operational costs.

This became especially visible during periods when global venture capital slowed down. Many startups were forced to cut spending, freeze hiring, or lay off employees simply to extend their financial runway.

For startups, managing liquidity is often a matter of survival.

 

Liquidity Crunches in the Wider Economy

Liquidity crunches don’t just affect individual businesses. Entire financial systems can experience them as well.

A well-known example occurred during the Global Financial Crisis of 2007–2009. As uncertainty spread across financial markets, banks became increasingly reluctant to lend to one another in the interbank market due to fears about counterparty solvency. This loss of trust caused institutions to hoard cash, dramatically slowing the flow of credit and creating severe liquidity shortages. In response, central banks such as the Federal Reserve and the European Central Bank intervened with emergency lending programs and large-scale liquidity injections to stabilize markets and restore confidence.

 

Early Warning Signs

Liquidity crunches rarely appear overnight. Businesses often see warning signs beforehand.

One of the clearest signals is shrinking cash reserves. Another is a growing gap between the money coming in and the money going out.

Other red flags may include increasing reliance on short-term loans, delays in paying suppliers, or difficulty securing new financing.

Companies that closely monitor their cash flow are usually better positioned to spot these problems early.

 

How Companies Protect Themselves

While no business is completely immune to liquidity problems, there are ways to reduce the risk.

Maintaining healthy cash reserves is one of the most effective safeguards. Businesses can also diversify their funding sources, negotiate flexible payment terms with suppliers, and regularly review their cash flow forecasts.

Having access to credit lines or emergency financing can also provide a critical safety net during periods when cash becomes tight.

 

To Wrap Things Up…

A liquidity crunch may sound like a technical financial term, but in reality, it can become a defining moment for a company.

Even businesses with strong growth and solid revenue can run into trouble if they cannot access cash when they need it.

For entrepreneurs and executives, the lesson is simple: profitability is important, but cash flow is even more critical. Companies that carefully manage their liquidity are far better prepared to navigate economic shocks and periods of uncertainty.

Rejected but Not Defeated: Why Startups Still Have a Chance After Investors Say No

Kholoud Hussein 

 

Rejection is a normal part of startup fundraising, but for many founders, it still feels like a dead end. The reality is far more encouraging: a “no” from an investor rarely means forever. In growing ecosystems such as Saudi Arabia, the UAE, and broader global markets, many startups end up securing funding from the very same investors who had previously rejected them. The difference often comes down to timing, progress, and persistence.

In venture capital, rejection is seldom a judgment on a startup’s potential. More often, it reflects internal fund timing, sector focus, capital availability, or simple misalignment. A startup that doesn’t fit a fund’s mandate today may be perfectly positioned six months later. Investors routinely admit that many of their best deals started with an initial pass.

Fundamentals also evolve quickly. Early-stage startups often get turned down because revenue isn’t stable, customer acquisition isn’t mature, or the product still needs validation. When founders return with stronger metrics, better economics, and clearer customer traction, the investment conversation changes entirely. Investors respect momentum. They also notice founders who take feedback seriously and return with evidence of improvement.

Founders sometimes forget that relationships outlast rejections. Venture investing is built on long-term engagement, not one-off meetings. A professional, well-handled decline lays the groundwork for future opportunities. Many successful founders maintain consistent investor updates—short monthly emails highlighting progress and challenges. These updates keep the company on investors’ radar and often lead to renewed interest, especially when numbers start moving in the right direction.

Market timing is another major factor. Just as startups evolve, markets shift. A sector that seemed unappealing at the time of a pitch can suddenly become high-priority due to regulatory changes, technological breakthroughs, or macroeconomic shifts. Recent years have shown this clearly: climate tech surged after net-zero commitments, AI exploded after generative models took hold, and fintech rebounded after regulatory advancements in the GCC. A startup deemed “too early” can quickly become “exactly right.”

Today’s founders also have more funding options than ever before. The rise of sovereign funds, corporate venture capital, angel syndicates, family offices, government-backed accelerators, and alternative financing models means one rejection does not signal the end of the road. Often, the right investor is simply in a different corner of the ecosystem.

Ultimately, rejection shapes better founders. It demands clarity, forces refinement, and tests resilience. Many successful entrepreneurs credit their early rejections for sharpening their pitch, strengthening their business model, and pushing them toward deeper customer understanding. Investors, for their part, watch closely how founders react. A constructive response signals maturity, discipline, and leadership—traits VCs value as highly as revenue.

In fast-growing markets like Saudi Arabia, where capital pools are diversifying and competition among investors is rising, a rejection today is more likely to be a temporary pause than a definitive judgment. Founders who continue building, improving, and communicating often find the door opens again—and this time, more widely than before.

Rejection is not a verdict. It’s a checkpoint. And for many startups, it becomes the very step that leads to their strongest investment partners.