E-Learning Unleashed: The Saudi EdTech Ecosystem at Full Speed

Feb 25, 2025

Ghada Ismail

 

Saudi Arabia’s education landscape is experiencing a groundbreaking shift, driven by robust government policies, rapid digitalization, and an increasing appetite for innovative learning solutions. As part of the Vision 2030 agenda, the nation is committed to fostering digital literacy, promoting lifelong learning, and building a knowledge-based economy. EdTech has emerged as a vital catalyst in this transformation, offering diverse tools and platforms that enhance accessibility, engagement, and educational outcomes.

 

The Saudi government has actively promoted digital learning initiatives, making significant investments in infrastructure, content development, and digital literacy programs. Institutions are rapidly adapting to new educational paradigms, integrating artificial intelligence (AI), big data, and immersive technologies to enhance teaching and learning processes. As a result, Saudi Arabia has positioned itself as a regional leader in EdTech adoption, attracting global investors and fostering a culture of innovation in education.

 

What is EdTech?

EdTech (Educational Technology) refers to the use of digital tools, software, and technology-driven solutions to enhance learning and teaching. It encompasses everything from e-learning platforms, AI-powered tutoring systems, and gamified learning apps to smart classrooms, virtual reality (VR) education, and adaptive learning technologies. The goal of EdTech is to make education more accessible, engaging, and effective for students and educators alike.

 

Key Stats on Saudi Arabia’s EdTech Growth

Market Value: According to GlobalData, The Saudi Arabian EdTech market was valued at $714.7 million in 2023 and is projected to grow at a compound annual growth rate (CAGR) of over 10% from 2023 to 2028. 

 

E-Learning Market Growth: According to a study by IMARC Group, the country's e-learning market reached $2.1 billion in 2023 and is expected to grow at a CAGR of 13.2%, reaching $6.7 billion by 2032. 

 

Online Education Revenue: Revenue in the online education market is projected to reach $280.87 million by 2025, with an annual growth rate of 5.90% between 2025 and 2029, according to Statista. 

 

Government Initiatives: Saudi Arabia has allocated significant investments toward digital education transformation, focusing on modernizing infrastructure, enhancing e-learning platforms, and supporting AI-driven educational tools. 

 

Startup Ecosystem: The EdTech landscape in Saudi Arabia includes prominent companies such as AlGooru Holding LTD, iStoria, Udemy Inc, Coursera Inc, Aanaab, Aila, and many others contributing to a competitive and fragmented market.

 

Internet Penetration: The widespread adoption of e-learning in Saudi Arabia has been facilitated by improved internet infrastructure, playing a crucial role in driving the adoption of e-learning services.

 

 

A. The Market Landscape

Saudi Arabia is home to one of the largest education sectors in the MENA region, with over 7 million students in K-12 and higher education. The government has made significant investments in digital learning platforms, smart classrooms, and AI-driven education solutions. The COVID-19 pandemic further accelerated the adoption of EdTech, leading to increased engagement with online learning tools.

 

Key players in the Saudi EdTech ecosystem include startups such as Noon Academy, Classera, and Akhdar, as well as international collaborations with platforms like Coursera and Udacity. Government initiatives such as Madrasati, a digital learning platform launched by the Ministry of Education, have also played a pivotal role in the sector’s growth. Madrasati is Saudi Arabia’s national e-learning platform, launched by the Ministry of Education in 2020. It was initially developed as a response to the COVID-19 pandemic to ensure uninterrupted education, but it has since evolved into a permanent digital learning solution for K-12 students.

 

Moreover, partnerships between universities and global technology firms are driving the development of localized, high-quality digital education resources.

 

Saudi Arabia is also witnessing the rise of hybrid learning models, blending online and in-person instruction to maximize flexibility and accessibility. With an increasing number of private investors entering the space, the EdTech sector is poised for sustained growth, with new startups emerging to cater to diverse educational needs.

 

B. Key EdTech Segments

 

K-12 Digital Learning

The K-12 segment has seen rapid adoption of e-learning platforms, gamification tools, and AI-driven personalized learning solutions. Platforms like Madrasati and Noon Academy have gained traction by providing interactive and adaptive learning experiences. AI-powered tutors and smart content recommendation engines are also gaining popularity, helping students grasp complex concepts with personalized study plans.

 

Higher Education & Online Degrees

Saudi universities are increasingly integrating digital tools and collaborating with global EdTech companies to offer online degrees and certifications. Institutions like King Saud University and KAUST are pioneering digital transformation through smart campuses and AI-driven learning analytics. Virtual laboratories and AI-assisted assessments are further revolutionizing higher education, making learning more efficient and accessible.

 

Corporate Training & Upskilling

The demand for continuous learning and professional development has led to a rise in corporate training solutions. Companies are leveraging platforms like Udacity, Coursera, and Edraak to upskill employees in emerging fields such as AI, cybersecurity, and data science. The Saudi government’s focus on workforce readiness, through initiatives like the Human Capability Development Program, further highlights the importance of digital learning in professional development.

The Human Capability Development Program (HCDP) is a key initiative under Saudi Vision 2030, launched to enhance the skills, knowledge, and employability of Saudi citizens. It focuses on education, training, and lifelong learning to create a globally competitive workforce that aligns with the Kingdom’s economic transformation goals.

 

EdTech for Special Needs

Innovative technologies are improving accessibility for students with disabilities. Assistive learning tools, AI-powered speech-to-text applications, and digital Braille solutions are being integrated into educational programs to ensure inclusivity. The government is actively working to expand accessibility initiatives, ensuring that students with special needs receive equitable educational opportunities.

 

C. Investments and Funding Trends

Saudi Arabia’s EdTech sector has witnessed increasing venture capital interest, with significant funding rounds for startups such as Noon Academy and Classera. Public-private partnerships and government-backed investment initiatives are further accelerating the industry’s growth. The Saudi Venture Capital Company (SVC) and other government-backed funds have played a crucial role in fostering local innovation, creating an ecosystem where EdTech startups can scale rapidly.

 

The influx of foreign investment and collaborations with global technology giants have also contributed to a more dynamic EdTech landscape. As new funding opportunities emerge, Saudi EdTech startups are expanding their reach beyond the domestic market, targeting regional and international audiences with innovative solutions.

 

D. Challenges and Barriers

Despite its rapid expansion, the EdTech sector in Saudi Arabia faces challenges such as digital divide issues in rural areas, resistance to adoption within traditional institutions, and regulatory hurdles. Ensuring equitable access to technology and improving digital literacy remain key priorities for policymakers. Additionally, maintaining the quality and effectiveness of digital education tools while scaling up their adoption poses a significant challenge.

 

The need for robust data privacy regulations and cybersecurity measures is also becoming increasingly apparent, as digital education platforms collect vast amounts of student information. Addressing these concerns through clear policies and innovative security solutions will be crucial for sustaining growth in the sector.

 

E. The Future of EdTech in Saudi Arabia

Emerging trends such as AI-driven tutoring, virtual reality (VR) classrooms, and blockchain-based credentialing are expected to shape the future of education in Saudi Arabia. The government’s focus on fostering innovation and digital transformation will continue to drive advancements in the sector. The integration of 5G technology and cloud computing is expected to further enhance the scalability and efficiency of online learning platforms.

 

As Saudi Arabia moves towards becoming a knowledge-driven economy, lifelong learning, and digital reskilling programs will become increasingly vital. Educational institutions, technology providers, and policymakers will need to collaborate to create a holistic and sustainable digital learning environment that meets the evolving needs of students and professionals.

 

The EdTech revolution in Saudi Arabia is not just reshaping traditional learning experiences but also unlocking unprecedented opportunities for students, educators, and businesses alike. With sustained investment, cutting-edge technology, and progressive policies, the sector is poised to redefine the educational landscape, making learning more engaging, inclusive, and globally competitive.

 

Saudi Arabia’s commitment to digital education aligns with its broader economic ambitions, ensuring that future generations are equipped with the skills needed to thrive in a rapidly evolving world. As digital education becomes a cornerstone of the nation’s development strategy, the kingdom is well on its way to establishing itself as a global leader in the EdTech space.

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Degefa: TruBuild to expand into UAE and Qatar in 2025

Noha Gad

 

The construction tech sector in Saudi Arabia is witnessing a transformative phase, driven by Vision 2030’s ambitious infrastructure projects and a growing focus on innovation. From smart cities to large-scale renewable energy initiatives, cutting-edge technologies such as AI, Building Information Modeling (BIM), and modular construction are reshaping the industry.

 

TruBuild, a leading Saudi construction tech company, is at the forefront of this evolution, delivering innovative solutions to enhance efficiency, sustainability, and digital transformation across the Kingdom.

Known for its advanced project management tools, automation, and data-driven insights, TruBuild has become a trusted partner for major developers and government entities, supporting Saudi Arabia’s mission to modernize its infrastructure with smarter, faster, and more cost-effective methodologies. 

 

Sharikat Mubasher held an interview with TruBuild’s Co-founder and CEO, Bisrat Degefa, to delve deeper into the trends, challenges, and future of construction tech in the Kingdom and the broader region.

 

TruBuild uses AI to streamline procurement and project management. How does the platform uniquely address delays and cost overruns compared to traditional methods?

Traditional tender evaluations often take 4–6 weeks, involve multiple full-time reviewers, and still produce inconsistent, subjective results. TruBuild transforms this process by ingesting thousands of pages of technical, commercial, and contractual data in minutes. It applies a transparent, rules-based scoring system enhanced by machine-learning insights and generates a fully auditable trail for every action. The result: evaluations are completed in 5–7 days by just two reviewers, with up to 85% cost savings, 70% faster cycle times, and significantly fewer downstream variations—thanks to early risk identification.

 

How do you see construction tech adoption today in Saudi Arabia and the wider region?

Adoption has moved from experimental pilots to core strategy. In 2019, fewer than 10% of top developers in the region used digital procurement tools; by 2025, over 60% are running live programs. Cloud-based PMIS adoption has grown from 20% to more than half. Saudi Arabia leads the charge, supported by mandates around BIM, e-tendering, and local data residency. What was once seen as optional is now essential to meet the region’s ambitious delivery timelines and scale.

 

What key challenges does TruBuild face in modernizing construction tech in Saudi Arabia and the GCC, and how have you tackled them?
Change aversion is a major hurdle—many teams still believe Excel is “good enough.” So, we built TruBuild to feel familiar: spreadsheet-style, no-code, and easy to learn in a single-day onboarding session. Data sovereignty concerns are resolved with fully Saudi-hosted deployments, compliant with ISO 27001 and NCA-ECC standards. To address fragmented procurement practices, we offer out-of-the-box templates for NEC, FIDIC, and local regulations. And we tackle skill gaps through embedded guidance and CPD-certified training delivered in collaboration with regional industry bodies.

 

You recently secured a $1 million seed round. How will this capital accelerate TruBuild’s growth?
 The funding enables us to scale our engineering, domain, and commercial teams. We’re launching a commercial evaluation module in Q3 2025 with an Arabic NLP interface and expanding go-to-market partnerships with leading project management consultancies to accelerate adoption across the region.

 

What are the company’s expansion plans in Saudi Arabia and the broader region?
 In Saudi Arabia, we are deepening our engagements with PIF subsidiaries and giga-projects. Regionally, we plan to enter the UAE and Qatar in 2025 through local system integrators, followed by targeted expansion into the UK and US markets, where we see strong demand for AI-driven construction tools.

 

How does TruBuild align with Vision 2030’s goals to digitize construction and localize technology?
 Vision 2030 calls for 70% local content, improved productivity, and greater transparency. TruBuild is designed and led from Saudi Arabia, and our clients are already seeing over 50% savings in procurement resource hours. The Vision’s delivery pace simply cannot be supported by legacy workflows. TruBuild shifts procurement from reactive to proactive, enabling faster, more accurate, and fully auditable decisions. Every riyal is tracked and justified, ensuring critical projects are delivered on time, on budget, and to the highest standards.

 

How do you expect construction tech to evolve in Saudi Arabia over the next five years?
We expect widespread adoption of AI-assisted workflows, contracts linked to digital twins, live ESG and schedule tracking, blockchain-enabled supplier payments, and automated compliance checks for codes and Saudization. With its combination of scale, urgency, and regulatory support, Saudi Arabia is on track to become a global leader in AI-powered construction, and TruBuild aims to be at the forefront of that evolution.

From Boardrooms to Breakthroughs: The CVC Revolution Reshaping Saudi Innovation

Kholoud Hussein 

 

Saudi Arabia is witnessing a significant transformation in its investment landscape, with Corporate Venture Capital (CVC) emerging as a pivotal mechanism through which large corporations are fostering innovation and contributing to the Kingdom's economic diversification goals outlined in Vision 2030.

 

The Emergence of CVC in Saudi Arabia

The rise of CVC in Saudi Arabia represents a structural evolution in how capital is deployed, risk is managed, and innovation is commercialized. Unlike traditional venture capital, which typically originates from financial institutions or specialized funds focused on returns, CVC in the Kingdom is increasingly driven by large corporations seeking to future-proof their businesses while aligning with national economic transformation goals.

 

This dual motive—strategic relevance and national alignment—has accelerated the institutionalization of CVC as a mainstream investment model across sectors ranging from energy and telecom to banking and retail.

 

From Passive Investment to Strategic Innovation Vehicle

Historically, corporate investment in startups within the region was opportunistic and reactive—often limited to sponsorships or minority passive stakes. Today, Saudi conglomerates and listed entities are adopting a more structured and proactive CVC architecture, complete with dedicated funds, governance models, and internal innovation mandates.

 

According to a 2024 report by MAGNiTT, CVCs accounted for 30% of all unique investors in Saudi Arabia’s venture market, a proportion higher than any other country in the MENA region. This surge reflects not only increased appetite from corporate boards but also regulatory encouragement and ecosystem readiness.

 

Additionally, between 2020 and Q3 2024, corporate investors in the broader MENA region deployed over $380 million across 1,361 tracked investment deals, with Saudi-based corporates contributing a significant share of those transactions. More importantly, CVCs in the Kingdom have moved beyond seed-stage activity, participating in later-stage rounds (Series A and B), signaling growing confidence in the scalability of regional startups.

 

Institutional Players Driving the Shift

Several corporate entities in Saudi Arabia have institutionalized venture activity, establishing internal venture arms with clear mandates:

  • Aramco Ventures, the $7 billion investment vehicle of the national energy giant, focuses on decarbonization, digital industrial solutions, and downstream innovation—sectors vital to both corporate sustainability and national competitiveness.
  • stc’s Tali Ventures has adopted a platform approach, investing across fintech, cybersecurity, AI, and content to support the Kingdom’s rapidly expanding digital economy.
  • Financial institutions like Riyad Bank, SNB Capital, and SABB Ventures are actively deploying capital into fintech and regtech startups, both to modernize their own operations and to stay ahead in a region undergoing digital financial transformation.

These initiatives are not isolated experiments. They are now embedded within broader corporate innovation agendas, often reported at the board level and evaluated against both strategic KPIs and ESG metrics, signaling a maturation of the CVC model.

 

Macroeconomic Drivers Behind the Shift

Several macroeconomic and policy trends have catalyzed the rise of CVC in Saudi Arabia:

  1. Diversification pressure: With Vision 2030 emphasizing the contribution of non-oil GDP, large corporations are incentivized to hedge against sectoral stagnation by investing in adjacent or emerging industries.
  2. Technological leapfrogging: By partnering with agile, innovation-first startups, corporations accelerate access to disruptive technologies, especially in areas like AI, green energy, and e-commerce.
  3. Government encouragement: Programs like Monsha’at’s CVC initiatives, co-investment funds from SVC, and innovation zones like King Salman Park are actively drawing corporates into the venture ecosystem as anchor participants.
  4. Global positioning: As Saudi companies expand internationally, CVC provides a strategic foothold in foreign innovation markets, while simultaneously drawing foreign startups into the Saudi market under joint ventures or strategic partnerships.

 

Strategic Alignment with Vision 2030

Saudi Arabia’s growing CVC activity is not happening in a vacuum—it is deeply synchronized with the Kingdom’s long-term strategic transformation under Vision 2030. As the country transitions from an oil-reliant economy to a diversified, innovation-led model, CVC is emerging as both a market instrument and a policy mechanism to accelerate this shift.

 

Where traditional economic reforms focus on infrastructure, education, and regulation, CVC functions as a fast-track channel for technological absorption, SME empowerment, and sectoral diversification—all cornerstones of Vision 2030.

 

Catalyzing Non-Oil Sector Growth

A central pillar of Vision 2030 is to increase the private sector’s contribution to GDP, particularly through high-growth industries such as fintech, healthtech, clean energy, and digital logistics. CVCs play a catalytic role here by identifying and nurturing startups in these sectors, thereby unlocking new value chains and expanding sector-specific ecosystems.

For example:

  • Aramco Ventures has strategically deployed capital into carbon capture, hydrogen technologies, and industrial AI startups. These align not only with Aramco’s net-zero commitments but also with Saudi Green Initiative targets.
  • stc’s Tali Ventures is channeling funding toward AI-powered analytics, cloud-native infrastructure, and digital content platforms—sectors critical to achieving the National Digital Transformation Strategy.

This alignment is intentional. Corporate venture arms are increasingly evaluated not just by ROI but by their contribution to national innovation metrics, including IP generation, employment in tech sectors, and localization of frontier technologies.

 

Driving Knowledge Transfer and Localization

Vision 2030 places emphasis on developing local capabilities—not only in terms of employment, but in innovation sovereignty. CVC-backed startups often act as conduits for technology transfer, bringing global models into the local context and adapting them to Saudi-specific challenges.

 

For example, healthtech startups backed by corporate investors in the Kingdom are localizing AI diagnostic tools and digital health records systems in Arabic, with full compliance to national data governance frameworks (under SDAIA). This wouldn't be feasible without the scaling infrastructure and compliance frameworks that large corporations provide.

 

This localization effort directly feeds into Human Capability Development, one of the Vision Realization Programs (VRPs), by giving Saudi technologists, engineers, and operators a platform to lead innovation on home ground.

 

Institutional Coordination and Policy Integration

Crucially, CVC activity in Saudi Arabia does not operate independently of the state. It is interwoven with broader institutional frameworks that include:

  • Monsha’at, which supports SME development and regularly co-hosts demo days with CVCs.
  • Saudi Venture Capital Company (SVC), which co-invests alongside corporate arms to amplify startup financing.
  • Ministry of Investment (MISA), which works to facilitate smoother cross-border entry for foreign startups backed by Saudi corporates.

These synergies ensure that CVC activity is not just corporate strategy—it is part of a national innovation strategy. As a result, startups receiving corporate backing are more likely to be aligned with priority sectors identified in Vision 2030, from tourism tech and smart cities to energy optimization and AI governance.

 

A Policy Lever for Private Sector Empowerment

Vision 2030 explicitly calls for deepening the role of the private sector. CVC embodies this vision in action. It allows the private sector not only to participate in, but to shape, the Kingdom’s innovation trajectory. By positioning large corporations as venture backers, Saudi Arabia is bridging the traditional disconnect between startups and industrial giants.

 

As Majid Al-Qasabi, Minister of Commerce, stated in a 2024 forum: “The role of major companies is evolving. Today, they are not just employers or operators—they are incubators of national innovation capacity.”

In this context, Corporate Venture Capital in Saudi Arabia is not merely a business trend—it is a strategic policy instrument embedded in the country’s long-term economic vision. It reinforces the Kingdom’s ambition to become not only a regional hub for investment, but a global engine for innovation rooted in sovereign capability and entrepreneurial dynamism.

 

Impact on the Startup Ecosystem

Corporate Venture Capital (CVC) in Saudi Arabia is reshaping the startup ecosystem not only by injecting financial capital, but by fundamentally altering the structure, maturity, and scalability of emerging ventures. Unlike traditional venture capital firms that primarily seek high-return exits, CVCs in the Kingdom are driven by both financial objectives and strategic imperatives, creating a layered value proposition for startups.

 

Strategic Capital vs. Passive Investment

Startups backed by corporate venture arms often benefit from more than just funding—they gain access to the strategic infrastructure and commercial networks of the parent corporation. This includes distribution channels, procurement pipelines, regulatory facilitation, and, critically, early enterprise clients. For early-stage companies, such access can compress market entry timelines by years.

 

Take, for instance, fintechs backed by SNB Capital or stc’s Tali Ventures. These startups are not just experimenting in isolation—they are being integrated into live environments, piloting products directly within national banks or telecom platforms. This symbiotic approach allows startups to iterate rapidly and scale with less friction.

 

Sectoral Depth and Regulatory Advantage

In regulated industries such as finance, energy, health, and logistics, where bureaucratic complexity often inhibits innovation, CVC involvement provides a regulatory shield and operational runway. Startups working under the umbrella of corporates like Aramco Ventures or Riyadh Bank Ventures often report faster compliance onboarding, shared risk frameworks, and access to insider policy insights.

 

This is particularly important in sectors where time-to-market is constrained by licensing, certification, or policy alignment. As Nabeel Koshak, CEO of Saudi Venture Capital Company, stated: “Strategic capital is now a form of national capacity building. It allows startups to operate at the frontier of innovation while being tethered to institutional strength.”

 

Talent Development and Knowledge Transfer

Corporate-backed startups also become indirect beneficiaries of knowledge transfer. Through mentorship from corporate leadership, shared R&D facilities, and access to seasoned professionals, these ventures develop internal capabilities that exceed typical startup benchmarks. This can lead to higher retention, better governance, and stronger product-market fit over time.

 

Moreover, some corporates are now embedding startup staff into internal innovation teams—a reverse mentorship model that enhances agility on both ends.

 

Creating a Hybrid Funding Model

Another key development is the rise of co-investment models involving both CVCs and traditional VCs. According to MAGNiTT, nearly 87% of CVC-backed deals in Saudi Arabia during 2022–2023 included participation from institutional or regional venture capital funds. This hybrid approach diversifies the risk profile and expands the strategic bandwidth of the startup.

 

Startups that operate under this dual-investor structure often find themselves better positioned to attract international investors during later stages, particularly Series B and beyond, due to the credibility and operational grounding provided by corporate stakeholders.

 

Toward a Sustainable Innovation Ecosystem

Ultimately, the growth of CVC in Saudi Arabia is helping to mature the startup ecosystem in a way that is structurally sustainable. It is bridging the gap between experimental tech and industrial adoption. And in doing so, it is laying the groundwork for long-term ecosystem resilience—where innovation is not only celebrated, but continuously deployed, scaled, and institutionalized.

 

In short, CVCs in Saudi Arabia are not merely supporting startups—they are scaffolding a future where startups become part of the national economic architecture.

As Saudi Arabia continues to implement Vision 2030, the role of CVC is expected to expand further. Corporations are likely to increase their investments in startups, fostering innovation and contributing to the Kingdom's economic transformation. The synergy between corporate objectives and national goals positions CVC as a powerful tool for driving sustainable growth and positioning Saudi Arabia as a hub for innovation in the region.

 

The Startup MVP: Your First Step Toward Product-Market Fit

Ghada Ismail

 

An MVP is not a prototype or a half-baked concept. It’s a functional product just stripped down to its core. It includes the most essential features that solve your customers' main problem. Think of it as the shortest path between your idea and real user feedback.

Instead of spending months building the “perfect” app or platform, you build something usable and release it early. This way, you avoid wasting time and money on features nobody wants.

 

Why MVPs Matter in the Startup Journey

  1. Validation Before Scaling
    Your MVP helps you test the market before committing heavy resources. You’ll find out if there’s actual demand — and learn what users really care about.
  2. Faster Time to Market
    Building an MVP helps you launch quickly. And in the startup world, speed often beats size.
  3. Smarter Use of Resources
    Startups usually work with tight budgets. An MVP helps you focus only on what matters, reducing risk and avoiding feature bloat.
  4. Informed Product Decisions
    By releasing early, you gather real-world data. That feedback becomes your compass for what to build next.

 

What an MVP Is Not

  • It’s not a buggy or unpolished product. It should still be functional and user-friendly.
  • It’s not a test run with your friends and family. Real users provide real feedback.
  • It’s not the final version. It’s the beginning of a learning process.

 

Examples of MVPs in Action

  • Instagram started as a photo-sharing app with just a few filters, no stories, no messaging.
  • Dropbox first launched with a video explaining how the product would work, even before it was fully built.
  • Uber began as a simple app connecting black car drivers with iPhone users in San Francisco.

These MVPs were not flashy. They were focused.

 

Tips for Building Your MVP

  • Identify the core problem you’re solving.
  • List the must-have features and ditch the rest.
  • Choose the right tools for speed and simplicity.
  • Build, release, and listen to your users.
  • Iterate based on actual usage and feedback.

 

Final Thoughts: MVP Is a Mindset

Building an MVP isn’t just a tactic,  it’s rather a mindset. It encourages startups to learn, adapt, and grow in the most efficient way possible. In the fast-paced world of entrepreneurship, launching smart can be just as important as launching fast.

So if you’re at the early stage of your startup journey, don’t wait for perfect. Start with an MVP and let your users shape what comes next.

 

AI at the Core: The Rise of Generative-First Startups in the Middle East

Kholoud Hussein 

 

In the rapidly evolving landscape of artificial intelligence (AI), a new breed of startups is emerging in Saudi Arabia and the broader Middle East and North Africa (MENA) region. These are generative AI-first startups—companies that are not merely incorporating AI into their operations but are fundamentally built around generative AI technologies. This strategic focus positions them at the forefront of innovation, offering scalable solutions across various sectors.

 

Defining Generative AI-First Startups

 

A generative AI-first startup is characterized by its foundational reliance on generative AI models. Unlike traditional companies that may adopt AI tools to enhance existing processes, these startups are conceived with AI at their core, leveraging technologies such as large language models (LLMs), generative adversarial networks (GANs), and other advanced algorithms to create novel content, solutions, or services.

 

Beyond Tools: Generative AI as the Core Business Model

 

In these startups, generative AI is not an auxiliary tool but the central component of their value proposition. This paradigm shift enables the creation of products and services that were previously unattainable, allowing for unprecedented levels of personalization, efficiency, and scalability. For instance, in the healthcare sector, generative AI can analyze vast datasets to generate personalized treatment plans, while in education, it can create customized learning materials tailored to individual student needs.

 

This approach also facilitates rapid prototyping and deployment, as AI models can be trained and fine-tuned to adapt to specific market demands swiftly. Consequently, generative AI-first startups can achieve significant market penetration with relatively lean operational structures, often requiring fewer human resources compared to traditional enterprises.

 

Prominent Generative AI-First Startups in Saudi Arabia and MENA

 

Several startups in Saudi Arabia and the MENA region exemplify the generative AI-first model:

  • Mozn (Saudi Arabia): Specializes in enterprise AI solutions, including OSOS, a generative Arabic AI model designed for natural language understanding and generation. 
  • Lucidya (Saudi Arabia): Offers a customer experience management platform powered by AI, providing real-time insights and interactions, with a particular focus on Arabic language analysis. 
  • Kinetik (Saudi Arabia): Utilizes generative AI to personalize patient care, analyzing health data to provide tailored health plans and recommendations. 
  • DXwand (Egypt & UAE): Develops AI-powered chatbots and voice assistants, focusing on Arabic and English language support to automate customer service and extract insights from unstructured data. 
  • Seez (UAE): Provides AI-driven solutions for the automotive industry, including an AI-powered virtual assistant that enhances customer support with chatbot functionality and real-time insights. 

 

Strategic Implications for the Region

 

The rise of generative AI-first startups aligns with Saudi Arabia's Vision 2030, which emphasizes technological innovation and economic diversification. By fostering an ecosystem conducive to AI development, the region is positioning itself as a hub for cutting-edge technologies. Investments in AI infrastructure, talent development, and regulatory frameworks are critical to sustaining this growth trajectory.

 

Moreover, the success of these startups demonstrates the region's potential to make a significant contribution to the global AI landscape, offering solutions that address both local and international challenges. As generative AI continues to evolve, the MENA region's proactive engagement with this technology will be instrumental in shaping its economic and technological future.

 

In conclusion, generative AI-first startups represent a transformative force within Saudi Arabia and the MENA region, redefining traditional business models and unlocking new avenues for innovation. Their emergence underscores the importance of embracing advanced technologies to drive sustainable economic growth and competitiveness on the global stage.

 

 

Beyond speed: why dark stores are the next big thing in supply chain revolution

Noha Gad

 

In an era where consumers demand faster deliveries, greater convenience, and seamless shopping experiences, a logistical transformation is occurring behind the scenes: the silent rise of dark stores. These unmarked, tech-driven fulfillment centers are quietly revolutionizing retail infrastructure, emerging as the critical link between digital storefronts and instant delivery expectations in our era of hyper-speed e-commerce and q-commerce.

Recent research showed that the global dark store market is expected to hit $32.91 billion in 2025, with a CAGR of 41%. Meanwhile, the dark store market in the Middle East and North Africa (MENA) is projected to reach $12.1 billion by 2030, growing at a CAGR of 36.1%.

 

What exactly are dark stores?

Unlike traditional retail stores designed for customer foot traffic, dark stores are optimized exclusively for online order fulfillment. They function as micro-warehouses, strategically located in urban centers to enable hyperlocal deliveries, sometimes in as little as 10 to 30 minutes.

These highly automated spaces eliminate all traditional retail elements: no storefronts, shoppers, or checkout lines. Instead, they feature AI-driven inventory systems, robotic pickers, and smart sorting technology operating around the clock. 

By focusing exclusively on high-demand products and leveraging predictive analytics, dark stores simultaneously achieve remarkable speed, reduced waste, and optimal space utilization, making them the perfect fulfillment solution for today's instant gratification economy.

 

Why dark stores are gaining traction in Saudi Arabia

Dark stores are gaining traction in the Kingdom thanks to several key factors aligned with the country’s economic, technological, and consumer trends:

  • Rapid growth of e-commerce. Consumers increasingly prefer quick, convenient online shopping, especially for groceries and everyday essentials. 
  • Demand for super-fast delivery. Dark stores enable 10-to-30-minute deliveries, meeting rising expectations for speed. Applications like Nana, Ninja, and Haseel leverage dark stores to offer instant grocery delivery.
  • Urbanization and high population density. Cities like Riyadh, Jeddah, and Dammam have dense populations, making dark stores cost-effective for covering large demand areas.
  • Investment in technology and startups. Saudi venture capital firms, such as STV and Jahez, fund quick-commerce startups adopting the dark store model.

 

How dark stores benefit the supply chain in Saudi Arabia 

Dark stores are transforming supply chain efficiency in Saudi Arabia by optimizing logistics, reducing costs, and improving delivery performance. They provide:

  • Faster and more efficient order fulfillment.
  • Lower operational costs.
  • Enhanced inventory management.
  • Scalability for Q-commerce.
  • Reduced delivery costs and carbon footprint
  • Better supplier and retailer collaboration.

Dark stores vs. traditional warehouses vs. micro-fulfillment centers

 

Unlike large warehouses, which are typically located on the outskirts of cities and designed for bulk storage, dark stores are compact, urban-based facilities optimized for speed. They act as hidden retail hubs—stocking high-demand groceries and essentials—and enable platforms like Nana and Jahez to deliver orders in under 30 minutes.

Their proximity to consumers and tech-driven picking systems makes them ideal for Saudis' on-demand culture, though their smaller size limits inventory capacity compared to sprawling traditional warehouses.

 

Meanwhile, traditional warehouses are the backbone of bulk logistics, serving big retailers and manufacturers. While they lack the agility of dark stores, they support large-scale e-commerce operations with lower per-unit storage costs. However, their distance from urban centers slows last-mile delivery.

 

The automated, high-density micro-fulfillment centers (MFCs), often embedded in existing supermarkets or standalone sites, use robotics and AI to fulfill online orders quickly. 

 

Dark stores are poised to play an even bigger role in Saudi Arabia’s retail and logistics landscape, driven by several key trends, notably hyperlocal and on-demand dominance, automation and robotics integration, sustainability and cost optimization, and regulatory and investment support.

Finally, dark stores are more than a passing trend in Saudi Arabia, they’re a strategic evolution in retail and supply chain efficiency. By combining speed, cost savings, and scalability, they address the Kingdom’s unique challenges: urbanization, high digital adoption, and demand for instant gratification.