Reem Asaad: The Saudi Woman Who Changed Labour Law with Facebook — Then Built a Tech Leadership Career

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In 2009, when a Saudi woman used Facebook to campaign against a retail labour regulation, the likelihood that it would change a decades-old national law was approximately zero. Reem Asaad did it anyway. Her Facebook-and-lecture campaign calling for women to be allowed to work in Saudi Arabia’s retail lingerie sector — which at the time employed only men, requiring Saudi women to discuss intimate purchases with male staff — generated national debate that led directly to the Ministry of Labor issuing a law in 2011 permitting women to work in retail. It was, by any measure, an extraordinary demonstration that personal conviction, digital platforms, and persistent advocacy can reshape policy in a country that outsiders often assume is impervious to change.

From Social Activist to Tech Executive

What makes Reem Asaad’s career arc remarkable is that her labour activism was not a diversion from her professional path — it was consistent with it. With over 30 years of experience across technology, financial services, and customer experience, she currently serves as Cisco’s Vice President for the Middle East, Africa, Turkey, Romania, and CIS — one of the largest regional leadership roles in one of the world’s most important enterprise technology companies. She manages a team responsible for Cisco’s business across a territory encompassing more than 100 countries, representing one of the most significant senior technology executive roles held by an Arab woman globally.

Before Cisco, Asaad built her career across multiple industries, developing a reputation for the combination of commercial acumen and social awareness that makes her one of the region’s most cited voices on technology leadership, digital transformation, and women’s advancement in the Arab workforce. She has been ranked among the most powerful Arab women in business by Arabian Business Magazine and has spoken at the World Economic Forum, the UN Global Compact, and dozens of regional CEO summits.

Technology as a Women’s Empowerment Tool

Asaad is deliberately vocal about the relationship between technology access and women’s economic participation — not as a philanthropic position but as a business argument. Her thesis, articulated consistently over the past decade, is that digital economy platforms disproportionately expand women’s economic agency because they remove the geographic, social, and transportation barriers that have historically limited women’s workforce participation in the GCC. The growth of women-led e-commerce businesses across Saudi Arabia and the UAE since 2016 — accelerated by the relaxation of guardianship requirements and the expansion of digital payment infrastructure — is, in her analysis, the most commercially significant social transformation in the region’s history.

What Her Story Means for GCC Business in 2026

Reem Asaad’s relevance to GCC business in 2026 is multi-dimensional. As Cisco’s regional vice president, she directs the technology investments of one of the world’s largest enterprise IT providers across markets that are collectively spending hundreds of billions of dollars on digital transformation. Her decisions on where Cisco deploys resources, invests in partnerships, and builds local talent pipelines directly shape the competitive landscape for enterprise technology in the GCC.

At the same time, her legacy as the woman who used social media to change Saudi labour law — before it became fashionable to credit digital platforms with social change — is a reminder that the GCC’s transformation has been shaped not only by royal decrees and sovereign wealth funds but by individual citizens who believed the status quo could be improved and were prepared to say so publicly. For the next generation of GCC professionals who wonder whether their voices matter, Reem Asaad’s career is the most compelling evidence that they do.

Also Read: Saudi Vision 2030 Halfway Milestone: Key Non-Oil GDP Achievements and What Comes Next | MENA Economic Outlook 2026: Key Sectors, Investment Themes, and Growth Drivers for GCC Business | Saudi Arabia’s Digital Riyal CBDC Pilot Expands to 20 Banks as Cross-Border Testing Begins

Fatima Al Zaabi
Fatima Al Zaabi
Senior Editor covering GCC business leadership, policy and economic strategy.

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