GCC Technology Champions: The Companies Building the Gulf’s Digital Future

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The GCC technology sector has produced a growing cohort of regionally significant companies that are building digital infrastructure, AI capabilities, and technology services across the Gulf and increasingly on a global scale. These companies differ from Silicon Valley counterparts in their close relationship with government strategy and sovereign capital — which gives them resources and market access that purely commercial companies rarely enjoy.

G42: Abu Dhabi’s AI and Cloud Giant

G42 (Group 42) is Abu Dhabi’s most prominent technology company and one of the region’s most ambitious. Founded in 2018, G42 has grown rapidly through a combination of AI development, cloud infrastructure investment, and strategic partnerships with global technology leaders. G42’s work on Arabic large language models and its data centre development programme positions it as a foundational technology infrastructure provider for the UAE’s AI ambitions. The company’s partnership with Microsoft — involving a $1.5 billion investment from the US technology giant — marks G42 as an internationally significant AI player.

stc: Saudi Telecom’s Digital Transformation

Saudi Telecom Company (stc) has transformed from a conventional telecommunications operator into one of the region’s broadest digital services companies. Rebranded from STC to stc to signal its pivot, the company now encompasses enterprise cloud services (through stc pay, stc cloud, and related offerings), digital payments, cybersecurity services, and streaming media. stc’s scale — serving millions of consumers and business customers across Saudi Arabia — gives it unmatched reach for deploying digital services at national scale.

Etisalat (e&): The UAE Telecoms Giant

Emirates Telecommunications Group, rebranded as e& in 2022, is one of the world’s top 10 telecom companies by market capitalisation and operates across multiple continents. In the UAE, e& is the dominant provider of mobile, broadband, and enterprise connectivity services. The company has invested heavily in 5G infrastructure — the UAE has among the highest 5G penetration rates globally — and is building technology services businesses in AI, cloud, and smart city applications on top of its connectivity foundation.

For businesses seeking technology partnerships, government contracts, or venture capital in the GCC, understanding these national technology champions is essential. Each company actively partners with international technology vendors, provides platforms for innovative services to reach national scale, and invests in startups through corporate venture arms. Building relationships with these companies is often a critical step for technology businesses entering Gulf markets.

Also Read: Cybersecurity in the GCC: Regulations, Frameworks, and Business Imperatives in 2025 | Inside the UAE’s Most Powerful Conglomerates: Al Futtaim, Majid Al Futtaim and Emaar | DeFi and Web3 in the GCC: How Decentralised Finance is Taking Root in the Gulf

James Mitchell
James Mitchell
Business and Economy Editor

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