KAUST to support SMEs with research & innovation

KAUST SME Innovation Services will help SMEs increase their customer base and reach new markets while diversifying the Kingdom’s economic landscape.
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Updated 02 November 2020
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KAUST to support SMEs with research & innovation

King Abdullah University of Science and Technology (KAUST) has announced the launch of Saudi Arabia’s first university engagement program intended specifically to foster the growth of small and medium-sized enterprises (SMEs) in the Kingdom. Designed to provide access to KAUST’s innovation ecosystem, KAUST SME Innovation Services will help SMEs increase their customer base and reach new markets while diversifying and strengthening the Kingdom’s economic landscape.

Within the Kingdom, SMEs accounted for more than 99 percent of the private sector in 2018, yet contributed only about 28.7 percent of GDP, according to a recent report by the Small and Medium Enterprises General Authority (Monshaat). With plenty of opportunity for growth, SMEs play an important role in Vision 2030, the Kingdom’s blueprint for a thriving economy. To further this vision, KAUST is committed to supporting a primary objective: Increasing SME GDP contributions to 35 percent by the year 2030. 

“SMEs are the engine of the economy and create crucial jobs and income,” said Kevin Cullen, vice president of innovation and economic development at KAUST. “As a university driven by our economic development mission, we have identified SME growth as a key focus area — and we are keen to welcome these companies into our world-class innovation ecosystem.”

The new program follows the completion of KAUST’s comprehensive survey of 500 SMEs throughout the Kingdom. Conducted in partnership with Monshaat, the Jeddah, Riyadh and Dammam chambers of commerce, Ministry of Investment Saudi Arabia (MISA), the Royal Commission of Jubail and Yanbu, and the Council of Saudi Chambers, the survey is the first to collect SME-university specific data. 

“Innovation is growing rapidly and sustainably through an ecosystem,” said AbdulMajeed Al-Omran, director of the innovation department at Monshaat. “This is reflected in the distinguished report; there is a desire for SMEs to adopt innovation in their products to enhance business growth and a desire to cooperate with a pioneering university such as KAUST.”

Mohammed Yousuf Naghi, chairman of the Jeddah Chamber of Commerce and Industry’s board of directors, said: “As part of the Jeddah chamber’s keenness to support small and medium enterprises in line with the Kingdom’s Vision 2030 to advance development, the Jeddah chamber contributed with KAUST to circulate an opinion poll aimed at measuring the extent to which small and medium enterprises need scientific research and innovation with the aim of developing partnership programs in research and development.”

The Saudi Authority for Industrial Cities and Technology Zones (MODON) has also been working with KAUST on enabling SMEs and supporting areas of improvement. “We are delighted to explore the outcome of KAUST’s survey report to identify SMEs challenges and the way forward to support this sector through a list of inventive packages,” said Ahmed Al-Hilayel, health and environment director at MODON.


ITC Infotech accelerates Vision 2030 through digital hub in Riyadh

Updated 17 January 2026
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ITC Infotech accelerates Vision 2030 through digital hub in Riyadh

ITC Infotech’s commitment to delivering real digital change in the Middle East is reinforced by strengthening collaboration and working more closely with customers on the ground. The establishment of its Digital and AI Engineering Hub in Riyadh brings superior digital engineering and AI skills closer to businesses, allowing for speedier collaboration, localized innovation, and solutions targeted to regional needs. This strategic expansion aligns with Saudi Arabia’s Vision 2030 and underscores ITC Infotech’s long-standing emphasis on partnership-led growth and customer-centric innovation.

The hub was officially inaugurated on Jan. 15 by Sanjiv Puri, chairman and managing director of ITC Ltd. This facility is designed to help enterprises leverage advanced technologies and convert digital ambitions into measurable business outcomes. This move aligns closely with Saudi Arabia’s efforts to build a knowledge-driven economy powered by innovation and technology.

Saudi Arabia’s digital leap

Vision 2030 is more than just economic diversification; it is a clear blueprint for creating a technologically advanced society. This vision is centered on the integration of artificial intelligence and digital engineering, which are transforming industries and enabling long-term, sustainable growth. The strategic importance of AI is clear, with the Saudi Data and AI Authority estimating that it may add $135 billion to the Kingdom’s GDP by 2030. This commitment is supported by significant investments, including $14.9 billion announced at LEAP 2025 to advance digital infrastructure, talent, and next-generation technologies, as well as historic projects like the $2.7 billion Hexagon Data Center in Riyadh. Together, these efforts are laying the foundation for a secure, resilient, and future-ready digital ecosystem that can support AI adoption, data-driven governance, and smart city development at scale.

What the hub offers

ITC Infotech’s Riyadh hub is designed to fuel this momentum by focusing on three core areas:

  • AI-powered platforms: Delivering predictive analytics, intelligent automation, and data-driven insights to help businesses transition from reactive operations to proactive strategies.
  • Digital engineering solutions: Leveraging Industry 4.0-driven smart manufacturing capabilities, integrating AI-led modeling, connected systems, and advanced analytics to optimize production performance, improve asset utilization, and proactively reduce operational and quality risks across the engineering lifecycle.
  • Cloud-native architectures: Building agile, secure, and resilient ecosystems that enable faster innovation and seamless integration across enterprise systems.

These capabilities are designed to enable organizations to innovate, scale, and compete in a rapidly evolving digital economy. Beyond technology, the hub is fundamentally anchored in building a team of the region, from the region, for the region and for global impact. Through structured skill-building programs, deep partnerships with academia, systematic knowledge transfer, and immersive, hands-on delivery models, the hub is creating a future-ready Saudi workforce fully aligned with Vision 2030 and capable of serving both national and international priorities.

Driving enterprise transformation 

The ITC Infotech hub aims to enable transformation rather than simply deploy technology. By driving AI adoption, accelerating digital engineering, and building cloud-native ecosystems, ITC Infotech seeks to help businesses:

  • develop new business models to meet evolving market needs.
  • improve operational efficiency through predictive insights and automation.
  • support sustainability goals by optimizing resources and reducing risks.
  • build a skilled local workforce capable of leading future innovations.

These outcomes support enterprises as they transition to more resilient, data-driven, and digitally mature operating models.

The road ahead

ITC Infotech is a wholly owned subsidiary of ITC Limited, one of India’s largest conglomerates, with over 25 years of experience as a trusted technology services partner to enterprises globally. The company focuses on next-generation enterprise transformation, delivering services across infrastructure and application modernization, cloud, cybersecurity, digital engineering, and AI-led innovation.

As Saudi Arabia continues its digital journey, ITC Infotech’s combination of global expertise, strong local presence, and collaborative delivery model positions it as a long-term partner in advancing Vision 2030. ITC Infotech’s hub in Riyadh reflects this commitment, bringing advanced capabilities closer to customers, investing in local talent, and enabling enterprises to adopt AI at scale as they compete in an increasingly digital world.