Monshaat partners with US university to help Saudi SMEs

The Hoover Tower rises above Stanford University, California. (Reuters)
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Updated 08 December 2020
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Monshaat partners with US university to help Saudi SMEs

  • Stanford program to cover corporate innovation strategies, market development, growth management
  • Founded in 1891, Stanford University is one of leading educational institutions in the US

RIYADH: Saudi Arabia’s General Authority for Small and Medium Enterprises (Monshaat) has teamed up with Stanford University in California to launch a program aimed at helping small companies in the Kingdom scale up their operations.

The Monshaat Academy Programme for Innovation and Entrepreneurship was launched on Monday in cooperation with the Stanford Center for Professional Development and the King Salman Institute for Studies and Consulting Services, with participants from 50 small and medium enterprises (SMEs) taking part.

The new academy will help SMEs become more efficient and adopt industry business practices, a Monshaat official told Arab News on Tuesday.

A three-month program will cover corporate innovation strategies, market development, growth management and SMEs scale-ups services.

Founded in 1891, Stanford University is one of leading educational institutions in the US.

The Stanford Center for Professional Development, established in 1995, is the university’s online education subsidiary. It operates the Stanford Online platform, which has taught over 1.5 million students in 190 countries.

So far, the academy has delivered five scale-up programs to more than 250 small and medium enterprises in the Kingdom.

Monshaat said the number of fast-growing Saudi SMEs is estimated at 7,000 and is growing at a rate of nearly a thousand a year.


Saudi Arabia, Japan trade rises 38% between 2016 and 2024, minister says

Updated 11 January 2026
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Saudi Arabia, Japan trade rises 38% between 2016 and 2024, minister says

RIYADH: Trade between Saudi Arabia and Japan has increased by 38 percent between 2016 and 2024 to reach SR138 billion ($36 billion), the Kingdom’s investment minister revealed.

Speaking at the Saudi-Japanese Ministerial Investment Forum 2026, Khalid Al-Falih explained that this makes the Asian country the Kingdom’s third-largest trading partner, according to Asharq Bloomberg.

This falls in line with the fact that Saudi Arabia has been a very important country for Japan from the viewpoint of its energy security, having been a stable supplier of crude oil for many years.

It also aligns well with how Japan is fully committed to supporting Vision 2030 by sharing its knowledge and advanced technologies.

“This trade is dominated by the Kingdom's exports of energy products, specifically oil, gas, and their derivatives. We certainly look forward to the Saudi private sector increasing trade with Japan, particularly in high-tech Japanese products,” Al-Falih said.

He added: “As for investment, Japanese investment in the Kingdom is good and strong, but we look forward to raising the level of Japanese investments in the Kingdom. Today, the Kingdom offers promising opportunities for Japanese companies in several fields, including the traditional sector that links the two economies: energy.”

The minister went on to note that additional sectors that both countries can also collaborate in include green and blue hydrogen, investments in advanced industries, health, food security, innovation, entrepreneurship, among others.

During his speech, Al-Falih shed light on how the Kingdom’s pavilion at Expo 2025 in Osaka achieved remarkable success, with the exhibition receiving more than 3 million visitors, reflecting the Japanese public’s interest in Saudi Arabia.

“The pavilion also organized approximately 700 new business events, several each day, including 88 major investment events led by the Ministry of Investment. Today, as we prepare for the upcoming Expo 2030, we look forward to building upon Japan’s achievements,” he said.

The minister added: “During our visit to Japan, we agreed to establish a partnership to transfer the remarkable Japanese experience from Expo Osaka 2025 to Expo Riyadh 2030. I am certain that the Japanese pavilion at Expo Riyadh will rival the Saudi pavilion at Expo Osaka in terms of organization, innovation, and visitor turnout.”

Al-Falih also shed light on how Saudi-Japanese relations celebrated their 70th anniversary last year, and today marks the 71st year of these relations as well as how they have flourished over the decades, moving from one strategic level to an even higher one.