SRMG among LinkedIn’s top 15 companies in Saudi Arabia for 2025

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Jomana Al-Rashid, the CEO of the Saudi Research and Media Group. (Supplied)
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Riyadh-based SRMG was included in “LinkedIn’s Top 15 Companies 2025: The 15 best workplaces to grow your career in Saudi Arabia.” (Supplied)
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Above, Saudi Research and Media Group’s DIFC office in Dubai. (Supplied)
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Above, Saudi Research and Media Group’s DIFC in Dubai Media City in Dubai. (Supplied)
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Above, Saudi Research and Media Group’s office in Saudi Arabia. (Supplied)
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Updated 11 April 2025
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SRMG among LinkedIn’s top 15 companies in Saudi Arabia for 2025

RIYADH: Riyadh-based SRMG was included in “LinkedIn’s Top 15 Companies 2025: The 15 best workplaces to grow your career in Saudi Arabia,” the sole media organization who made it in the prestigious list.

“This recognition underscores SRMG’s unique position as a trailblazer in the media sector and its commitment to talent empowerment, human-centric transformation and digital acceleration,” SRMG, the leading integrated media group in the Middle East and North Africa region, said in a statement.

“This recognition, stemming from LinkedIn’s data-driven assessment of career growth opportunities, skills development, and workplace equity, reaffirms SRMG’s ongoing transformation that commenced in 2021 with a bold strategy emphasizing innovation, digital-first operations, and the cultivation of future-ready teams.

“The ranking is built on LinkedIn’s proprietary analysis across seven key pillars: opportunities for advancement, skills growth, company stability, external opportunities, company affinity, gender diversity, and educational background,” SRMG added.

SRMG has redefined its brand after launching its transformation strategy, and has expanded into new platforms and embraced cutting-edge technologies to attract top regional and global talents while investing in leadership development and upskilling.

Arab News is one of the SRMG’s media brands.


Multilateralism strained, but global cooperation adapting: WEF report

Updated 10 January 2026
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Multilateralism strained, but global cooperation adapting: WEF report

DUBAI: Overall levels of international cooperation have held steady in recent years, with smaller and more innovative partnerships emerging, often at regional and cross-regional levels, according to a World Economic Forum report.

The third edition of the Global Cooperation Barometer was launched on Thursday, ahead of the WEF’s annual meeting in Davos from Jan. 19 to 23.

“The takeaway of the Global Cooperation Barometer is that while multilateralism is under real strain, cooperation is not ending, it is adapting,” Ariel Kastner, head of geopolitical agenda and communications at WEF, told Arab News.

Developed alongside McKinsey & Company, the report uses 41 metrics to track global cooperation in five areas: Trade and capital; innovation and technology; climate and natural capital; health and wellness; and peace and security.

The pace of cooperation differs across sectors, with peace and security seeing the largest decline. Cooperation weakened across every tracked metric as conflicts intensified, military spending rose and multilateral mechanisms struggled to contain crises.

By contrast, climate and nature, alongside innovation and technology, recorded the strongest increases.

Rising finance flows and global supply chains supported record deployment of clean technologies, even as progress remained insufficient to meet global targets.

Despite tighter controls, cross-border data flows, IT services and digital connectivity continued to expand, underscoring the resilience of technology cooperation amid increasing restrictions.

The report found that collaboration in critical technologies is increasingly being channeled through smaller, aligned groupings rather than broad multilateral frameworks.  

This reflects a broader shift, Kastner said, highlighting the trend toward “pragmatic forms of collaboration — at the regional level or among smaller groups of countries — that advance both shared priorities and national interests.”

“In the Gulf, for example, partnerships and investments with Asia, Europe and Africa in areas such as energy, technology and infrastructure, illustrate how focused collaboration can deliver results despite broader, global headwinds,” he said.

Meanwhile, health and wellness and trade and capital remained flat.

Health outcomes have so far held up following the pandemic, but sharp declines in development assistance are placing growing strain on lower- and middle-income countries.

In trade, cooperation remained above pre-pandemic levels, with goods volumes continuing to grow, albeit at a slower pace than the global economy, while services and selected capital flows showed stronger momentum.

The report also highlights the growing role of smaller, trade-dependent economies in sustaining global cooperation through initiatives such as the Future of Investment and Trade Partnership, launched in September 2025 by the UAE, New Zealand, Singapore and Switzerland.

Looking ahead, maintaining open channels of communication will be critical, Kastner said.

“Crucially, the building block of cooperation in today’s more uncertain era is dialogue — parties can only identify areas of common ground by speaking with one another.”