A top official at the National Entrepreneurship Institute (Riyadah) said on Monday that 84 percent of Saudi entrepreneurs have succeeded in their business ventures, while only 16 percent failed, a percentage considered very high compared to the international standard.
Sherif Elabdelwahab, CEO of the Riyadah, a government entity that promotes national entrepreneurship program for budding entrepreneurs, told a press conference on Monday that 4,720 young Saudi entrepreneurs have started their business enterprises in 181 categories.
Riyadah trained 9,447 out of 10,000 targeted trainees by December 2015 for entrepreneurial skills and business plans. According to the Riyadah CEO, 7,900 Saudis were approved for loans from among 10,000 who had completed their business plans and another 1,000 businesses are on the way for opening.
The official, who was speaking on the institute’s achievements in 2014, said that Riyadah operates with 25 male and 14 female branches. More than a million browsers of Riyadah's portal with seven million browsers to its pages have resulted in 71,000 making applications annually, which led to 551 training sessions for 9,447 future entrepreneurs.
Established in 2010, Riyadah works on six main objectives that moderate the prospective of operations. They include promoting one’s own business ideology and build positive beliefs toward small businesses (active).
Developing a national entrepreneurship program for fostering entrepreneurs under Erada program (active), developing needed manpower for Riyadah (active), enabling 10,000 entrepreneurs to start their own businesses (active), enabling entrepreneurs to current and new updates of starting own businesses (active), and promoting successful entrepreneurs annually with Best Entrepreneurs Award (BEA) (active) are among the positive results.
Referring to the creation of the institute, he said Riyadah was established as one of Technical and Vocational Training Corporation’s (TVTC) strategic partnerships with an annual contribution of SR30 million for Riyadah operation.
The testimonial success of the TVTC Small and Medium Business Development Center led the Ministry of Petroleum and Minerals' initiative to start the entrepreneurship program in Saudi Arabia.
He continued: "Japan Saudi Arabian Methanol Company led by SABIC supported Riyadah endowment fund to enable 10,000 Saudis as entrepreneurs. Six founders of this program, who are represented in the board, carry the responsibility to establish and oversee Riyadah."
Those founders are Saudi Basic Industries Corporation (SABIC), Saudi Aramco, Saudi Telecommunication Company, AlInma Bank, Saudi Credit and Saving Bank (SCSB) and TVTC. It took Riyadah less than a year start in mid-2010 and become fully operational in January 2011.
He said in 2012 and 2013, Riyadah created e-training and e-solutions for the current entrepreneurs choosing three courses out of 60 different training courses.
Since 2012, Riyadah has been a regular attendant to Saudi Cultural Mission at the US Graduation Ceremony for King Abdullah Scholarship Program graduates. Two years in a row, Riyadah offered Develop Your Business Idea (DYBI) training programs for its graduates.
The same year, Riyadah offered training for selected Ministry of Education summer camps across the country where more than 8,000 youngsters benefited from those training sessions in 2012. In addition, this year, Riyadah focused on supporting current entrepreneurs with needed care to excel in their businesses.
Finally, this year our entrepreneurs represented us in Aramco Wa'ed, Arabia 500, and G20 YEA events, and one of the entrepreneurs won the first start-up business in Arabia 500.
He added: To accomplish the objectives, several activities entail training, consultations, mentorship, incubation, financing attainment, and assist in official permits' acquisition assistance.
Riyadah translates those objectives into projects and programs.
Saudi entrepreneurs achieve high success rate, only 16% fail
Saudi entrepreneurs achieve high success rate, only 16% fail
Saudi youth turn to AI for art and culture
- Creativity, heritage and technology converge in a new generation of artists
RIYADH: As Saudi Arabia’s Vision 2030 places creativity, culture and technological innovation at the core of national development, the impact of these priorities is becoming increasingly visible across a wide range of disciplines and practices.
Through the use of artificial intelligence, young Saudis are integrating technology into their creative work both as a practical tool and as a medium in its own right. In doing so, they are expanding their capabilities, exploring personal and collective identity, and finding new ways to preserve and reinterpret cultural heritage.
“AI gives young Saudis a new way to interact with their own cultural inheritance,” said Dmitry Zaytsev, founder of Dandelion Civilization, a platform designed to help individuals shape unique professional paths.
“Traditional design elements such as calligraphy or geometric motifs were once difficult to modify. Experimentation required resources and formal approval. AI removes that barrier and makes exploration immediate. A creator can test many versions of a pattern and see which ones still feel authentic to them,” he told Arab News.
According to Zaytsev, this emerging form of expression does not signal a rejection of tradition, but rather a deeper engagement with it. “The young creator discovers what can change and what must remain constant. AI becomes a sketchbook that allows culture to evolve through curiosity rather than fear. When creators correct a model or push it toward local rhythm, they strengthen rather than dilute cultural identity,” he explained.
Sarah AlBaiz, an art adviser, researcher and artist, uses code to blend visual art with concepts drawn from culture and philosophy. While her early practice focused primarily on painting, her trajectory shifted during the 2020 AI Artathon, a pioneering international event highlighting collaboration between humans and machines in artmaking, where she discovered how to merge her engineering background with her creative work.
DID YOU KNOW?
• Saudi youth are using AI as a creative tool to reinterpret heritage, from calligraphy to folklore.
• AI is helping artists experiment faster without the traditional barriers of resources or formal approval.
• The Kingdom is backing creative AI nationally, with programs like SAMAI aiming to empower 1 million Saudis for an AI-driven future.
Operating within the field of computational creativity, where technology actively participates in the artistic process, AlBaiz explores themes of finance and faith. “Because they’re two sides of who I am,” she said. “When you talk about values, for example, that is both a term used in finance and trade from an objective perspective, but also moral and spiritual value.”
“When you understand prompting in AI, you can get it to produce almost anything. But it’s also informed by the training data it has,” she said.
Rather than relying on a single platform, AlBaiz experiments with multiple AI models to test their limitations and audience reception. “I work a lot with language as well, so large language models are right up my street when it comes to computational creativity.”ee
Her work has gained international recognition. At the 2022 Islamic Arts Biennale in Jeddah, she co-created an artwork under the banner of Super Artistic AI that generated Al-Qatt Al-Asiri motifs from southern Saudi Arabia. The piece received an Audience Award.
Beyond her artistic practice, AlBaiz is developing an intelligent art advisory system aimed at helping users navigate the Saudi art landscape. Designed as an initial point of contact, the system would guide users through potential pathways before they engage with a human adviser.
“It’s about understanding what role AI plays in the pursuit of what you want,” she said. “When I decided to focus on Qantara and building the advisory, I recognized that many of the systems required would need to be intelligent systems that offload a lot of work from me and the team.”
“When AI is an enabler rather than the end result, it becomes less intimidating because it feels risk-free for the end user,” she added.
Zaytsev echoed this idea, describing AI as a kind of rehearsal space. “Young people practice conversations, explore sensitive topics and organize their thoughts without social risk. This builds emotional clarity and confidence,” he said.
While generative tools such as large language models attract much of the attention, AI’s creative applications extend far beyond text and image generation.
Fairooz Alawami, trained as both an architect and engineer, uses AI to create self-expressive visual works inspired by dance.
“My practice is focused on contextualizing movement,” she said. “Because of my architectural training, I work with 3D modeling software called Rhino, which includes a visual coding language. Within that environment, you can also write code in Python, JavaScript or C#.”
Alawami employs OpenPose to analyze videos of her dancing by mapping points across her body. She then applies another computer vision model, MIDAS, which converts images or videos into depth frames. “If OpenPose gives me a skeleton, MIDAS gives me depth,” she explained. The resulting data is fed into 3D modeling software, where it is refined and manipulated into finished artworks.
She began dancing at a young age. “I didn’t find it, it found me,” she said. Movement later became the foundation of her artistic practice, leading to her first major project around three years ago while completing her master’s degree using the Grasshopper plugin. At the time, the workflow was slow and fragmented, but the arrival of ChatGPT helped streamline the process by making it easier to write and learn code.
“I think my love for dance and my love for art and design came together in a way that felt uniquely me,” she said. “Once I found that space, I just ran with it. It is my singular voice.”
Her work also draws heavily on cultural and musical heritage. One recent project was inspired by folklore referenced in the iconic song “Al Leila wa Leila” by Umm Kulthum. Alawami extracted musical stems from the track and mapped them to characters within the narrative. “The vocals were Shahrazad, the storyteller, and each stem represented a different narrative element,” she said. Earlier works were influenced by Islamic architecture and the geometric patterns found throughout Saudi Arabia and the wider Arab world.
“There are some incredible artists using generative AI to do very impressive things, and I don’t think I fall into that camp,” she said. “For me, AI is more like a skills-gap tool that helps me reach where I want to go.
“As humans, whether we realize it or not, the act of creating feeds us in some way. Lowering the barrier to entry makes creativity less intimidating.”
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Today, Saudi Arabia’s creative sector is supported by expanding national infrastructure. Initiatives such as the Cultural Scholarship Program place Saudi students in more than 60 universities worldwide, spanning disciplines from archaeology and literature to design, filmmaking and culinary arts. In parallel, the Kingdom launched the SAMAI initiative last year, aiming to equip 1 million Saudis with the skills needed to engage confidently in an AI-driven world.
Within Vision 2030, culture, tourism, digitalization and AI are treated as strategic sectors rather than peripheral concerns. As Saudi Arabia develops its creative economy as a form of soft power, its youth are becoming increasingly digitally fluent. AI tools are now embedded within creative workflows, enabling a new generation to explore heritage, remix traditional aesthetics and develop narratives that resonate on a global stage.










