I’ve spent a lot of time in rooms where deals were being made, and an equal amount of time watching deals quietly falling apart. They didn’t fall apart because of the product, nor because of the price, but because nobody followed up a lead, smart enough, fast enough, in the right language, at the right time.
In the Gulf, that window is even shorter than most people realize. I’ve seen it firsthand working across MENA, for instance, a WhatsApp message unanswered for the next two hours in Riyadh or Dubai isn’t a warm lead anymore, it’s a cold one. However, the businesses that have figured this out aren’t hiring more salespeople now, they’re doing something way smarter.
A Global Pattern
WhatsApp isn’t a messaging app in the UAE and Saudi Arabia, it’s where business happens, where decisions, are made and where deals are end up with payment links. I watched this same dynamic unfold in China years earlier, in its prime, the pattern is identical, although the platform is different, the behaviour is the same.
What China taught me is that messaging-first commerce isn’t a trend, it’s what happens when you put people on a platform they trust, and let them figure out the fastest way to buy and sell. The GCC is on the same trajectory, compressed into an even shorter timeline because the infrastructure is already there and the consumer appetite is already formed.
I see the same shift happening across Singapore and Malaysia, where WhatsApp and Telegram have become primary channels for closing B2B and B2C deals alike. In London, where we’re based, the conversation is shifting too, especially among businesses with MENA and APAC clients who have already moved entirely to messaging for commercial conversations. The Gulf isn’t following a global trend, it’s leading one, in many ways.
What the Smartest Businesses are Actually Doing
The companies growing fastest in the UAE and Saudi Arabia, right now, have made one fundamental shift. They stopped treating WhatsApp as a customer service channel and started treating it as a sales environment.
Customer service reacts, sales converts and the businesses winning in this region have built systems, increasingly expands-ai-powered-wealth-platform-in-the-uae-as-demand-for-digital-investing-accelerates/”>AI-powered ones, that respond to a lead within minutes, qualify their interest, handle the obvious objections, and move the conversation toward a decision, all inside the chat. No redirect to a website, just a conversation that ends with a booking, a payment, or a clear next step.
In UAE real estate, AI-powered lead scoring has pushed the conversion rates from 8% to 23% for some businesses. Riyadh retailers using AI personalization have reported 45% revenue increases. These aren’t outliers, they’re early adopters who figured out that in a market where response speed is everything, automation isn’t a cost-cutting measure, but a competitive weapon.
The Language Question Nobody Talks About
Trust is everything in Arabic-speaking markets
A perfectly written sales message in English to a business owner in Jeddah is a missed opportunity, not because they don’t understand English, but because you didn’t show up in their world. Content in Khaleeji dialect generates 35-50% high engagement than translated English. The businesses that respond in Arabic, in a tone that feels natural rather than translated, are building something the others aren’t: genuine rapport at scale.
This is where AI is changing the game in ways that weren’t possible years ago. Not AI that translates but AI that genuinely operates in multiple languages with the cultural nuance that makes a difference in a sales conversation. For a region, as linguistically rich as the GCC, and for businesses operating across MENA, APAC, and Europe simultaneously, that’s not a nice-to-have, it’s the whole package.
What This Means for Your Business in 2026
Saudi Vision 2030, and the UAE’s National AI Strategy 2031 aren’t just government initiatives, they’re signals about where the infrastructure, the talent, and the consumer expectations are heading. The region’s AI market is projected to reach $23 billion by 2034, and SMEs already using AI sales tools are reporting 45% faster sales cycles, and 33% higher win rates.
But the opportunity isn’t in the numbers, it’s in the gap
Most businesses in the region are still running their WhatsApp sales manually, one team member, one message at a time, only during working hours, and only in one language. The businesses that close that gap first, with systems that respond humanly and instantly, around the clock, in the customer’s language won’t just grow faster, they’ll make it structurally difficult, for anyone still doing things the old way, to compete.
The future of sales in the Gulf isn’t more salespeople, it’s smarter systems that let the salespeople focus on what humans actually do best: build relationships.
