UAE | Education

Creating a new generation of entrepreneurs in Arab world a challenge

Conference calls on younger Arab entrepreneurs to make use of lower costs and manpower glut

  • By Rania Moussly, Staff Reporter
  • Published: 00:00 March 13, 2010
  • Notes

  • Image Credit: Oliver Clarke, Gulf News
  • Dr Tayeb Kamali, Vice-Chancellor of the Higher Colleges of Technology, speaks during the session.
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Dubai: Raising awareness levels among a new generation of entrepreneurs in the Arab world is the biggest challenge facing the business community in this part of the world, according to Adel Al Shared, vice-chairman of the Mohammad Bin Rashid Al Maktoum Foundation.

Al Shared was addressing a panel discussion on entrepreneurship opportunities in difficult economic times during the the third annual Global Entrepreneurship Conference (GEC) at the Dubai Men's College last week. The conference was organised by the Higher Colleges of Technology (HCT) in collaboration with the University of Pennsylvania's Wharton Business School.

"A major challenge in the Arab world is awareness," Al Shared said. "The challenge is not a lack of funding or skills. It's the lack of awareness about entrepreneurship programmes for human development."

Al Shared said what is needed is an open channel of communication with the younger generation.

"Through conferences like this we can raise the awareness of the younger generation to not depend entirely on classic career paths," he said.

"The role of an entrepreneur is of persistent optimism, which is the key trait in certain difficult times," said Daniel Schwartz, author of Future of finance: how private equity and venture capital will shape the global economy.

"The venture capital world is in trouble these days but the question is, are these troubles cyclical or fundamental?" asked Schwartz, who is also CEO of Qiosk.com, a website providing online news feeds from major news publications.

Comparing the roles of venture capitalists and entrepreneurs, he said: "Entrepreneurs are the people who make things happen and venture capitalists are the ones who fund their dreams."

Schwartz said budding entrepreneurs should learn from the current recession and seize the opportunity it presents to do what they want. "Your costs are down, people are available, which gives you a chance to build what you want," he said.

However the abundance of wealth of the region is both a blessing and a curse in such times, said Shiv Khemka, vice-chairman of the SUN group, India.

"The blessing of a wealthy country is the ability to build infrastructures, schools, universities and social welfare systems for all the young people," he said.

"However, the curse is that the fire in the belly needed in the youth to drive them to create and compete, is hard to find."

Khemka is also a principal investor and private equity fund manager.

Khemka said he believes the way forward for young entrepreneurs in the region is to expand their horizons.

"The thing for them to do now is to go out to Africa and Asia and try to start things there," he said. "In those environments where there is a grind, it will create the entrepreneurial rigour necessary for success. Those markets also have a huge scope for future growth."

Running alongside the second Kauffman Global Entrepreneurship Congress, the GEC welcomed speakers Carl Schramm, president and CEO of the Kauffman foundation, and Sarah Ferguson, Duchess of York, to address business leaders and students on the importance of entrepreneurship and the role it plays in an economy.

"New firms are an enormous power to create jobs," said Schramm. "Almost all the jobs in the US are created by firms less than five years old."

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Do you think the UAE market needs more young entrepreneurs? Is there room for fresh ideas? Tell us.

Comments (1)

  1. Added 14:53 March 13, 2010

    Congratulations for Adel Al Shared, and the Mohammad Bin Rashid Al Maktoum Foundation.They seem to have the right ideas and plan that should increase the chances of success for the new entrepreneurs. A new strong market can be formed in Dubai and in UAE. This area to grow up in the future more needs a great number of new middle classes enterprises. Now, very important is to find the right way to approach every new, every potential new entrepreneur. Scoping makes approaching simpler. It is the first step of getting organized before start. Second step are the aims, that means that everybody has to know what he wants to achieve. His aim must be clear, simple and easy to communicate to others. The third step are the objectives that can help the people to get down to the tangible detail of action. Once aims and objectives are suitable move on to the details of how the plan and strategy will work. Continue to map out the below informations. Everyone has to spend time getting his plan in order will enable him to achive the change he wants.

    Dipl.-Kfm. Basilis Tsiounis, Athens, Greece

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