Dubai Silicon Oasis successfully concluded the first Middle East edition of the Doers Summit 2025, held under the patronage of His Highness Sheikh Ahmed bin Saeed Al Maktoum.
The two-day gathering, organised in collaboration with The DOERS Company, drew more than 4,000 participants from 115 countries, positioning Dubai as a thriving global hub for innovation.
Industry leaders, founders, and investors explored emerging trends across AI, fintech, climate tech, digital infrastructure and sustainable mobility, engaging in conversations that underlined technology’s growing real-world impact.
According to the press release, the event reinforced Dubai’s ambition to nurture 30 unicorns in the coming decade, a target aligned with the Dubai Economic Agenda D33. Badr Buhannad, Director General of Dubai Silicon Oasis, said the Summit’s success reflects the confidence of the global innovation community in Dubai’s supportive ecosystem, competitive incentives and world-class infrastructure.
He noted that the Doers Summit plays a pivotal role in connecting entrepreneurs and investors across the Middle East and Europe, accelerating business collaboration and expansion opportunities.
Speakers and participants echoed this sentiment throughout the two days, with Stylianos Lambrou, co-founder of The DOERS Company, highlighting Dubai’s role in enabling meaningful startup–investor engagement, pitch sessions and cross-market learning. Avinash Mudaliar, CEO and Co-Founder of HT Labs, described the Summit as a “gathering defined by substance, not spectacle,” praising the depth of conversations and the clarity of insights that emerged. Sessions delved into the evolving nature of startup exits, with experts urging founders to prioritise strong products and operational excellence over premature exit planning, noting that M&A continues to dominate while IPOs remain rare across most markets.
The future-of-economy and future-of-work discussions also drew significant attention. Panellists stressed the urgency of shifting from linear to circular economic systems, calling circularity an economic, sustainability and competitiveness imperative, with nearly USD 2 trillion in secondary materials still untapped globally.
Conversations on work culture reflected a shift toward flexible, technology-driven organisational models shaped by remote work, gig-based talent and AI-enabled productivity. The consensus across the Summit was clear: companies willing to adapt, embrace intelligent tools and tap global talent pools will lead the next era of economic and industrial transformation.
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