Cover Story
Logitech Transforms Hybrid Work with AI-Powered Solutions
Exclusive Interview with Loubna Imenchal, Head of Enterprise Business for AMETCA Africa, Middle East, Türkiye and Central Asia, Logitech
How has the shift to hybrid work influenced Logitech’s product development?
The shift to hybrid work—working between office, home and on the go—is now an established model across the world. This means, the need for multiple workspaces, video collaborations, and solutions to boost productivity and creativity are likely to become more important. Logitech is leveraging AI to deliver superior audio and video experiences in its Video Collaboration portfolio to drive productivity for organisations navigating these workplaces trends.
For example, we have introduced the Zone 305 headset and MeetUp 2, designed to support collaboration in hybrid and remote environments. The Zone 305 headset is particularly effective in helping users manage background noise with dual noise-canceling microphones, making it ideal for employees working from noisy environments like cafés or open offices. MeetUp2, on the other hand, is engineered to enhance video meetings, ensuring that everyone in the room is seen clearly with an ultra-wide lens and AI-powered framing capabilities. Both products are ideal solutions for organizations that are shifting their focus across diverse workspaces.
Another key trend that we’ve observed is the growing importance of sustainability in workplace solutions. More businesses are incorporating eco-friendly practices, such as using energy-efficient devices and reducing travel with hybrid work solutions, to minimize their carbon footprint. Logitech is playing a major role in this shift by incorporating post-consumer recycled plastic into many of its products, helping organizations to work more efficiently while remaining environmentally conscious.
What can the market expect from Logitech at GITEX GLOBAL 2024?
At GITEX 2024, Logitech aims to strengthen our position as a key technology partner to organizations who are evolving their workplaces and adapting to hybrid work. We will be presenting a comprehensive range of video collaboration and personal workspace solutions, catering to the needs of the “everywhere workplace.”
Logitech will focus on AI-driven solutions for video conferencing and workspace management. We will showcase innovative products such as the MeetUp 2, Zone 305 headset, Brio 705 webcam, and Logitech Sync, all of which are designed to meet the growing demand for flexible, hybrid work environments.
The MeetUp 2, with its AI-powered auto-framing and speaker tracking features, ensures an immersive meeting experience, whether the participants are in the office or remote. The Brio 705 webcam is another standout, delivering high-definition video with AI-driven auto-light correction, making it ideal for hybrid workers and professionals on the go.
In addition, the Zone 305 headset, featuring dual noise-canceling microphones, allows for clearer communication, especially in noisy or public spaces, ensuring productivity in varied environments.
Logitech will also have a large emphasis on sustainability at GITEX. With products like the Zone 305 and MeetUp 2 incorporating post-consumer recycled plastic, Logitech will demonstrate how businesses can reduce their carbon footprint while driving innovation. Expect a strong focus on creating eco-friendly, AI-powered solutions that help companies navigate the evolving hybrid work landscape.
How is Logitech incorporating sustainability into its product development and manufacturing processes?
As a design company, we leverage the power of design to spur innovation and scale progress. We conscientiously factor in environmental and social impacts as part of every design decision, starting from sourcing raw materials to the product’s end-of-life stage.
Logitech’s Design for Sustainability approach is across our existing and future portfolio:
- 3 in 4 products use Next Life Plastics (recycled plastic) instead of virgin plastic.
- We are increasingly choosing materials made using renewable energy. 66 product lines use low-carbon aluminium that is produced with renewable energy
- We are transitioning away from single-use plastic packaging and embracing more recyclable, paper-based packaging solutions. Approximately 20% of products use FSC-certified paper packaging, and increasingly the majority [73%] of new product introductions have moved to FSC packaging.
- 43% of products are PVC-free
With Logitech shipping more than 150 million products every year, this is sustainable innovation at scale.
How are AI and automation shaping the future of business collaboration, and what role will Logitech play in this evolution?
AI and automation are revolutionizing business collaboration by enhancing communication, streamlining workflows, and improving overall efficiency. As organizations adopt hybrid work models, the demand for intelligent solutions that facilitate seamless collaboration between remote and in-office teams continues to grow.
Logitech has launched AI-driven products like the MeetUp 2 and Zone 305 headset to improve the meeting experience. Features like auto-framing, speaker tracking, and noise cancellation ensure that meetings are more engaging and productive, while tools like Logitech Sync enable IT teams to support large-scale video deployments, minimizing site visits and trouble tickets – all from a simple browser-based interface. This enhances remote manageability and provides ultimate control over devices and spaces, offering deeper insights into device usage and ensuring compatibility to maximize resource utilization efficiency.
As AI and automation continue to advance, Logitech’s role will be to develop human-centred solutions that enhance the user experience, making business collaboration smoother and more efficient. By integrating AI into our product suite, we are both improving the quality of communication and also helping businesses adapt to the changing nature of work.
How does AI enhance user experience and efficiency in Logitech’s products, particularly for device management and meetings?
AI plays a pivotal role in enhancing both the user experience and operational efficiency within Logitech’s products, particularly in the context of device management and meetings. With the rise of hybrid work, meeting spaces have evolved to integrate both physical and virtual teams, requiring solutions that enhance collaboration.
Logitech’s MeetUp 2 uses AI-powered features like auto-framing and speaker tracking to create a more dynamic and engaging meeting experience. These capabilities ensure that all participants are visible and clearly heard, making meetings more productive and inclusive. AI-driven features like these are particularly valuable in hybrid work environments, where it’s important to create seamless collaboration between in-office and remote participants.
On the device management side, Logitech Sync enables IT teams to remotely monitor and manage video conferencing equipment across multiple locations. AI helps streamline device management, reducing the need for manual intervention and ensuring that devices are always up to date. This not only improves efficiency but also ensures that businesses can maintain high levels of productivity, regardless of where their teams are working.
What trends are shaping the future of meeting room spaces, and how is Logitech adapting to these trends?
The rise of hybrid work has reshaped meeting room spaces, creating new demands for seamless collaboration between remote and in-office teams. One of the most notable trends is the growth of huddle spaces—smaller, flexible meeting areas that encourage spontaneous discussions and collaboration. These spaces are designed to be used by both remote and in-office participants, making them a key tenet of the hybrid work environment.
Logitech is addressing these trends with products like the MeetUp 2, which is designed for huddle rooms and smaller meeting spaces. Its AI-powered auto-framing and speaker tracking features ensure that all participants are actively engaged, even if they are joining remotely. The Zone 305 Business Headset also supports these smaller meeting spaces by providing clear audio and eliminating background noise, ensuring that conversations are distraction-free.
By focusing on the evolution of meeting room spaces and developing solutions that cater to the unique needs of hybrid teams, Logitech is helping businesses create more flexible and efficient work environments.
What role does Logitech’s Sync software play in managing video conferencing devices, and how does it improve business efficiency?
As organizations continue to adopt hybrid work models, the ability to manage multiple devices across various locations is essential. Logitech Sync is an integral part of our video collaboration solutions. Sync is a cloud-based device-management platform that allows IT to manage and monitor Logitech meeting room devices at scale. It enables better remote manageability and ultimate control of devices and space.
By providing a centralized platform for device management, Sync helps businesses maintain high levels of productivity and collaboration, regardless of where their teams are located.
How does Logitech cater to both large enterprises and small businesses with its collaboration technology?
Logitech’s approach to collaboration technology is designed to serve both large enterprises and small businesses by offering scalable, flexible solutions that can be tailored to the needs of each organization. Products like the MeetUp 2 and Zone 305 headset are designed to be accessible and affordable for companies of all sizes, from small huddle rooms to large conference spaces.
For larger enterprises, Logitech Sync offers a centralized platform for managing video conferencing devices across multiple locations, making it easier to monitor and update equipment remotely. For small businesses, Logitech’s solutions are designed to be easy to deploy and manage, allowing them to improve collaboration and productivity without the need for a large IT team.
By offering a range of products and services that cater to organizations of all sizes, Logitech ensures that businesses can adopt the right tools to support their collaboration needs, at any scale.
What is Logitech’s long-term vision for supporting businesses in navigating the future of work?
As the workspace evolves, organizations will look to further enhance collaboration experiences, while also addressing other rising business imperatives, such as navigating sustainability challenges.
Logitech will continue to enable and empower businesses to navigate the future of work through innovation, sustainability, and focusing on the user experience. With hybrid work only becoming more common globally, we are committed to developing tools that enhance collaboration, boost productivity, and create more inclusive work environments. By aligning our product development with the trends that are shaping the future of work, Logitech will continue to lead the way in helping business thrive in the hybrid work environment.
Cover Story
Hisense doubles down on localisation, supply chains, and smart living in the Middle East
As the Middle East accelerates its push toward becoming a digital economy, global consumer electronics brands are being forced to rethink their role beyond simply selling devices. For Hisense, that shift is already underway.

From building connected living ecosystems to strengthening regional manufacturing and R&D, the company is positioning itself not just as a technology provider, but as a long-term partner in the region’s transformation.
In this conversation, Jason Ou, President of Hisense Middle East, Africa and India, outlines how localisation, supply chain investments, and a sharper focus on consumer relevance are shaping the company’s next phase of growth in the region—and why the Middle East is emerging as more than just a consumption market.
The region is increasingly positioning itself as a hub for digital economies. How can consumer electronics brands contribute to this broader transformation beyond simply selling devices?
Consumer electronics brands today play a much bigger role than just providing devices. Our real impact comes from shaping how people live in an increasingly digital world. At Hisense, we focus on anticipating consumer shifts and building our innovation around the needs of modern, connected lifestyles. It’s not only about technology, but about how that technology integrates seamlessly into everyday life.
We see this clearly through connected living. A TV today is no longer just a screen, it becomes part of a wider ecosystem, connecting with appliances, enabling intuitive control, and helping consumers manage comfort, energy, and daily routines more efficiently. At the same time, localization is key. Through regional R&D, partnerships, and a stronger presence on the ground, we ensure our innovation is relevant to local lifestyles and market realities. Ultimately, our role is to translate innovation into meaningful, practical value, supporting the region’s digital transformation in a way that is tangible for both consumers and communities.
Technology companies often struggle between being engineering-led and market-led. How does Hisense maintain that balance internally?
For us, it is not a question of choosing between engineering-led or market-led. The strongest companies are built on both, working hand in hand. At Hisense, we combine strong engineering capabilities with a deep understanding of consumer needs and local markets. Our innovation is driven by technology, but always shaped by how people actually live, interact, and use our products. We focus on one simple principle: every innovation must translate into a better user experience. That is where engineering excellence meets real market relevance, allowing us to stay both forward-looking and grounded in consumer value.
You have led Hisense’s expansion in the Middle East through a period of rapid technological change. What leadership principles have helped you balance global innovation with local market realities in this region?
The starting point has always been staying true to Hisense’s vision and values. That gives us a clear direction, especially during periods of rapid change. The second element is people and partnerships. Building the right team on the ground, and working with the right partners, has been essential to understanding the region and executing effectively across markets.
Third is localization with discipline. While we benefit from strong global innovation, success in this region comes from adapting that innovation to local lifestyles, climate, and consumer expectations in a consistent and structured way. And finally, long-term commitment. We have approached the Middle East as a strategic growth market, continuing to invest in technology, operations, and relationships. That long-term view allows us to balance global ambition with local relevance and build sustainable growth over time.
As most global supply chains and manufacturing ecosystems for consumer electronics remain concentrated outside the Middle East, what role do you see the region playing in the future production and innovation landscape of this industry?
I believe the region will play a much bigger role over time, especially as a center for localization, strategic manufacturing, regional distribution, and application-led innovation. We are already seeing that evolve. Hisense has been strengthening its regional manufacturing footprint, including operations in Algeria and Egypt, alongside localized R&D in Dubai. Our recent export milestone from Algeria into Egypt and Tunisia shows that the region is not only a consumption market, but increasingly part of a broader industrial and supply-chain ecosystem.
Going forward, I see the Middle East and wider MENA region becoming more important in three areas: as a faster response hub for regional supply and customization; as a testing ground for technologies suited to local environmental and lifestyle conditions; and as a bridge between global innovation and emerging-market demand. The opportunity is not just to manufacture more, but to shape products and solutions that are more relevant to this part of the world.
If we fast forward ten years, what will the concept of “home entertainment” look like compared to today?
We are currently witnessing a significant wave of innovation, particularly driven by AI capabilities. I believe this will continue to evolve, becoming smarter, more intuitive, and more seamlessly integrated into everyday life. Home entertainment will not only improve in terms of quality, with better visuals, sound, and performance, but it will also become more personalized and adaptive to each user.
At the same time, we will see more robotic and automated technologies becoming part of the home, supporting everyday tasks and enhancing convenience, creating a more connected and intelligent living environment. Ultimately, the experience will shift from simply watching content to enjoying a smarter, more immersive, and fully integrated home experience.
Finally, if you had to describe the next chapter of Hisense in the Middle East in one word, what would it be and why?
Reliable. We aim to become the most reliable brand in the region, in line with our longterm vision. This means continuously strengthening our position across technology development and market penetration, while keeping consumer needs at the center of everything we do. At the same time, we will further invest in localized solutions to ensure our innovation remains relevant, practical, and impactful for the region.
Cover Story
AI Moves from Experiment to Essential in UAE’s Advertising Landscape

From content creation to media buying, artificial intelligence is quietly reshaping how campaigns are built, delivered, and optimised across the GCC.
In the UAE and across the GCC, artificial intelligence has moved well beyond the stage of experimentation. What was once a buzzword discussed in boardrooms is now deeply embedded in the day-to-day execution of advertising. Brands are no longer testing AI—they are relying on it to run campaigns, generate content, and make increasingly precise decisions about audience targeting and timing.
On the creative front, the shift is particularly visible. AI-powered tools are now capable of producing ad copy, visuals, and even short-form video content at a pace that would have been unthinkable just a few years ago. For marketers operating in a market like the UAE—where campaigns often need to speak to audiences in both English and Arabic, while also resonating across a diverse mix of nationalities, this level of speed and adaptability is more than a convenience. It is becoming a necessity.
Behind the scenes, machine learning has also transformed how media buying is approached. Traditional methods that relied heavily on instinct or retrospective performance reports are steadily being replaced by systems that analyse audience behaviour in real time. These platforms continuously optimise campaign performance, adjusting budgets and placements based on how users interact with content.
In the UAE’s PR ecosystem, brands are already leveraging platforms such as Meltwater, Brandwatch, and Sprout Social to better understand media performance, audience sentiment, and the broader buying landscape.

A practical example of this shift can be seen in platforms like Skyscanner, where advertising systems respond dynamically to user intent. Instead of targeting broad demographic groups, campaigns are triggered by actual search behaviour and travel patterns, allowing for more relevant and timely engagement.
AI is also influencing emerging advertising formats. Digital billboards, for instance, are becoming more responsive, using live data inputs to tailor content based on factors such as time of day, location, and audience movement. Similarly, augmented reality experiences are beginning to incorporate behavioural insights, offering more contextual and interactive brand engagements.
Looking ahead, the trajectory appears clear. Advertising is moving towards deeper automation, more intelligent recommendations, and tighter integration between creative tools and analytics platforms. The industry is shifting from a model centred on broadcasting messages to one that focuses on responding to audiences in real time, with context and precision.
In this evolving landscape, AI is no longer just an enabler, it is becoming the foundation on which modern advertising is built.
Cover Story
SHAPING THE SKYLINE: HOW GCC MARKETS ARE REDEFINING ARCHITECTURE IN 2026
Mohamed Fiaz Khazi, Entrepreneur & Managing Director, Euro Systems
Architecture across the GCC is entering a more demanding phase, shaped by the realities of day-to-day operation. For much of the past decade, design ambition was defined by scale, visibility, and speed. Towers rose quickly, façades grew lighter, and skylines transformed almost overnight. In 2026, the focus has shifted to how buildings perform over time and the quality of experience they deliver to occupants.
This evolution reflects a more mature, performance-driven market while maintaining bold design. Questions around energy use, occupant comfort, maintenance, and durability are now central to architectural decision-making. In a region shaped by heat, dust, and intense solar exposure, design intent carries weight only when it is supported by systems capable of delivering consistent performance over time.
A changing regional approach
Façades illustrate this shift particularly clearly. Glass-heavy architecture remains integral to the region’s visual language, yet it is now approached with greater technical intent. Solar control, shading, acoustic performance, and automation are increasingly considered as parts of a unified strategy rather than isolated design features.
Industry studies consistently show that external shading devices, such as louvers and overhangs, can significantly reduce solar heat gain before it enters the building envelope, lowering cooling demand in the process. Fully shaded glazed areas further reduce thermal loads, easing pressure on mechanical systems while improving internal comfort.
While this performance-led direction is shared across the GCC, each market is responding in its own way.
In the UAE, architectural expression continues to take center stage. Landmark developments, hospitality projects, and mixed-use districts place strong emphasis on experience and identity. What has changed is the level of coordination behind the scenes. Façades are now expected to deliver daylight and transparency without introducing glare or thermal instability. Shading and glazing strategies are increasingly developed together, allowing design ambition to be preserved while meeting operational requirements.
Saudi Arabia presents a different dynamic. Here, scale and speed dominate, with large-scale developments and giga-projects compressing timelines and increasing complexity. In such an environment, fragmented decisions quickly translate into operational challenges. Architecture in the Kingdom is therefore being shaped by early integration, industrialized delivery, and lifecycle planning, where performance and repeatability become essential to building at scale. Research from McKinsey reinforces this approach, showing that large capital projects perform more reliably when coordination replaces siloed decision-making.
Qatar occupies a distinct position between these two models. Following a period of rapid delivery, focus has shifted toward longevity, sustainability, and adaptability. Buildings are expected to operate efficiently over decades and align closely with national sustainability frameworks. Façade performance, shading strategies, and acoustic control are increasingly specified for their contribution to long-term asset value and occupant well-being.
Technology integration
Technology underpins much of this evolution. Smart shading, responsive glazing, and integrated control systems are now practical tools for managing daylight, reducing glare, and stabilizing interior conditions. By reducing solar radiation before it reaches the glazing, external shading delivers measurable performance benefits in high-sun environments.
When façade strategies are developed early and embedded into the design process, materials, structure, and systems align more naturally. The result is architecture that feels deliberate in appearance and dependable in operation.
An operational view
The next wave of GCC projects will approach architecture as a dynamic system, ensuring long-term efficiency and reliability. Design ambition will remain high, but it will be matched by discipline in execution. Integration will increasingly define the process, particularly on complex and large-scale developments, with performance considered alongside form from the outset.
This shift represents meaningful progress. It reflects a region learning from experience and raising its own standards. The skyline will continue to evolve, but its true measure will lie in buildings that remain comfortable, efficient, and resilient long after the initial excitement has passed.
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