Cover Story
Why Tech Brands Need to Rethink Influencer Strategy in the Middle East
The Middle East’s consumer technology market is in the middle of a remarkable run.
Smartphone shipments across the region grew 13 percent in 2025, marking a third consecutive year of growth. Ramadan alone now accounts for 15 percent of annual technology and durables sales across MENA. By any measure, the opportunity is significant.
But headline growth can hide an uncomfortable truth. The way consumers in this region evaluate and choose a technology brand has fundamentally changed. Brands still running the old playbook, buying reach from celebrity and mega influencers, measuring success in gross impressions, and treating the GCC as a single audience, are leaving both conversion and credibility on the table.
Mariam Abouzeid
PR & Influencer Marketing Manager, MEA, Nothing Technology
Having managed PR ecosystems generating billions of impressions across the UAE, Saudi Arabia, and beyond, I have seen this shift unfold in real time.
The data is clear. The market has moved. Many marketing strategies have not.
In today’s GCC market, attention is easy. Credibility is rare.
Beyond the Bigger-is-Better Logic
For most of the last decade, the dominant logic in technology marketing across the region was simple. Bigger reach meant better results. Secure the highest-reach influencers, maximize impressions, and sales will follow.
That logic made sense when social media behaved like a broadcast channel. Today it does not.
The UAE and Saudi Arabia are now among the most digitally saturated markets in the world. Social media penetration in the UAE has reached 111 percent of the population, while Saudi Arabia counts 34.1 million social media identities for a population of 34.7 million.
In markets this connected, audiences are no longer passive viewers. They are sophisticated, fast-moving, and deeply skeptical of content that does not feel earned.
Reach alone is no longer influence.
The Power of the Micro-Influencer By the Numbers
The consequences for influencer marketing are measurable. Macro influencers typically achieve engagement rates of around 1.7 percent. Nano influencers, those with between 1,000 and 10,000 followers, consistently deliver engagement rates of 6 to 8 percent in the UAE market.
When cost per engagement is considered, micro-influencer campaigns cost roughly $0.20 per interaction compared with $0.33 for macro campaigns. More importantly, they routinely deliver 5 to 8 times the return on investment, compared with the 3 to 5 times range typical of macro campaigns. The conclusion is simple.
Reach creates visibility. Trust creates action.
The Shift from Search to Social Feed
To understand why community-driven marketing works, it is important to understand how the modern GCC consumer actually makes a purchase decision.
It rarely begins with a search engine. It begins in the feed.
Nearly half of UAE users, 48.1 percent, and 60 percent of Saudi users now use social networks as their primary tool for researching brands and products. Before a consumer clicks add to cart, they have already passed through a quiet community validation process. They have watched unboxing videos from creators they follow and seen devices appear in the rhythm of everyday life.
Celebrity endorsements signal aspiration. Micro creators signal authenticity.
In consumer electronics, authenticity wins.
The Tiered Ecosystem: A Multi-Dimensional Strategy
The most effective technology marketing campaigns in the region now operate through a deliberate multi-tier structure.
Macro influencers are used sparingly to create cultural moments and announce major launches. Mid-tier creators establish niche authority and technical credibility. Micro-influencers carry the critical work of storytelling and product validation. The final layer, the nano tier, drives conversion through peer trust and cultural familiarity.
This distinction matters.
When consumers see a mega-influencer holding a new smartphone, they recognize an advertisement. When they see someone from their own community using the same device in everyday life, they recognize a recommendation.
That difference shapes behavior.
The GCC creator economy has grown 74 percent over the last two years and now includes more than 263,000 active influencers. Technology has become the fastest-growing vertical within that ecosystem. The pool of credible creators available to brands has never been deeper.
The Regional Calendar Geography Is Not a Strategy
One factor global marketing teams often underestimate is cultural timing.
The GCC is not simply a geography. It operates like a calendar.
Consumer spending in the UAE, Saudi Arabia, and Egypt increases by more than 53 percent during Ramadan. Campaigns that might perform modestly in a typical month can deliver outsized impact when creative work reflects the values and rituals of the season.
That kind of resonance can only be achieved by collaborating with creators who understand the culture from the inside.
Moving From Output to Outcomes
There is an uncomfortable truth at the center of the influencer marketing industry in this region.
Many brands are still measuring the wrong things.
Total impressions and cost per mile remain dominant metrics because they are easy to present in reports. But the shift required is from output metrics to outcome metrics.
The questions that matter are different.
What was the depth of engagement?
How many saves and shares did the content generate?
How much earned advocacy emerged from creators who chose to talk about the product because they genuinely valued it?
Organic enthusiasm cannot be purchased. It can only be earned.
The GCC influencer marketing market is valued at $315.5 million in 2025 and is projected to reach $771.6 million by 2032.
The brands that will lead the next phase of this market will not simply be those with the largest budgets. They will be the brands that understand how their consumers actually make decisions, build disciplined influencer ecosystems, and measure the signals that truly drive behavior.
The Middle East tech consumer is one of the most digitally engaged and brand-aware audiences in the world. They expect strategies that reflect that sophistication.