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Celebrating Emirati Women’s Day with Maryam A Hassani

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Zealous emirati women's day

On the special occasion of Emirati Women’s Day, Integrator Media had an exclusive interview with Maryam A Hassani, Co-founder & CEO at Zealous.

How did you start your career in technology? What was your journey like at the beginning, and how has it evolved over time?

After graduating from NYU Abu Dhabi, I started my career as a strategy consultant at one of the big four firms. My gravitation toward innovation and startup projects provided me with the opportunity to lead the Special Olympics Innovation Challenge and play a key role in the MBRIF Accelerator Program.

Over the years, I’ve supported more than 45 diverse companies in localizing and establishing themselves in the MENA region. I’ve always been passionate about the emerging tech ecosystem in MENA, from designing startup programs to supporting the localization of startups, and now, being a startup founder myself.

I’m driven by the mission to solve today’s most pressing challenges with technology. I believe that leveling the playing field in software development through AI will unlock substantial opportunities for entrepreneurs with similar goals.

Was there a specific challenge you faced early in your career that you’d like to share with our readers?

From the start of my founder journey, I knew I wanted to build a product leveraging emerging technologies, but as a non-tech founder, my ability to build and experiment was limited.

Initially, I explored working with regional software development firms, but any experienced founder knows that’s not the best approach. These firms are focused on delivering products ready for the market, but building a new venture is a journey of learning and iteration. You need to start with an MVP that addresses a significant problem and test it in the market. What I really needed was a technical co-founder with the expertise and the same level of commitment to the mission as I had.

Can you tell us a bit about your team at Zealous and the story behind the creation of Zealous?

My co-founder and I met at a leading international tech event, where we bonded over our shared passion for making professional networking intentional, easy, and meaningful in emerging tech scenes.

The mission of Zealous has always been to answer the question, “How can we leverage AI to help people?” Initially, it was about making it easier to connect with like-minded entrepreneurs in emerging tech markets. Today, we have two products in the market that are free to use:

  1. Zealous Social App for professionals to find, meet, and stay connected with connections on the go.
  2. Zaia AI Event Assistant for professionals to get personalized, real-time suggestions on how to collaborate with the connections they make at events.

As a bootstrapped company, our journey led us to develop an in-house AI code generation and testing framework, Zealous TenX, to help us meet the demands of building and iterating our software products in the most time- and cost-effective way. Using it ourselves, we quickly realized we were onto something significant with this framework.

Now, our focus is on supporting software developers and companies in developing products faster, reducing overhead costs, and maintaining quality code as they scale. We are still very much serving the emerging tech space, just from a different angle and addressing a more pressing problem in the market.

What initiatives has Zealous implemented to support the advancement of women in technology?

We are passionate about helping people connect better, especially in emerging markets in the Middle East. Women globally are roughly 25-30% less likely to network effectively and meet the right people.

I dedicate time to mentoring and supporting university entrepreneurship programs to encourage young women and aspiring founders to pursue their ideas. I also make an effort to demystify what it really means to build a startup. I wish someone had done this for me sooner. I share my learnings as a female Arab founder and my findings from the emerging tech space, with the hope that they can learn and be better off as a result.

How is Zealous leveraging AI to help women expand their networks? Additionally, what other functionalities and features does Zealous offer?

Both female and male entrepreneurs can benefit from Zealous’ professional networking products by connecting with others in the space. Creating intentional and meaningful connections today is challenging; at events with potentially thousands of attendees, it’s difficult to remember every face and every business card. We simplify this process, enabling event networkers to scan business cards or LinkedIn QR codes instantly and automatically save details such as where they met, the person’s role, their organization, and the intentions for the meeting.

Women generally need to know more about an individual before they feel confident reaching out or engaging in conversation. Our products take that into account. Although our products are not exclusively for women, the user experience and intention-based features are optimized to suit cultural and social norms.

Moreover, knowing that women founders don’t get as much capital investment (female-founded startup investments dropped by 64% in MENA in 2023), our code generation product helps them get a foot in the market with lower overhead costs.

What advice would you give to young Emirati women aspiring to careers in technology?

I would advise other women on their tech founder journey to focus on identifying a worthy problem to solve first, rather than starting with company setup.

The journey of any tech startup founder is challenging, from finding a problem worth solving to developing a viable solution for a large enough market that customers will pay to use. Given the time and resource intensity, I strongly recommend finding a problem that intrigues you and that you want to explore deeply.

Unfortunately, raising VC funding as a female founder is especially difficult, so be mindful of monthly spending and subscriptions. Also, make use of the support available, such as programs and incentives in the UAE that help reduce startup costs.

Spotlight

The World Order Has Changed! Has Your Technology Governance?

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When did you last see geopolitical risk appear as a named line item in your technology governance framework?” This question — posed by Subrato Basu to technology leaders across industries and geographies, and echoed in the conversations Srijith KN has tracked across the CXO community — increasingly divides its audience into two groups. The gap between them is widening, and it reveals a deeper shift: geopolitics is no longer external to technology strategy. It is now one of its defining forces.

The first group — still the majority — treats geopolitical risk as someone else’s problem. It belongs, they assume, to risk officers, government affairs teams, or the audit committee. Technology is their domain; geopolitics is noise in the background. The second group has understood something that the first has not: the boundary between geopolitical risk and technology risk no longer meaningfully exists.

This article is written for both. For the first group, it is a wake-up call — offered in the hope that it arrives before an incident makes the argument more forcibly. For the second, it is an attempt to sharpen a framework and ground it in the operational realities that boards and CXOs are navigating right now. The central argument is this: geopolitical volatility has become a direct, structural input into enterprise technology strategy. Organizations that govern for it with the rigor applied to financial or regulatory risk will be measurably more resilient, more competitive, and more trusted than those that do not.

Geopolitical volatility is no longer background noise for technology leaders. It is a direct input variable into technology strategy, and the boards that do not govern for it are operating with a critical blind spot.


The Assumption That Built Our Governance Frameworks Is Broken

For most of the past two decades, a workable assumption underpinned how organisations sourced, deployed, and governed technology: that the global technology ecosystem was broadly open, commercially-driven, and largely apolitical. Hardware vendors competed on specification. Cloud providers competed on price and performance. Procurement teams evaluated suppliers on technical merit. Geopolitical considerations were, at most, a due diligence footnote.

That assumption has been systematically dismantled. The deliberate weaponisation of technology — through trade restrictions, regulatory controls extended beyond national borders, state-sponsored cyber operations, and the calculated use of supply chain access as an instrument of strategic leverage — has fundamentally altered the risk calculus for any enterprise that depends on globally sourced technology infrastructure. What was once a commercially neutral procurement decision is now, in many cases, a geopolitical exposure.

This is not a temporary disruption that will normalise once a particular set of tensions eases. It reflects a durable structural shift in how major powers compete, and in how that competition is increasingly waged through, and against, the technology layer of the global economy. For enterprises operating in markets defined by proximity to active geopolitical fault lines — whether those fault lines are geographic, commercial, or digital — the consequences are not theoretical. They are already reaching enterprise cloud contracts, hardware procurement pipelines, and security operations. From our respective vantage points — practitioner and editorial — the pattern is unambiguous.

What was once a commercially neutral procurement decision is now, in many cases, a geopolitical exposure. Governance frameworks designed for a different era are systematically unfit for this one.


Five Fault Lines Running Through the Enterprise Technology Stack

When we map the pathways through which geopolitical volatility translates into technology operational risk, five pressure points emerge with consistency across sectors and geographies. We offer them not as a comprehensive risk register — every organisation’s exposure profile will differ by market, sector, and architecture — but as a diagnostic lens for board and CXO discussion.

a) The Cloud Compliance Trap

The hyperscalers that power the majority of enterprise digital infrastructure operate under regulatory frameworks whose reach extends well beyond their home jurisdictions. Technology access controls and compliance obligations do not stop at national borders. Enterprises with commercial relationships, supply chain connections, or infrastructure footprints that intersect with restricted or conflict-adjacent jurisdictions can find themselves subject to service reviews, contract amendments, or capability restrictions — sometimes with limited notice, and often as a downstream consequence of their vendor’s own compliance posture rather than anything the enterprise has done directly.

The trap is that this exposure is rarely visible until it activates. It can emerge through indirect supply chain adjacency, shared infrastructure configurations, or compliance flags several steps removed from the enterprise’s own operations. CIOs who have mapped their cloud footprint against potential regulatory jurisdiction risk — proactively, not reactively — hold a material governance advantage. Understanding which workloads reside on infrastructure subject to extended regulatory reach is not optional hygiene. It is foundational governance.

b) The Cyber Threat Multiplier

A consistent and well-documented pattern has been established across multiple cycles of geopolitical escalation, recorded in threat intelligence reports published by recognised international cybersecurity research organisations and government security agencies: periods of elevated inter-state tension correlate with increased state-linked cyber activity targeting financial institutions, critical infrastructure, and government-adjacent enterprises in proximate markets. This is not the authors’ independent assertion. It is an observable, documented, and reproducible pattern in the publicly available record.

The structural implication for technology leaders is clear: the cyber threat environment in markets proximate to active geopolitical fault lines is durably more elevated than in geopolitically stable ones, and that elevation intensifies when political temperature rises. The attack surface has expanded materially through the convergence of information and operational technology, the proliferation of AI-integrated workflows, and the broad adoption of connected devices. CISOs who construct their security posture reactively, in response to incidents rather than in anticipation of structural threat conditions, have fundamentally misread the governance mandate their environment demands.

c) The Supply Chain Blind Spot

Most enterprises maintain reasonable visibility into their software supply chains. Very few have equivalent clarity on the geopolitical exposure embedded in their hardware supply chains. Semiconductors, networking equipment, and industrial technology components originate from supply chains subject to trade restrictions and regulatory controls that can translate, under escalatory conditions, into sudden procurement constraints, extended lead times, or mandatory certification requirements creating material operational bottlenecks.

The organizations most exposed are those in active digital transformation or major infrastructure refresh cycles that have never stress-tested their procurement pipeline against a scenario in which specific hardware categories become unexpectedly constrained. The board-level question is not whether this will happen. It is whether, if it did, the organization would have ninety days of operational runway or ninety hours.

d)The Vendor Dependency Risk

Multi-year enterprise software commitments — ERP platforms, data infrastructure, security tooling, AI platforms — are made on the assumption of uninterrupted service from vendors operating in predictable regulatory environments. The regulatory obligations carried by enterprise software vendors headquartered across major technology jurisdictions can, under specific and not implausible circumstances, translate into licence amendments, capability restrictions, or service reviews with limited contractual notice. This risk is amplified, and actively expanding, for software incorporating AI capabilities as those capabilities attract increasing regulatory attention across multiple jurisdictions simultaneously.

Boards approving these investments are, in our view, frequently not receiving the full picture of vendor jurisdiction exposure. Requiring legal and technology leadership to jointly assess this exposure before committing to multi-year agreements is not procedural excess. In the current environment, it is a core fiduciary responsibility.

e) The Talent Dimension

The talent dimension of geopolitical risk is consistently the least visible and the most underestimated. Technology-intensive organisations in dynamic markets draw on internationally mobile specialist talent pools. Sustained geopolitical instability affects those pools in ways that are difficult to predict and slow to reverse: senior professionals reconsider relocation decisions, acquisition pipelines for specialist roles — particularly cybersecurity engineering, AI architecture, and regulatory compliance — tighten, and workforce continuity in critical functions comes under pressure at precisely the moment when those functions matter most.

Resilience against this risk requires proactive investment in local talent pipelines, structured knowledge transfer protocols for critical technology functions, and a workforce continuity discipline that treats geopolitical scenarios as first-class planning variables — not as footnotes in the HR risk register.

The technologies most exposed to geopolitical disruption are simultaneously the most powerful instruments available to build resilience against it.

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Hospitality

Authenticity is at the heart of everything I do

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QWERTY Dubai

Exclusive Interview with Chef Thomas Smeeth, Senior Sous Chef, QWERTY

In this exclusive chat, chef shares his journey from family kitchens to Dubai, blending British tradition with authentic, comforting flavors.

You started working in your father’s kitchen at the age of 13. How did those early experiences shape your passion for food and cooking?

Starting young in my father’s kitchen ignited my passion for the culinary world. It wasn’t just about learning to cook—it was about discovering the energy and creativity of kitchen life. Those formative years taught me skills I never had before and instilled a respect for hard work and attention to detail, which continue to drive me today.

What’s your personal twist on classic British dishes that makes them stand out to diners in Dubai?

I like to keep things simple yet impactful. Authenticity is at the heart of everything I do, avoiding overcomplications. My focus is on presenting classic British flavors that stay true to tradition while subtly elevating them to appeal to a diverse audience in Dubai.

You’ve described British food as comfort food. If you had to choose one dish that embodies this sentiment, what would it be?

For me, it has to be apple crumble with custard. It’s the perfect balance of sweet and warming—a dish that feels like a hug on a plate. It takes me back to my roots and resonates with people looking for that same nostalgic comfort.

Menu at QWERTY promises to tantalize taste buds, so what is one of your signature creations?

One of my standout dishes is the tuna steak paired with burnt onion purée and chimichurri. The dish offers a nice contrast of smoky, tangy, and herby flavors with a unique balance that surprises diners and leaves them wanting more.

Dubai is known for its diverse culinary landscape. How do you plan to carve a niche for British flavors in this multicultural city?

By keeping things simple and authentic. My goal is to remind diners of the comforts of British home cooking, whether they’re locals exploring new flavors or expats craving a taste of home. It’s about delivering those familiar tastes with the highest quality ingredients and care.

Does the art of welcoming lie in ambiance creation or human connection?

For me, it’s all about human connection. Ambiance plays a role, but nothing beats being made to feel truly welcome by attentive and genuine staff. It’s that warmth and personal touch that allows guests to relax, unwind, and fully enjoy their experience.

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Hospitality

We Are the Balance Between Professionalism and Comfort

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In an exclusive interview with Giacomo Puntel, General Manager of voco Bonnington JLT, he shares his vision of blending professionalism and comfort to redefine corporate hospitality and elevate guest experiences in Dubai.

In your new role, what leadership values and experiences do you aim to bring to voco Bonnington JLT to elevate its reputation as a leading corporate hotel?

In my role at voco Bonnington JLT, I aim to bring a leadership approach centered on collaboration and service excellence. Understanding the unique needs of corporate travelers and exceeding their expectations will remain at the heart of everything we do.

voco Bonnington JLT has a distinctive style and identity. How do you see its design and ethos enhancing the overall guest experience, particularly for business travelers?

The versatile meeting and event spaces, equipped with state-of-the-art technology, provide the perfect setting for corporate engagements. Meanwhile, the well-appointed rooms and communal areas foster an atmosphere where guests can unwind and recharge, ensuring a balanced experience. The combination of style, functionality, and care creates a standout experience that supports both professional and personal well-being.

As a corporate hotel, voco Bonnington JLT embodies a balance of professionalism and comfort. How do you define this approach, and how do you ensure it resonates with business and leisure guests alike?

For business travelers, this means providing efficient service, modern facilities, and amenities designed to support productivity, such as high-speed Wi-Fi, well-equipped meeting spaces, and a strategic location in Jumeirah Lakes Towers, close to major business hubs.

For leisure guests, we focus on creating a warm and inviting atmosphere, offering unique touches like comfortable rooms, personalized service, and access to leisure facilities. We emphasize a relaxed yet vibrant experience that reflects the voco brand’s hallmark charm.

With its diverse room offerings, how does voco Bonnington JLT cater to the unique needs of corporate travelers while maintaining a sense of premium hospitality?

We recognize that corporate travelers have specific needs, and we’ve designed our diverse room offerings to provide a balance of practicality and premium hospitality. Our rooms are thoughtfully equipped with amenities tailored to business guests, such as spacious work desks, high-speed Wi-Fi and easily accessible charging points, allowing them to work seamlessly from the comfort of their room. Corporate needs vary, which is why we offer a range of room types to suit different requirements. For instance, our standard rooms cater to solo travelers looking for efficiency and comfort, while our suites provide more expansive spaces, ideal for longer stays or informal meetings.

How do the hotel’s amenities, like the rooftop pool, signature dining, and meeting spaces, enhance the guest experience and attract business events?

Our array of amenities, including a rooftop pool, signature dining experiences, and state-of-the-art meeting rooms, elevates the guest experience and positions the hotel as an ideal choice for business and corporate events. The rooftop pool and fitness center provide guests with a chance to unwind after a busy day, while our diverse dining options offer both casual and fine dining settings perfect for networking or relaxation. Our versatile meeting and event spaces, equipped with cutting-edge technology and dedicated event support, ensure that corporate functions run seamlessly.

How will you leverage voco Bonnington JLT’s prime location in Jumeirah Lakes Towers to create memorable experiences for corporate and leisure travelers?

Situated in the heart of Jumeirah Lakes Towers, voco Bonnington JLT capitalizes on its prime location to offer a unique and dynamic experience for both corporate and leisure guests. the surrounding area offers an array of dining, entertainment, and cultural attractions that can be explored through personalized recommendations and curated experiences..

What are your key priorities for voco Bonnington JLT, and how do you see its role in Dubai’s competitive hospitality market?

As the General Manager of voco Bonnington JLT, my key priorities for the coming year are centered around enhancing the guest experience, expanding our market presence, and driving operational excellence. I envision voco Bonnington JLT playing a key role in Dubai’s competitive corporate and hospitality market by capitalizing on our strategic location in Jumeirah Lakes Towers. We will continue to attract business travelers through bespoke offerings tailored to their needs, including enhanced meeting solutions and proximity to key business hubs. Simultaneously, we aim to be a preferred choice for leisure guests by offering distinctive, immersive experiences that highlight the best of Dubai’s vibrant lifestyle.

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