Skip to content Skip to Search
Skip navigation

What I learned from five years at the top

The outgoing chairman of the British Business Group Dubai discusses the importance of loyalty, advocacy and resilience for companies and individuals

Dubai's Sheikh Zayed Road in 2020 Pixabay/Makalu
Dubai's Sheikh Zayed Road in 2020

I have chaired the British Business Group Dubai & Northern Emirates for the past five years. It is a position I have held with great pride and, over the years, I have seen huge changes in the region reflected through our ever-evolving membership.

As my BBG tenure ends, I am leaving a very different organisation from the one I was elected to lead in 2017. Three themes strike me the most when I look back: loyalty, advocacy and resilience. 

Loyalty

In terms of loyalty, it is worth remarking that some BBG members have been with the group for its entire 35-year existence.

The BBG was created to support the pioneers of British industry in the region to provide a slice of home for the career-change seekers and original entrepreneurs.

It has since grown as a network and an ecosystem supporting British-owned Dubai-based business, UK professionals and UK PLCs since 1987 – with some definite ebbs and flows.

Sheikh Zayed Road in 1990, three years after the founding of the BBG Dubai. Picture: Creative Commons

I had to navigate the hard way back in 2001 as I set up my company formation business – an idea generated through my own need and experience.

While I don’t want to take away from the pain and frustration that today’s entrepreneurs feel in setting up in the UAE – it is definitely a lot easier to be a business person in the region today.

We are supported and encouraged by the UAE government’s mission to gather information, reflect, improve and enhance the processes around being an entrepreneur.

British people are naturally attracted to international business standards, familiarity and experience, which is why the BBG continues to provide for a loyal following.

Advocacy

Advocacy is an integral pillar of business in the UAE – and before social media and e-comms, it was even more important to cultivate brand ambassadors out of your clients and employees.

I always appreciate the time it takes someone to provide feedback or make a referral, as this can only inspire or improve your proposition and increase prospects. 

We celebrate member advocacy and are aware how fragile that position is. Just as quickly as someone can have a positive experience and tell five contacts, they can have a bad experience and share a negative view that is extremely difficult to undo.

I would say that this region is particularly sensitive to advocacy and strives for optimal experience.

Resilience

The theme of resilience has featured throughout the 35 years of the BBG. It is a necessary quality for companies navigating in an unknown region, as well as families moving from the UK.

Then there are all the transition logistics. However, the coronavirus pandemic certainly threw new light on the issue. 

Our membership engagement made us aware of how many businesses were hit extremely hard by the lockdown, the uncertainty and the travel restrictions.

As they begin to recover, there has been a huge adjustment period linked to working arrangements, employee management challenges and, of course, huge financial pressure. 

However, the BBG members that showed the greatest resilience across multiple sectors are now enjoying growth, consistency and some even possess greater confidence to look further afield in to new markets across the GCC and even back to the UK. 

I look forward to continuing to support the BBG membership through my newly appointed role of director, government relations on the BBG board, where I will be focused on the existing UK-UAE trade corridor and development of GCC free trade agreements, working closely with the British embassy, Department for International Trade, UAE government and Dubai Chamber of Commerce.

John Martin St Valery OBE is director, government relations, on the board of the British Business Group

Latest articles

Jacksonville Port in Florida. A new container service connecting the port to Jeddha could improve Saudi exports

Florida port service could increase Saudi non-oil exports

Saudi Arabia’s exports are set to improve following the introduction of a new container service that will link Jeddah with Florida. Non-oil exports rose 4.4 percent year on year in February while production cuts led oil exports to slip to 77 percent of the total, the government said. Jacksonville Port Authority (Jaxport) in Florida said […]

An Emirates Boeing 777-300R. The Morocco facility will convert passenger planes to cargo

Boeing plane conversion facility to be built in Casablanca

A production facility is to be set up in Morocco to convert Boeing 777-300ER passenger jets into freighters. Stratos Industries will build three wide-body aircraft hangars at the Mohammed V International Airport in Casablanca as part of a deal between US-based companies Kansas Modification Center (KMC) and Integrated Aerospace Alliance (IAA). KMC will convert up […]

Art NFTs Video length: 04:13

Dubai art dealer uses NFTs for fractional art ownership

A Dubai tech startup is introducing tokenisation to the art world, after the NFT bubble burst spectacularly. 10101.art aims to make investing in art accessible to all by selling digitised fragments of works by artists including Andy Warhol, Banksy and Picasso, allowing for collective ownership of a masterpiece for as little as $100 a fragment. […]

Rain falling on paved surfaces such as roads has nowhere to go, but retrofitting roads to allow rainwater harvesting could help, some experts say

Rain harvesting could help Dubai offset a stormy future

If last week’s floods made improving drainage a necessity for Dubai, the reward might come in the form of more natural water resources, provided the emirate can boost rain harvesting efforts, industry observers tell AGBI. “The main idea for countries, especially in drier areas, is to try to reuse water as much as possible,” says […]