The Evolution of Saudi Arabia’s Training Market

training market in Saudi Arabia showing growth in professional certifications and capability development

Rising Demand, Structured Capabilities, and the Role of Professional Certifications

By: Shehab Dekenish

Saudi Arabia’s training market is not slowing down.

It is accelerating—
but in a more structured and intentional direction.

Over the past few years, demand for training has increased significantly across both public and private sectors. This growth is not limited to volume—it reflects a deeper shift in how organisations approach capability development.

Beyond Growth: A Shift in How Training Is Valued

Historically, training demand in the Saudi market was often driven by:

  • certification acquisition
  • compliance requirements
  • or individual career progression

Today, while demand remains strong particularly for professional certifications—the underlying motivation has evolved.

Organisations are no longer investing in training for participation.

They are investing in training for capability building.

The Continued Rise of Professional Certifications

Contrary to the assumption that certification-driven demand is declining, the opposite is occurring.

Professional certifications continue to experience strong demand across the Saudi market.

However, the reason for this demand has changed.

Certifications are no longer viewed as standalone credentials.

They are increasingly recognised as:

  • structured learning pathways
  • competency-based frameworks
  • and globally aligned standards for professional practice

This is particularly relevant in programmes built on international frameworks and methodologies, which provide organisations with:

  • consistency in knowledge
  • clarity in role expectations
  • and alignment with global best practices

Why Certifications Are Still in High Demand

The sustained demand for certifications is driven by three key factors:

1. Structured Learning Frameworks

Certifications offer something most training programmes do not:

Structure.

They are built on defined bodies of knowledge, competency models, and assessment frameworks—making them more reliable tools for capability development.

2. Alignment with Global Standards

Organisations in Saudi Arabia—particularly those operating in international or highly competitive sectors—require alignment with global practices.

Certifications provide:

  • internationally recognised benchmarks
  • standardised competencies
  • and shared professional language

3. Measurable Skill Development

Unlike many general training programmes, certifications often include:

  • defined learning outcomes
  • competency-based assessments
  • and structured evaluation mechanisms

This makes them more credible from an organisational perspective.

The Real Shift: From Certification as an Outcome to Certification as a System

The market is not moving away from certifications.

It is moving towards better use of certifications.

This represents a fundamental shift:

From:

Certification as a goal

To:

Certification as part of a broader capability development system

The Emerging Model: Integrated Capability Development

Leading organisations are no longer treating certifications as isolated initiatives.

Instead, they are integrating them into:

  • workforce development strategies
  • competency frameworks
  • organisational capability models

This approach ensures that certifications are:

  • aligned with business objectives
  • linked to role requirements
  • and embedded within long-term development pathways

The Gap in the Market

Despite increased demand and improved awareness, a gap still exists.

Many training providers continue to operate within a delivery-focused model:

  • offering programmes without integration
  • focusing on course completion rather than capability
  • lacking alignment with organisational strategy

This creates a disconnect between:

what organisations are trying to achieve → and how training is delivered

Implications for Training Providers

The market is growing but expectations are evolving.

To remain relevant, training providers must move beyond:

  • programme delivery
  • and certification promotion

Towards:

1. Capability-Centred Design

Building learning journeys around competencies—not individual courses.

2. Strategic Alignment

Ensuring training initiatives directly support organisational objectives.

3. Framework-Based Delivery

Leveraging structured models that define what professionals need to know and do.

4. Advisory Positioning

Operating as partners in capability development—not just providers.

The Role of Professional Standards

As the market matures, the importance of professional standards becomes more evident.

Frameworks such as the BDA BoCK represent a shift towards:

  • defining business development as a structured discipline
  • establishing competency-based learning models
  • and aligning training with real-world application

This reflects a broader market evolution:

From fragmented training → to standardised capability development

Looking Ahead

The Saudi training market is entering a more advanced phase.

A phase defined not by:

  • the number of courses delivered
  • or certificates obtained

But by:

  • how effectively capabilities are built
  • how well learning aligns with strategy
  • and how consistently organisations can execute growth

Conclusion

Demand for training in Saudi Arabia is increasing.

Demand for certifications is increasing.

But more importantly—
expectations are increasing.

Organisations are no longer asking:

“What training should we deliver?”

They are asking:

“What capabilities do we need to build—and how do we build them in a structured, scalable way?”

That is where the real transformation lies.

Recommended Posts