HRH Prince Khaled bin Alwaleed bin Talal: Forging A KBW Investments Framework
HRH Prince Khaled bin Alwaleed bin Talal
HRH Prince Khaled bin Alwaleed bin Talal

HRH Prince Khaled bin Alwaleed bin Talal

Photography by The Factory

"Hi, we're right here," says HRH Prince Khaled bin Alwaleed bin Talal while waving his iPhone 6 Plus at me from the far end of the Meydan Hotel lobby in Dubai. Two things you need to know right off the bat: the first is that he responded to Entrepreneur's interview request personally with a few members of KBW Investment staff on CC, and the second is that he came downstairs with KBW Investments CEO Ahmed Alkhoshaibi to collect us, calling me from his own mobile phone. Decked out in formal National dress, a quick look at his feet betrays a cool factor- he's wearing Converse. "It's 2014," he says, smiling when I point out his choice of footwear. In a professional capacity, HRH doesn't like his formal salutation used, and offers up that it's alright to call him "Abu Jenna or whatever you're comfortable with."

Comfortable? Hardly. As royal anomalies go, he's for sure in the 99th percentile and at first I don't know what to make of the man affectionately dubbed the "Tech Prince". A document that I downloaded from WikiLeaks -the URL indicates that this "intel" is part of the mass-released Global Intelligence Files- describes 36 year-old Prince Khaled as "business-minded like his father and serious, but also simple and nice," adding that "he has kept a considerably low-profile in the media, preferring to stay in the background." Immediately after meeting him, I could verify these statements to be true, especially that the apple doesn't fall far from the tree. When Abu Jenna does laugh or smile, his expressions are tempered by what I understand (perhaps incorrectly) to be shyness and a measure of reserve.

I need to explain something to you, the reader. When I sit down to interview anyone, be it a high profile celeb or a fresh startup founder, I have to put on a "game face". I have to be bold and probing, and I admit that I create a psychological atmosphere of what can be called "safe sharing". I preface questions with little anecdotes that put the subject in a frank frame of mind, I share personal information that I usually never disclose to encourage my interview subjects to do the same, and finally, I cross lines that I would never even toe outside of an interview space. If my subject happens to be a royal like Abu Jenna, I have to force myself to forget that he is who he is. I have to be a little brazen (okay, a lot brazen), and I really have to force my hand. Why? Because no one wants to read the same old regurgitated PR-friendly quotes.

Reader, know that Abu Jenna fields all of my personal intrusions like a champ- he has a great sense of humor, and he's a good sport. If I was on the receiving end of that barrage of leading questions, I have no qualms telling you that I would've been indignant, and maybe even a bit offended. Director General of Abu Jenna's private office, Mustafa Al Ansari, and the aforementioned Alkhosaibi both have expressions of sheer incredulity (and sometimes amusement) during the course of my two-and-half-hour conversation with the Prince. At some point, Al Ansari laughingly tells me that I'm "really pushing it." The result? An honest and surprising discourse with one of the most private royals in the MENA region. Before I ask you to move past his Princehood, I have one (hilarious) royal-related factoid to share.