The Little Island With Big Ideas

It’s hard to know where to start with this feature after spending a week in Bahrain getting to know the entrepreneurial ecosystem, and the entrepreneurs who are part of that ecosystem. From startups to full-fledged lifetime achievers who have inspired generations of their families to follow in their footsteps, there really is a ton of enterprise activity in Bahrain. I can tell you for a certainty that things on the island are different: to begin with, there is synergy between all the governmental and semi-governmental entities that promote and support entrepreneurship in the private sector.

In the eye of this storm is Tamkeen, and heading Tamkeen is Chairman and Acting Chief Executive H.E. Sheikh Mohammed bin Isa Al Khalifa, who is also the Political and Economic Affairs Advisor for the Court of the Crown Prince of the Kingdom of Bahrain. A semi-governmental entity, Tamkeen can be considered the epicenter of all things startup and SME in the Gulf state, and concerns itself solely with developing the Bahraini private sector and supporting the growth of the Kingdom’s enterprise space and entrepreneurs.

H.E. Sheikh Mohammed Bin Essa Al-Khalifa, Chairman and Acting Chief Executive, Tamkeen.JPG

Established in 2006, Tamkeen’s tagline, “working for a prosperous future,” isn’t just a tagline. Every person I meet with who is even remotely connected to entrepreneurship has heaps of praise for the organization, and through Tamkeen I was familiarized with the entire structure of the startup and SME space in the Kingdom.

For those of you who aren’t aware of the bevy of opportunities available to entrepreneurs in Bahrain, let me assure you that this little country has a big voice. Not only do they have banks ready to wade right in and finance projects even from ideation stage, they’ve also developed a number of singular startup showcase models that I haven’t seen anywhere else in the MENA region. One such example is Riyadat, the Bahrain Women’s Competence Development Centre, a several-storey mall of outlets comprised of women-founded startups allowing them very low subsidized rent spaces that they can use to sell their products and services. A collaborative effort between Bahrain Development Bank (BDB), the Supreme Council for Women (SCW) and the Bahrain Business Incubator Centre, Riyadat Mall is essentially a women’s incubator that actually gives startups a chance to be directly in touch with their potential customer base while receiving the benefits of incubation.

Annada scarf 90 X 90, The Point’s End Lailac by artist Ebrahim BuSaad