From Practitioner to Pathfinder: Evolving Role of HR in MENA
Across the Middle East, a new kind of organisation is taking shape - driven by National Vision frameworks, economic diversification, shifting regional dynamics and AI integration. These forces are collectively reshaping what organisations need from their people function, and the HR professionals who lead it.
For long, HR in the region played a pivotal role as the operational backbone. But today's complexity demands that HR step into a different role: strategic, anticipatory, agile and deeply embedded in how organisations are designed, led, and built for the future.
What Challenges are Redefining the HR Mandate?
1. Regional Capability Priorities: Governments across the GCC have defined bold nationalisation targets, and organisations have a real opportunity to rise to them. The focus for HR is building the skills infrastructure that makes local talent not just placed, but positioned to perform and grow. This is a workforce design opportunity as much as it is a compliance one.
2. Building an Ecosystem That Retains All Talent: The GCC's diverse, multinational workforce is one of its greatest strengths. Sustaining it requires HR to think beyond compensation - creating environments where both local and expatriate professionals find career visibility, a sense of belonging, and compelling reasons to grow within the organisation.
3. Operating Through Regional Momentum: Shifting trade relationships and business dynamics are forcing organisations to restructure faster than people strategies can keep pace. HR is increasingly expected to lead workforce restructuring and change management at a speed for which it was not traditionally designed.
4. Building a Future-Ready Workforce Without a Fixed Roadmap: AI adoption and sector diversification are reshaping the skills organisations need - often faster than L&D functions can respond. HR must move from delivering standardised learning programs to designing dynamic capability strategies aligned to an evolving business landscape.
To address these challenges, the HR leader of yesterday is not the HR leader organisations need today. SHRM research also points to the need to evolve: 92% of CHROs anticipate greater AI integration in workforce operations, while 46% cite leadership and manager development as their top priority for 2026.
Which Five Roles Define the HR Pathfinder?
Workforce Architect: Hiring for roles is giving way to building capabilities. HR must redesign career architectures, anchor talent decisions in skills, and build pipelines that are ready for a world still taking shape.
Retention Strategist: In a region where talent is mobile, retention is no longer a benefits conversation. With 51% of workers likely to leave organisations that fail to meet their needs (SHRM, 2026), HR must build ecosystems where people feel seen, supported, and connected - and where a sense of belonging is intentional, not incidental.
Change Navigator: HR must lead through ambiguity - preparing leaders for roles without a clear blueprint, holding people and performance together through restructuring, and communicating with conviction when the road ahead is still being drawn.
Capability Builder: AI fluency is fast becoming a baseline expectation - for managers and employees alike. HR must go beyond awareness and embed new ways of working and leading into the fabric of the organisation.
Culture and Wellbeing Custodian: When organisations get it right, 91% of employees report higher job satisfaction. But when they don't, that figure drops to 44% (SHRM, 2026). HR must create conditions where people feel genuinely well, psychologically safe, and purposefully connected - because human stability drives organisational resilience.
Reimagining the Role from Within
Structural repositioning matters - but so does personal evolution. With 59% of HR professionals already using strategic goals as KPIs, and 40% tracking revenue and profitability metrics, the shift is underway. The next step is translating intent into practice - bringing insight, conviction, and foresight to leadership conversations, not just metrics and recommendations. A useful starting point: the questions every HR leader should be able to answer about their organisation, as explored in SHRM's HR Quarterly Spring 2026 edition, The Perfect Pitch.
As SHRM's HR Quarterly notes, influence is built through credibility, data, and demonstrated impact. And that requires HR professionals to invest in their own capabilities - in workforce analytics, organisational design, change management, and AI literacy - with the same rigour they apply to developing others.
The Opportunity Inside the Complexity
The organisations that will build the most resilient workforces across the GCC will not be those that simply manage HR well, but those that harness it as a genuine driver of organisational capability, shaping culture and leading transformation in line with the ambition of the region's Vision frameworks.
The question for every HR professional is not whether the role is changing - it already has. The question is how intentionally you are nurturing yourself to grow with it.
Sources: SHRM 2026 State of the Workplace Report; SHRM 2026 CHRO Priorities and Perspectives Report
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