Empowering

Global

Talent

MG Consulting Group

Key Takeaways

  •   GCC banks are automating across customer-facing, back-office, compliance, and governance functions faster than they’re preparing people to manage those systems.
  •   The most common reskilling mistake isn’t skipping training — it’s sequencing it wrong: teaching AI literacy for roles that haven’t been redesigned yet.
  •   Employees doing repetitive work know their roles are at risk. They want to move into higher-value, higher-paying positions, but they need clear pathways, time, and employer support to get there.
  •   Successful GCC banks treat automation as organizational redesign, not cost-cutting, and build governance before deploying technology.
  •   The future GCC banking workforce needs AI governance, vendor risk management, Arabic-language AI capabilities, and cross-border regulatory mapping — not generic prompt-engineering skills.

    Why GCC Banks Are Automating Faster Than They Are Reskilling Their Workforce

GCC banks are automating at a pace that outpaces their ability to prepare the people who must run, govern, and validate those systems.

Saudi Arabia announced more than $14.9 billion in AI-sector investments and projects at LEAP 2025. For First Abu Dhabi Bank, Aletihad reported 75% workflow acceleration in cross-border payments and a 30% increase in revenue per relationship manager from AI advisors.

On the workforce side, the World Economic Forum’s Future of Jobs Report 2025 says employers expect 39% of workers’ core skills to change by 2030. In fact, most employees already know this and are anticipating changes and upgrades in their work. 

However, the pathways to higher-value work aren’t very visible yet in several organizations. 

This article looks at where automation is landing in GCC banking, why reskilling the financial services workforce is lagging, the mistakes banks are making, and how to close the gap before the talent pipeline runs dry.

Where GCC Banks Are Deploying Automation Right Now

Automation in GCC banking is no longer confined to pilots; documented deployments now span customer service, digital channels, back-office processing, fraud controls and internal governance. 

Function Area Institution What They Did
Customer-facing operations Emirates NBD Launched EVA, a natural-language virtual assistant for voice and chat interactions.
Customer-facing operations RAKBANK Reported introducing the AI digital assistant “Rai” in its 2025 annual report.
Customer-facing operations Emirates NBD Offers 24/7 secure Chat Banking via WhatsApp.
Back-office processing Emirates NBD Reported more than 100 RPA solutions across Retail, Corporate and Compliance functions.
Compliance and risk RAKBANK Reported strengthened AML/CFT monitoring, real-time fraud detection and AI-powered fraud alerting in 2025.
Compliance and risk Saudi banking sector (SAMA framework) SAMA’s counter-fraud framework explicitly addresses AI/ML-enabled fraud prediction, decision support and auditability.
Revenue and cross-border operations First Abu Dhabi Bank Agentic AI sped cross-border payments by 75%; AI advisors lifted relationship-manager revenue by 30%
Internal governance UAE Ministry of Finance Automated 63 processes and sub-processes; reported 39,000 working hours saved, 95% fewer errors and 65% lower average handling time.

Processes and tasks are already changing. The question is whether the workforce is changing with it.

The Reskilling Gap: Training vs. Transformation

There’s a distinction a lot of GCC banks haven’t internalized yet.

While a standard training expands what your existing people can do in their current jobs, reskilling changes who does the work, how much judgment they’re trusted with, and who’s accountable when something goes wrong. 

The latter process changes the job itself, while the former just changes the person doing it.

However, the common response in many organizations today has been the former: rollouts of AI literacy training sessions on large language models, prompt engineering, and AI ethics. 

Now, while those programs can be useful, completion rates and certificates do not necessarily mean that the most crucial workplace change has taken place.

If the operating structure of the workforce remains the same, the organization only ends up with AI-literate employees inside unchanged roles.

How does that matter? when automation removes tasks from a role without redesigning the role itself, the residual work doesn’t automatically become higher-value.

How do we mean? 

Imagine a credit analyst whose work shifts from mostly data gathering to mostly judgment after automation. If performance metrics still reward throughput, the analyst is evaluated on the wrong work. The bank ends up with someone technically more capable but structurally misaligned.

ILO research finds that clerical occupations have the highest GenAI exposure. If a bank fails to plan properly, they might keep training people for routine work that is being reshaped while struggling to build pathways into higher-value roles.

This is why the distinction between AI upskilling versus reskilling matters: upskilling improves performance in a current role; reskilling prepares an employee for a materially different role.

What Banks Are Getting Wrong: The Reskilling Mistakes

If your bank has a reskilling program in place, the following mistakes may already be present. They’re not always visible from the inside.

Mistake 1: Reskilling for existing roles instead of future roles

You’re mapping training to current job families. Credit analysts are learning Python. Compliance officers are learning to audit AI. Data engineers are learning to deploy models. But you haven’t identified which roles may emerge or expand – for example, agent operations, model governance, AI risk or decisioning architecture. The risk is training only for today’s job map while automation changes it.

Mistake 2: Underinvesting relative to technology spend

Your bank may have approved significant budgets for AI infrastructure, RPA licenses, and cloud migration without making a comparable assessment of workforce transition needs. The issue is not a universal spending ratio; it is whether people-investment follows the bank’s actual automation exposure.

Mistake 3: Running generic programs instead of role-specific transitions

A broad AI literacy course is not the same as a role transition. For example, training a large population in generic AI concepts does not by itself redesign credit-analysis work around AI-augmented judgment, exception handling and governance. Generic programs can miss the judgment shifts created when automation removes routine tasks.

Mistake 4: Not changing performance metrics

Your reviews still reward output metrics — files processed, deals closed, reports filed — that AI commoditizes fastest. If the metrics don’t change, the behavior doesn’t change, and the reskilling doesn’t stick. You’re asking people to work differently while measuring them the same way.

Mistake 5: Assuming the middle layer is safe

You think senior, judgment-heavy roles are insulated from automation. The data says otherwise. AI amplifies the difference between a great senior practitioner and a mediocre one. The most AI-exposed workers are often older, more educated, and higher-paid — the exact profile of your mid-career managers. You’re under-investing in the very people whose remaining work is most valuable.

Mistake 6: The apprenticeship trap

You’ve reduced junior analyst intake while sourcing AI talent from those same early-career cohorts. But banking is an apprenticeship business. Foundational experiences — learning how systems work, how to collaborate, how to interact with customers — are being lost as core processes become black-boxed. Hollow out the junior pipeline, and you hollow out the senior pipeline ten years later.

Mistake 7: Treating AI as an IT initiative

AI sits with your IT team or innovation lab. It never reaches frontline staff. Pilots that don’t connect to measurable business outcomes lose sponsorship. Reskilling is designed by HR or IT in isolation from the business units that must actually use the new capabilities.

How Successful GCC Banks Are Approaching Automation

Some banks are already navigating this well, and they share a common trait: they treat automation as organizational redesign, not cost-cutting. 

They build governance and infrastructure first, then deploy technology at scale. They also free people for judgment-based work rather than eliminating them.

First Abu Dhabi Bank (FAB)

Focused on standardizing internal platforms before deploying AI. Its NUMO platform for product building and Gernas platform for AI data created the architecture that allowed agentic AI to scale safely. The result wasn’t just speed — cross-border payments up 75% — but revenue growth. 

AI advisors lifted revenue per relationship manager by 30% because the infrastructure was designed to augment human judgment, not replace it.

Emirates NBD

Didn’t automate a single department in isolation. It deployed over 100 RPA bots across retail, corporate, compliance, and customer support simultaneously. The horizontal approach prevented the patchwork of disconnected tools that plagues many banks. 

It also created cross-functional visibility: a bot in compliance could share data logic with a bot in customer onboarding, reducing duplication and audit complexity.

ADCB

Used AI-driven credit scoring with alternative data to expand access to credit for underserved populations. The automation had a commercial outcome and a social outcome. It wasn’t justified by headcount reduction but by market expansion.

Banco Supervielle (regional reference model)

Achieved 100% compliance with government regulations while handling 43% more cases in six months. The critical factor was that auditability was built into the automation from the start, not retrofitted later.

NatWest (reference model)

Built a Change Risk Hub that standardized 17 disjointed governance processes into a single approval workflow. The governance cycle dropped from 73 days to 73 minutes in some cases, saving an estimated £4.5 million annually. The lesson: governance first, speed second.

These institutions treated reskilling as a sequencing problem: they identified the roles first, then designed pathways toward them.

The order matters more than the budget. Ask whether your bank built governance before or after deploying the technology.

The Skills That Actually Matter in GCC Banking

That raises the obvious next question: which skills actually matter in GCC banking right now?

The need is broad and is shaped by overlapping regimes, including the UAE federal PDPL, DIFC Regulation 10, ADGM’s data-protection framework, and the Saudi PDPL, alongside sector-specific AI guidance. 

Skill What It Covers
AI governance and regulatory mapping Tracing AI use cases across CBUAE, SAMA, SDAIA, and Qatar Central Bank requirements simultaneously.
Vendor AI risk management Evaluating third-party AI tools under data sovereignty constraints and contractual liability frameworks
Arabic-language AI capabilities Working with Arabic NLP, chatbots, voice recognition, and document processing systems
Audit trail and evidence design Creating regulator-ready documentation, model cards, and decision logs — not just policy statements
Cross-border data governance Navigating UAE federal PDPL, DIFC Regulation 10, ADGM frameworks, and Saudi PDPL in a single operating model
Exception handling and AI output review The judgment layer that sits above automation and decides when to override algorithmic recommendations
Alternative data and credit analytics For financial inclusion, SME lending, and non-traditional scoring models

If your current reskilling curriculum doesn’t touch at least three of these, it’s likely that it’s preparing people for the wrong decade.

Emerging Roles in GCC Banking: An Opportunity for Employees

For employees sitting in roles being automated right now, the stakes are more immediate. The AI impact on banking jobs, for them, is less a threat than a chance to move into work that requires judgment and oversight.

Employers must also support them for this transition. Experienced staff understand the bank’s products, its customers, and its regulatory environment. Losing them and hiring externally for new technical roles is more expensive and slower than building the capability internally. 

That said, below are the roles that are emerging now: 

Emerging Role What It Does
AI governance manager (GCC) Designs cross-jurisdictional regulatory mapping for banks operating across Saudi Arabia, UAE, Qatar, and Bahrain
Responsible AI officer Aligns AI systems with SDAIA’s ethical framework and CBUAE governance expectations
Vendor AI risk manager Manages third-party AI due diligence under strict data sovereignty and contractual liability requirements
Arabic NLP/AI specialist Develops and governs Arabic-language models for customer-facing and internal document processing
AI compliance officer (cross-border) Builds unified compliance frameworks that satisfy multiple regulators without duplicating effort
Digital onboarding and eKYC specialist Manages AI-driven customer onboarding with Sharia compliance and local regulatory alignment
Wealth management AI advisor Blends traditional Gulf wealth management with AI-driven personalization and portfolio analytics
Agent operations lead Oversees agentic AI systems that make autonomous decisions, ensuring human accountability and exception handling

 These aren’t theoretical roles. They’re already appearing in job boards and organizational charts. The question is whether banks will build the internal pathways to fill them.

How GCC Banks Should Reskill: Practical Steps

Building those pathways starts with one thing: audit automation exposure before approving another training budget. That order — exposure first, spend second — is where most reskilling programs go wrong.

1. Audit automation exposure before training anyone

Map which roles are being automated, which are being augmented, and which net-new roles are emerging. Do not design curricula for jobs that evidence suggests are being materially reshaped.

2. Identify net-new roles before designing pathways

Define likely future roles – AI governance, vendor risk, exception handling and related capabilities – then design reskilling pathways toward them rather than only toward current job families.

3. Replace generic AI literacy with role-specific transition programs

A credit analyst should learn credit governance in an AI-augmented environment. A compliance officer should learn AI audit trail design. A customer service agent should learn escalation management and AI output review. Don’t run prompt-engineering courses for everyone.

4. Restructure performance metrics to match the new work

If AI handles throughput, measure judgment, exception quality, and governance contribution. Metrics must change before behavior changes.

5. Map reskilling against nationalization targets

Align reskilling pathways with nationalization requirements and with roles that are likely to remain judgment-heavy or become AI-augmented. SAMA’s Saudization requirements and CBUAE Emiratization rules make this a workforce-planning constraint, not merely a diversity initiative.

6. Build governance and documentation into the architecture

Reskilling isn’t only about people. It’s about the systems they operate. Every automated process needs a human accountability layer, an audit trail, and a documented escalation path. Train people to manage that layer, not just to use the tool.

Designing role-specific reskilling pathways while automating operations and meeting nationalization targets, all at once, is a structural challenge for most HR teams. 

This is where external HR consultancy firms in the GCC or transformation advisers may be useful. Especially where a bank lacks internal capacity to map automation exposure, define net-new roles, and coordinate change management with commercial and regulatory requirements.

Conclusion

The argument of this article is not that GCC banking is behind on technology. It is that rapid automation creates a workforce-redesign challenge that needs to be managed with equal discipline.

Banks that perform well through the next phase are likely to be those that redesign work so people can govern, augment, and validate automated systems – not simply those with the most RPA solutions or the largest AI budgets. 

That means managing automation, regulation, and nationalization on a coordinated timeline.

The transition is already changing tasks and skill requirements. Employers that create credible pathways can preserve institutional knowledge, support localization objectives, and build governance capability as regulators raise expectations. 

Those that don’t risk ending up with live technology, tighter rules, and a workforce that has completed training without being ready for redesigned work.

FAQs

We already ran an AI literacy program. Doesn’t that count as reskilling?

Not on its own. If your performance metrics still reward throughput after the course, the course trained people to work the same way with a certificate attached — it didn’t reskill anyone. Reskilling requires the role itself to change, not just the person’s familiarity with a tool.

Our senior credit and compliance staff are experienced — are they actually at risk from AI?

The safest indicator isn’t seniority; it’s how much of the role is judgment versus retrieval. A twenty-year credit officer, mostly retrieving information for pricing decisions, is more exposed than a five-year officer negotiating structured deals.

Automation is shrinking the entry-level roles we normally use to hit our Saudization numbers — what do we do?

Redirect the target. Build the national talent pipeline into the exception-handling and governance layer instead of the roles automation is shrinking. That’s where the unfilled technical roles already sit, and local hires can be trained into them fastest because the work still requires human judgment rather than scarce specialist experience.

If we can only fund one type of training this year, what should it be?

Vendor AI risk management. It’s the capability least likely to be built through a generic course, most likely to become a regulatory requirement within the next two cycles, and hardest to hire for externally — it depends on your bank’s existing vendor relationships as much as on AI compliance knowledge.

Where do we start if we haven’t done any of this yet?

With the audit, even if it takes a full quarter and delays other reskilling work. A bank that skips this step may have to redo its training investment within eighteen months, because it built pathways toward roles that automation had already reshaped.

Which emerging roles are easiest for an internal employee to move into, versus ones that need external hiring?

Digital onboarding/eKYC specialist and exception-handling roles are the most reachable internally — they build on existing compliance and operations knowledge. Arabic NLP/AI specialist and agent operations lead are the hardest to fill internally in the near term; most banks will need to hire externally or partner for that capability.

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