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Omanization 2.0: How Businesses and Talent Can Build Oman’s Next-Generation Workforce

Nov 7, 2025 | Government, Talent

Omanization 2.0: How Businesses and Talent Can Build Oman’s Next-Generation Workforce

Oman’s economy is entering a decisive phase!

Vision 2040 has set the target: by the end of the next decade, 40 percent of the private-sector workforce should be Omani.

Achieving that goal will take more than quotas, it demands a new mindset about skills, career growth, and how companies define value.

This next phase, often called Omanization 2.0, is about aligning national goals with business competitiveness.


From Policy to Practice

The government’s latest labor reforms, especially Sultani Decree No. 53 of 2023, signal a shift from protection to participation. The law recognizes flexible work types — part-time and remote roles — opening new doors for Omanis who once saw limited options outside public service.

Yet, a gap remains. Employers in digital fields such as cybersecurity, data, and cloud computing continue to struggle to find qualified local talent. Educators are modernising curricula, but progress takes time.

For companies, this transition period requires creativity: how to meet Omanization quotas while keeping teams competitive in a fast-moving economy.


What Businesses Can Do Differently

1. Invest in Skills, Not Just Hiring Numbers

Meeting headcount targets is not enough. The companies succeeding with Omanization 2.0 treat talent development as strategy, not compliance. They upskill existing staff, sponsor short-course programs, and track learning progress through internal learning systems.

Partnerships with initiatives such as Makeen show how private firms can link with universities and training centres to create role-specific programs in data, AI, or project management.

2. Strengthen Employer Value

The private sector competes directly with government entities for top graduates. To stay attractive, businesses must offer a compelling value proposition — clear career pathways, visible success stories, and flexibility.

Flexible work options, now endorsed by law, help attract young professionals and working parents. Likewise, personalized reward packages tied to performance can boost retention more effectively than uniform benefits.

3. Use Data to Guide Workforce Decisions

Leading HR teams in Oman are adopting talent analytics to map skill gaps and plan succession. By analysing where capabilities fall short — for instance, digital marketing within sales or AI literacy within IT — companies can design targeted training.

Some partner with regional HR consultancies to benchmark pay and track progress, ensuring their nationalization goals support, rather than slow, business growth.


The Role of Individuals

Omanization 2.0 is a two-way effort. Professionals who invest in themselves will find far greater opportunity than those who wait for placement.

  • Pursue Training: National programs such as Makeen and other digital-skills academies offer free or subsidized courses.
  • Earn Recognised Credentials: Certifications in cybersecurity, project management, or data analysis signal readiness for advanced roles.
  • Build Core Digital Literacy: Even non-technical jobs increasingly rely on data tools, collaboration platforms, and responsible tech use.

Omani professionals who treat learning as a continuous habit will be best positioned for the private-sector careers emerging under Vision 2040.


Looking Ahead

Omanization 2.0 is redefining what national employment means. For businesses, it is a chance to modernise workforce strategies and create competitive advantage. For individuals, it is a call to upgrade skills and adopt a growth mindset.

If both sides embrace this shift — from policy to practice, from compliance to capability — Oman’s private sector can become not only more national, but more globally competitive.

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