Our Consultancy
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Expansion to the Middle East
Whether you’re exploring market opportunities or ready to launch operations, we help you understand the business landscape, cultural nuances, regulatory requirements, and strategic options for a successful entry into Middle Eastern markets.
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Recruitment
We support companies in building effective recruitment strategies tailored to local markets. From identifying talent needs to navigating cross-cultural hiring practices, we help you attract and select the right people for the right roles.
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Administrative & Legal Support
Setting up or expanding a company involves detailed administrative work. We provide consultancy for:
Obtaining work permits. Establishing companies in Romania or the Middle East. Understanding local procedures and legal requirements.
Our goal is to make these processes smooth, transparent, and compliant.
Meet Bitnawyah!
Bitnawyah’s Expansion to the Middle East
Bitnawyah approached Bitna with an exciting yet complex opportunity. Her company had developed an innovative Human Capital Management application, and she saw the Middle East as a promising market — one known for advancing HR technologies and investing heavily in workforce digitalization.
But expanding into a new region requires more than ambition.
It requires local understanding, cultural awareness, and a clear strategy.
Bitnawyah knew she needed insights that went beyond a basic market scan — she needed a partner who understood how businesses think, decide, and operate in the region.
That partner was Bitna.
We began with a full market study, identifying:
Key pain points in talent management across different countries
Industries most likely to adopt the solution
The region’s digital maturity, HR trends, and technology adoption
The difference in workforce dynamics between the Middle East and Europe
Potential early adopters and partnership channels
Next, we analyzed how the app’s value proposition fit into this context. We realized together that the message had to shift — not because the product was wrong, but because the workforce culture in the Middle East operates on different priorities, hierarchies, and decision-making structures.
Bitna worked closely with Bitnawyah’s team to refine:
The tone of communication, respecting business etiquette and cultural expectations
The strategic narrative behind the product
A localized value proposition that responded to the region’s needs
The recommended market entry strategy (industry-first, partnership-first, or pilot-first)
Suggested marketing approaches and positioning statements
By the end, Bitnawyah had clarity. She understood not only the potential but also how to approach the Middle Eastern market with confidence and sensitivity.
Her company is now preparing its next steps with a solid, culturally aligned strategy — one that speaks the language of the region both emotionally and professionally.