For decades, Middle-Eastern companies have been forced to choose between imported software that does not understand them and local software that compromises on quality. We refuse this trade-off. Our vision is built on four principles.
1
Software designed FOR this region — not retrofitted from elsewhere
Imported tools treat Arabic as a translation problem and our business norms as edge cases. We start from the opposite end: every database column is nvarchar, every query is parameterized, every UI direction is RTL-aware from line one of design. Bilingual is not a feature checkbox — it is an engineering discipline.
- Every nvarchar field, every parameterized query, every RTL interface is non-negotiable
- The Hijri calendar, Friday holidays, end-of-service calculations live in the core, not as plugins
- Our user-research happens in customer offices in Kuwait, Cairo, and Riyadh — not in slide decks
"If your software treats Arabic users as a localization problem, it does not understand them."
2
Software you can audit, own, and outlast vendors with
Black-box SaaS subscriptions force customers to bet their entire operation on a vendor's continued existence. We reject that asymmetry. Our customers can run our software on their own servers, audit our code if they pay for source escrow, and walk away with their data on the day they decide to.
- On-premise deployment supported as a first-class option, not as an "enterprise add-on"
- Source-code escrow available for customers running mission-critical workloads
- Data exports in open formats (CSV, JSON, SQL) — your data is portable by design
- Privacy and regional compliance (GDPR, PDPL) are starting points, not premium tiers
3
Partnerships measured in decades, not in fiscal quarters
Some of our customers signed in 2003 and are still with us in 2026. That is not luck — it is the result of a deliberate choice not to optimize for short-term revenue at the expense of trust. We say "no" to features that would compromise stability. We say "yes" to the unglamorous engineering that keeps things running for the next ten years.
- Customer renewals are our primary success metric, not new logos
- Migration scripts ship the day we change a schema — not six months later
- Support hours overlap with customer business hours in the Gulf, not Pacific Time
4
The future of regional business technology will be built here
It will not be built in Silicon Valley and translated. It will be built in Cairo, Kuwait, Riyadh, Dubai, Casablanca — by people who lived through the same problems they are solving. A1-Soft is one company in that movement. We are committed to remaining a regional company, with a regional team, serving regional customers — for the next 26 years and beyond.