With visitor numbers climbing and new hotels transforming neighbourhoods from Zamalek to New Cairo, employers across the city are scrambling to retain skilled workers in an increasingly competitive talent landscape.
As innovation districts reshape neighbourhoods from Maadi to New Cairo, residents should know how startup growth is reshaping everything from food delivery to apartment hunting.
From Khan el-Khalili to Zamalek, entrepreneurs report the toughest trading conditions in years as inflation and energy prices squeeze already-thin margins.
As innovation districts reshape Downtown and New Cairo, residents are discovering how startups are changing everything from your morning commute to your grocery bill.
As multinational firms embrace hybrid models, competition for office-based roles has intensified while salaries for remote-capable positions are climbing faster than rent in New Cairo.
Rising consumer confidence and shifting capital allocation reveal a hospitality sector in flux as international money eyes Egypt's food and beverage landscape.
Operators across the city's dining and shopping districts face mounting pressure from currency fluctuations, energy expenses, and shifting consumer behaviour.
Labour shortages, supply chain pressures, and changing consumer habits are driving visible changes across the capital's restaurants, cafes, and retail spaces—here's what's actually happening.
Small business owners in Nasr City and New Cairo are racing to capture a surge in last-mile delivery demand, with some already doubling revenues as regional trade accelerates.
From Middle East tensions to Venezuelan migration patterns, international instability is forcing Cairo's businesses to rethink hiring strategies and workforce planning.
As inflation pressures ease and foreign investment flows shift, companies operating across Heliopolis, New Cairo and Downtown must recalibrate their growth strategies.
Hotels, tour operators and restaurants in Egypt's capital face a perfect storm of geopolitical tension, inflation pressures and shifting traveller behaviour that threatens to derail post-pandemic momentum.
As multinational firms and Egyptian startups reshape their real estate strategies post-pandemic, a new class of Cairo landlords and commercial brokers are reaping substantial returns.
In a city of 21 million, a young businesswoman is rewriting the rulebook for specialty coffee, transforming a modest spice-market operation into a regional player.
As foreign direct investment slows, employment growth in Egypt's capital reveals diverging fortunes across sectors—and what it means for your career prospects.