For organisations in Riyadh or Muscat previously reliant on UAE-based production facilities or international suppliers, the local presence could compress timelines.

OMAN/SAUDI ARABIA – GCG Enterprise Solutions has rolled out print production services across Saudi Arabia and Oman, offering high-speed inkjet and digital press technology for transactional documents, packaging, and customer communications.
The expansion will give Saudi and Omani customers access to high-speed inkjet systems and digital press technology, backed by local expertise rather than remote support.
The company is targeting commercial print providers, advertising agencies, copy centres, government entities, education institutions, and large enterprises with substantial document production requirements.
GCG Enterprise Solutions is part of the Ghobash Group and has operated since 1982, employing more than 200 specialists across the UAE, Oman, and Saudi Arabia.
Production Print vs. Managed Print
Managed print typically handles everyday office workflows, copiers, multifunction devices, toner management. Production print operates at industrial scale, processing tens of thousands of impressions daily with variable data capabilities that allow each printed piece to carry different personalised information.
For organisations in Riyadh or Muscat previously reliant on UAE-based production facilities or international suppliers, the local presence could compress timelines.
A marketing campaign that once required shipping materials from Dubai might now turn around in days rather than weeks.
Addressing Diverse Sector Pressures
Each sector faces different pressures: governments need compliance and speed, education institutions require cost efficiency during enrolment periods, and agencies demand customisation capabilities that older offset presses struggle to deliver.
Baiju KC, Sales Director at GCG Enterprise Solutions, framed the expansion around agility, stating that demand is growing across the GCC for more agile, scalable, and efficient print production environments.
He noted that expanding the company’s presence in Saudi Arabia and Oman allows GCG to support customers with advanced technologies backed by regional expertise and responsive service delivery.
A Geographic Bet on Physical Infrastructure
The move marks a geographic bet on physical infrastructure at a time when much industry talk centres on going paperless.
The company is inviting enterprises in both markets to assess how modern production technologies might improve efficiency and output quality, though it stopped short of disclosing investment figures or specific deployment timelines.
GCG sees sustained demand for high-volume print services across the Gulf, even as digital channels proliferate.
The expansion positions the firm to capture that demand locally rather than serving it from across borders, a geographic advantage that could prove decisive when turnaround time becomes the differentiator.
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