
Next Creative Leaders 2025 invites entries from rising female talent
The One Club for Creativity has extended the deadline for its annual Next Creative Leaders competition to Monday, 30 June 2025, giving more time for rising female talent to apply. The free-to-enter initiative celebrates emerging female talent in advertising and design, offering a global platform for visibility, leadership, and long-term career growth.
Now in its 10th year in 2025, Next Creative Leaders was developed in partnership with The 3% Movement and remains the only no-cost portfolio competition of its kind. It is open to copywriters, art directors, designers, associate creative directors, content creators, and newly promoted creative and design directors with less than one year in the role. Creative teams who are producing standout work are also encouraged to submit.
Entrants are evaluated on four to six pieces of creative work, alongside a written reflection on how they – and their ideas – are pushing the industry forward. Judges look for work that demonstrates leadership, impact, and advocacy in areas such as diversity and mentorship.
Winners receive a one-year individual membership to The One Club, free access to professional panels and mentorship events, and a complimentary ticket to a One Club development conference. Their work will be showcased on The One Club's website and social channels, with further media coverage and potential speaking opportunities at NCL events. Winners may also be invited to join juries across other One Club programmes.
'The One Club created its own inclusion and diversity department nearly 20 years ago, and has steadily increased programming around gender equity in the workplace,' said Kevin Swanepoel, CEO, The One Club. 'Next Creative Leaders is an important part of our programming because it identifies, elevates, and gives voice to those who are making a real difference, those who are opening the door and inspiring the next generation of creatives who follow in their footsteps.'
This year's jury includes MENA-based creatives Enas Rashwan, Nayaab Rais, Ali Rez, and Rana Sadek.
For more information visit the website: https://nextcreativeleaders.oneclub.org/
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Arabian Post
3 hours ago
- Arabian Post
G42 Stakes Claim in Europe with London AI Hub
G42 has inaugurated a London-based subsidiary, named G42 Europe & UK, marking a strategic expansion into the continent's private and public sectors. The entity aims to deliver AI-driven solutions and collaborate with governments and industry partners to erect critical AI infrastructure across continental Europe. The new operation will be co‑chaired by Omar Mir, a board member at World Wide Technology with over 20 years' experience in 5G, edge computing, cloud and AI deployments, and Marty Edelman, G42's group general counsel leading legal and compliance strategy for its global operations. G42 Europe & UK intends to localise the parent group's 'supercomputing nodes, data centres and AI capabilities' to support end‑to‑end AI services—ranging from advisory and model development to infrastructure deployment and managed services—across sectors including finance, healthcare, manufacturing and energy. ADVERTISEMENT Omar Mir stated the goal is 'to harness G42's proven AI expertise and localise it for European and UK businesses — fuelling digital transformation, enhancing competitiveness and building resilient, sovereign AI infrastructure in partnership with public and private stakeholders.' Marty Edelman described the region as a 'dynamic market with immense opportunity for AI‑driven innovation,' emphasizing London's relevance as a hub with deep regulatory understanding. This launch follows G42's broader continental push, tied to its data‑centre and high‑performance compute announcements in France and Italy, including a €1 billion supercomputing initiative with iGenius in Italy and an AMD‑powered facility in Grenoble. That wave of infrastructure expansion reflects Abu Dhabi's growing AI footprint in Europe. Analysts view the move as part of a broader UAE strategy aimed at offering European markets an alternative to leading US and Chinese AI suppliers, positioning G42 as a sovereign‑oriented provider of AI compute services. The London hub is expected to accelerate regulatory engagement and foster collaborations tailored to the region's data sovereignty agendas. G42's portfolio of specialised subsidiaries—including Khazna Data Centers, Core42 sovereign cloud, cybersecurity firm CPX, analytics arm Presight and AI lab Inception—will underpin the expansion, offering a comprehensive suite of AI infrastructure and services. Regional demand for locally governed, secure AI infrastructure continues to grow. G42's expansion is aligned with high‑profile European initiatives, such as the Italian supercomputer and AI campus in France backed by Abu Dhabi investment. London's hub will provide direct interface with European regulators and corporate partners seeking sovereign solutions outside dominant US/Chinese tech ecosystems. G42 Europe & UK is expected to engage with national and regional bodies to support regulatory frameworks and technological standards, as it rolls out next‑gen AI infrastructure. Its services aim to blend advanced technology nodes with legal and governance oversight suited to European data and digital resilience priorities. Observers suggest the London operation not only signals G42's ambition to be a key infrastructure partner in Europe, but also frames Abu Dhabi's broader economic diplomacy. With partnerships including Nvidia, AMD and Microsoft, and high‑capacity projects like Stargate UAE, G42's European hub is expected to amplify the UAE's influence in global AI development.


Arabian Post
4 hours ago
- Arabian Post
AI‑Powered 'RIQ' Sets New Reinsurance Benchmark
Arabian Post Staff -Dubai Abu Dhabi‑based IHC, in collaboration with BlackRock and Lunate, has officially launched Reinsurance Intelligence Quotient—RIQ—a global, AI‑native reinsurance platform headquartered in the Abu Dhabi Global Market. Anchored by over US $1 billion in initial equity, RIQ aims to underwrite more than US $10 billion in liabilities, spanning property and casualty, life, and specialty lines. The platform unites human talent with advanced artificial intelligence to refine risk selection, cost control, underwriting, and customer service. Its AI core provides real‑time insights and precision decision‑making, seeking to optimise capital deployment on a global scale. Registered with the Financial Services Regulatory Authority of ADGM, RIQ is in the final stages of securing full regulatory approval. ADVERTISEMENT The board of directors, chaired by Dr Sultan Ahmed Al Jaber, includes notable figures such as Syed Basar Shueb, H E Mohamed Hassan Alsuwaidi, Sofia Abdellatif Lasky, and RIQ CEO Mark Wilson, former leader at Aviva and AIA. The governance structure positions RIQ to balance regional expertise with global vision, leveraging its strategic partners. The initiative builds on a May plan unveiled by IHC, BlackRock, and Lunate to establish an AI‑powered reinsurer targeting US $10 billion in liabilities with over US $1 billion in capital. BlackRock will contribute its Aladdin technology and insurance asset management services, while Lunate brings private and public market investment capabilities. IHC CEO Syed Basar Shueb has emphasised the venture's role in accelerating Abu Dhabi's and the wider region's nascent insurance and capital market ecosystems. 'RIQ is the embodiment of IHC's vision to invest in the next frontier of global financial services,' Shueb stated. Meanwhile, RIQ CEO Mark Wilson described the platform as purpose‑built for a changing market, combining speed and flexibility backed by deep capital. Dr Al Jaber, who also serves as UAE's minister of industry and advanced technology, said the platform would 'connect global capital with high‑growth markets, all from the heart of Abu Dhabi's thriving financial centre'. This reflects a broader strategic push by Abu Dhabi to position itself as a hub for innovative financial services and AI‑driven offerings. Analysts have observed that RIQ's AI‑native architecture could challenge traditional reinsurance models, where legacy systems often hinder real‑time pricing accuracy and capital efficiency. With global risk landscapes evolving due to climate change, cyber threats, and geopolitical instability, the deployment of AI in underwriting and risk transfer represents a notable shift in industry norms. Industry commentators note that IHC, already one of the region's largest investment houses, continues to accelerate its diversification strategy, adding reinsurance to its growing portfolio that spans technology, energy, real estate, healthcare, and food production. Its ability to marshal more than US $455 billion in assets and maintain tight ties to the Abu Dhabi ruling establishment adds strategic depth to RIQ's capital and governance framework. Key trends marking this launch include the convergence of finance and bleeding‑edge technology, a stronger regional emphasis on insurance capacity, and elevated geopolitical importance of financial resilience. RIQ is set to capitalise on these developments, channeling global capital into emerging markets, while establishing Abu Dhabi as a next‑generation centre for financial innovation.


Zawya
11 hours ago
- Zawya
US tariffs, lower oil prices may slow down FDI flows into GCC: Report
Foreign direct investment (FDI) inflows into the GCC region are expected to slow down in 2025 after a decade of rapid growth, S&P Global Market Intelligence said in its latest outlook report. The slowdown is attributed to investor uncertainties, reflecting changing US trade policies, lower oil prices, and a more gradual development of GCC diversification projects. In the near term, the report forecasts a net negative impact on global FDI, primarily due to the indirect repercussions of US tariffs, a weaker oil price outlook and reduced global investor confidence. Lower oil prices, reflecting expectations of weaker oil demand and increasing OPEC supply, are likely to constrain the foreign exchange earnings generation capacity of large MENA hydrocarbon exporters. This, in turn, will limit their capacity to act as major investors in other countries within the region. While the GCC states have committed to investing large amounts of FDI in the US economy, such outflows are likely to reduce capital available for investment in non-GCC MENA states, which remain 'attractive venues' for renewable energy and tourism developments, the report said. According to S&P Global Market Intelligence, FDI in the region has shifted from hydrocarbons to infrastructure, renewable energy, logistics, tourism, and construction. This is likely to continue, complemented by areas such as auto sector investments in Morocco, but aggregate flows are likely to remain dominated by GCC states. However, a weaker US dollar could support the external competitiveness of GCC countries with currencies pegged to the dollar, the report said.