Business Cultures: Qatar
Key Cultural Values
- Wasta and connections: who you know matters enormously — an introduction through a trusted intermediary is worth more than the best marketing brochure
- Hospitality as a core value: generosity and welcoming guests is central to Qatari culture — accepting hospitality graciously is a form of respect
- Hierarchy and respect for authority: decision-making is concentrated at senior levels; relationships with senior procurement officials are what drive outcomes
- Long-term partnership orientation: Qatari institutions prefer suppliers committed to the market long-term over one-time transactional vendors
- Islamic values: Qatar adheres closely to Islamic principles — prayer times, Ramadan scheduling, and halal considerations affect business operations
First Meetings & Business Etiquette
Greetings & Introductions
The standard greeting is As-salamu alaykum, which is always well received. With Qatari men, a handshake is standard. With Qatari women, always wait — many will not extend their hand. Use formal titles (Your Excellency for ministers, Doctor, Eng.) and surnames. Men should avoid short sleeves in formal business settings; women should dress modestly. Business dress is conservative and professional.
Business Cards & Gifts
Business cards should be presented and received respectfully. A card with Arabic on one side is a strong positive gesture. Small gifts are appropriate for relationship meetings — quality food items, premium Turkish goods, or branded items work well. Avoid alcohol entirely. Gifts are often not opened immediately.
Communication Style
Communication is indirect by Western standards — Qataris rarely express disagreement or declining interest directly. Phrases like 'we will look into it' or 'God willing' (Inshallah) are polite ways of deferring or declining. Conversely, warm praise and interest are expressed generously; do not interpret this as a firm commitment.
English is widely used in Qatari business and government healthcare procurement. Arabic greetings and a few business phrases are warmly appreciated. Official government procurement documentation is typically in Arabic; English translations are usually provided.
Negotiation & Decision-Making
Negotiation Style
Negotiations in Qatar are conducted with formality and patience. Building the relationship over several meetings typically precedes detailed commercial negotiation. Price negotiation is expected but should be approached respectfully. Qatari buyers are sophisticated; they understand the quality-price tradeoff and are willing to pay a premium for proven reliability and after-sales service.
Decision-Making Process
Procurement decisions in Qatar — particularly for Hamad Medical Corporation (HMC), the dominant government hospital group — involve formal tender processes, technical evaluation committees, and senior-level approval. Private sector (Sidra Medicine, JHAH) follows more agile procurement processes. Building relationships at the clinical and procurement manager level as well as at senior leadership is essential.
Building Long-Term Relationships
Qatar's small, well-connected business community means that a strong relationship with one influential person can open many doors simultaneously. Regular visits to Doha — not just for exhibitions but for maintaining personal contact — are essential. WhatsApp is widely used for professional communication and relationship maintenance between visits. The Turkish community in Qatar is well established and provides a natural networking infrastructure.
Meeting Norms
- Meetings may not start promptly — patience is important; never express frustration
- Initial meetings are relationship-building; substantive business discussion often follows in subsequent meetings
- Senior-to-senior meeting matching signals seriousness and respect
- High-quality printed materials in English and Arabic create an excellent impression
- During Ramadan, working hours shift — many decisions slow during this period; schedule accordingly
Key Dos & Don'ts
| ✓ Do | ✗ Don't |
| Always greet with As-salamu alaykum and demonstrate genuine cultural respect | Do not offer or consume alcohol in any business context |
| Accept all hospitality — coffee, dates, tea — warmly and graciously | Do not schedule key meetings during Ramadan or Eid periods without sensitivity |
| Register with the Qatar Ministry of Public Health for all government hospital procurement | Do not rush to close — patience is essential in Gulf procurement cycles |
| Attend Qatar's Medical Conference or the Arabian Health Forum to meet HMC procurement staff | Do not ignore after-sales service requirements — maintenance and support capability is a key procurement criterion |
| Demonstrate long-term market commitment — Qatari institutions prefer enduring supplier relationships | Do not use your left hand for giving or receiving items, documents, or gifts |
Tips for Turkish Medical Exporters
- Hamad Medical Corporation is the key account: HMC manages the majority of Qatar's public hospital procurement — ensure your products are on the HMC approved supplier list and that your local agent is registered with their procurement system
- Appoint a Doha-based registered local agent: for government procurement, a registered Qatari agent with HMC and government connections is essentially mandatory
- Ministry of Public Health registration: all imported medical devices require MoPH registration — initiate this process well before planning market entry
- Leverage the Turkish Embassy in Doha: Qatar has a strong bilateral relationship with Turkey; the Turkish commercial attaché regularly facilitates introductions between Turkish companies and Qatari healthcare institutions
- Vision Qatar 2030 healthcare investment: Qatar's National Vision 2030 is investing billions in healthcare infrastructure — position your company as a long-term partner in Qatar's healthcare transformation
Conclusion
Qatar rewards suppliers who invest in genuine relationships, regulatory preparation, and long-term market commitment. For Turkish medical device companies, the combination of exceptional purchasing power, a culturally familiar Gulf Arab business environment, and Turkey's strong bilateral relationship with Qatar creates conditions that are very favourable for export success. The key investment is time — relationships in Qatar cannot be rushed.
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