Boards and executives
AI opportunity, exposure and accountability
Decision rights, portfolio priorities, governance and questions leaders should ask.
AI training for financial services
Effective AI training for financial services combines role-specific workflows, governance and hands-on practice. Ahmed designs and delivers Arabic and English programmes for executives, finance, FP&A, fraud, risk and product teams across MENA, translating GenAI into controlled decisions rather than generic tool demonstrations.
Current résumé evidence
Audience pathways
Boards and executives
Decision rights, portfolio priorities, governance and questions leaders should ask.
Finance and FP&A
Variance, forecasting, scenarios, management reporting and confidential-data controls.
Fraud and risk
Use-case design, model and rule governance, explainability, investigation and human oversight.
Product and transformation
Discovery, build-buy-partner choices, pilots, operating readiness and value evidence.
Programme design
Identify participant roles, recurring workflows, risk boundaries and sponsor outcomes.
Define what participants will analyse, build, review or explain by the end.
Practice with role-relevant cases, controlled data and regional context.
Include validation, confidentiality, human review, evidence and escalation.
Leave participants with reusable templates, decision checks and an adoption plan.
Delivery options
| Format | Best for | Typical result |
|---|---|---|
| Executive briefing | Boards and senior leaders aligning on opportunity and governance. | Shared language, priority questions and decision principles. |
| Applied workshop | A function testing specific workflows and controls. | A small set of reviewed use cases and next-step experiments. |
| Cohort programme | Teams building repeatable capability over several sessions. | Role-based practice, assessed outputs and an adoption roadmap. |
| Train-the-trainer | Institutions scaling internal learning capacity. | Facilitator guidance, assessment criteria and quality controls. |
Bilingual by design
Ahmed delivers in Arabic and English and adapts examples to the audience’s financial, regulatory and organisational context. Bilingual delivery is treated as learning design, not direct word-for-word translation.
Questions
Yes. The design can be adapted to roles, policies, approved tools, data constraints, regulatory context and priority workflows. Tailoring should change the practice, not only the logo on the slides.
Yes. Ahmed delivers in Arabic and English. Terminology, examples and activities can be designed for bilingual teams and regional financial-services contexts.
Not for executive and business pathways. The level is matched to the audience, while still teaching participants to test evidence, recognise limitations and work responsibly with technical teams.
Assessment can include case decisions, reviewed workflows, prompt or model evaluation, governance checklists, presentations and application plans. The method follows the programme outcome.
Start with the decision
For advisory, executive education, media or academic enquiries, share the decision you are facing, the audience involved and the outcome you need.