
Audio Guide
MENA & Gulf Cultural Audio Guide
Arabic maqam scales, Khaleeji pop, Ramadan audio, National Day campaigns, and dialect selection for Gulf markets.
What you'll learn in this guide
95%
Of UAE social media is accessed via mobile — audio must be mobile-optimised
UAE Telecommunications Regulatory Authority 2024
68%
Of UAE smartphone users use voice commands weekly
UAE Digital Habits Survey 2024
32M
Projected MENA podcast audience by 2027
PwC Global Entertainment & Media Outlook
35–40%
Increase in radio listenership during Ramadan in Gulf markets
GCC Media Consumption Report 2024
MENA & Gulf Cultural Audio Guide
The MENA region has unique cultural audio requirements. This guide covers Arabic maqam scales, modern Khaleeji pop, Ramadan campaigns, National Day audio, and Arabic dialect selection for Gulf, Levantine, and pan-Arab markets.
Arabic Dialect Selection Guide
| Dialect | Region | Best Use | Audience Perception |
|---|---|---|---|
| Gulf Arabic (Khaleeji) | UAE, Saudi, Kuwait, Bahrain, Qatar, Oman | Local campaigns targeting GCC nationals | Authentic, local, trustworthy |
| Modern Standard Arabic (Fusha) | Pan-Arab | Formal campaigns, pan-Arab reach, news/corporate | Authoritative, formal, educational |
| Levantine (Lebanese/Syrian) | Lebanon, Syria, Jordan, Palestine | Lifestyle, beauty, fashion, entertainment | Sophisticated, cosmopolitan, aspirational |
| Egyptian Arabic | Egypt + broadest pan-Arab reach | Entertainment, humour, mass-market campaigns | Relatable, warm, entertaining — widest comprehension |
| Bilingual (Arabic + English) | UAE, Bahrain, Qatar, Kuwait | International brands, tech, premium products | Modern, international quality + local relevance |
| North African (Maghrebi) | Morocco, Algeria, Tunisia, Libya | Local North African campaigns | Distinct identity — low comprehension outside region |
Music in MENA Advertising: From Maqam to Khaleeji Pop
Music is the emotional backbone of MENA advertising, and the region's musical heritage offers a uniquely powerful palette that no other market can replicate. Understanding when and how to use Arabic musical traditions — and when to blend them with contemporary Western production — is the key differentiator for audio advertising in the region.
Arabic Maqam Scales: The maqam system is the foundational musical framework of Arabic music. Unlike Western music's major/minor scale binary, the maqam system contains dozens of scales with microtonal intervals (quarter-tones) that do not exist in Western music. These microtones create the distinctive "yearning" quality of Arabic melody that is deeply familiar and emotionally resonant to Arab audiences.
Key maqam scales for advertising:
- Maqam Bayati — warm, grounded, earthy. The most commonly used maqam in everyday Arabic music. Ideal for: family brands, food, home products, Ramadan content
- Maqam Hijaz — dramatic, spiritual, exotic to Western ears. Strongly associated with religious and spiritual contexts. Ideal for: Ramadan campaigns, heritage brands, luxury with cultural depth
- Maqam Rast — bright, joyful, celebratory. The "happy" maqam. Ideal for: Eid campaigns, National Day, product launches, festive advertising
- Maqam Nahawand — equivalent to Western minor scale. Melancholic, emotional, tender. Ideal for: charity campaigns, healthcare, emotional storytelling
- Maqam Ajam — equivalent to Western major scale. Bright, optimistic, familiar to both Arab and Western ears. Ideal for: international brands entering MENA, bilingual campaigns
Classical Arabic Music: Classical Arabic music (tarab tradition) conveys heritage, prestige, and cultural pride. Use for luxury brands, national campaigns, and moments that celebrate Arab identity. The oud, qanun, and ney are the signature instruments. However, avoid using classical Arabic music as background filler — it demands attention and respect.
Modern Khaleeji Pop (خليجي): Khaleeji pop blends traditional Gulf melodies with modern production (electronic beats, Western song structures, auto-tune effects). It appeals strongly to Gulf youth aged 18–35 and is the dominant music genre on Gulf social media. For brands targeting young Gulf audiences on TikTok, Reels, and Snapchat, Khaleeji pop elements in the audio are a powerful engagement signal.
The Blend Approach: The most successful MENA audio advertising often blends — Arabic melodic elements (maqam phrases, oud riffs) layered over modern Western production (electronic beats, cinematic strings, contemporary arrangement). This signals both cultural authenticity and international quality simultaneously.
Arabic Dialect Strategy: Choosing the Right Voice for Each Market
Dialect selection is one of the most consequential decisions in MENA audio advertising. The wrong dialect can make a brand sound foreign, pretentious, or irrelevant — even if the message is perfectly crafted. The right dialect creates instant cultural belonging.
Gulf Arabic (Khaleeji) — خليجي: The dialect of the GCC countries (UAE, Saudi Arabia, Kuwait, Bahrain, Qatar, Oman). Each country has subtle variations, but they are mutually intelligible. Gulf Arabic signals local identity, authenticity, and belonging. Use for: local brands, government campaigns, national celebrations, products targeting GCC nationals. Sub-variations to be aware of: Saudi Najdi vs. Saudi Hejazi vs. Emirati vs. Kuwaiti — for hyper-local campaigns, matching the specific sub-dialect matters.
Modern Standard Arabic (MSA / Fusha) — فصحى: The formal, pan-Arab language of news, literature, and official communications. No one speaks MSA as a native language — it is learned in school. Use for: pan-Arab campaigns that must reach all Arabic-speaking markets, formal/institutional advertising, corporate communications, and campaigns where authority and gravitas are paramount. Caution: MSA can sound overly formal and distant in consumer advertising — it lacks warmth.
Levantine Arabic — شامي: The dialect of Lebanon, Syria, Jordan, and Palestine. Levantine — particularly Lebanese Arabic — is widely perceived across MENA as sophisticated, cosmopolitan, and aspirational. It is widely understood due to Lebanese media influence (TV, music, entertainment). Use for: lifestyle, beauty, fashion, entertainment, and brands that want to project cosmopolitan elegance. Lebanese Arabic voice talent is often selected for pan-Arab lifestyle campaigns even outside the Levant.
Egyptian Arabic — مصري: The most widely understood Arabic dialect across the entire MENA region, thanks to Egypt's dominance in film, television, music, and entertainment for over a century. Egyptian Arabic feels warm, relatable, humorous, and approachable. Use for: mass-market campaigns, entertainment, humour-driven advertising, and any campaign that prioritises maximum comprehension across the Arab world. Limitation: Egyptian Arabic may feel out of place in premium Gulf campaigns where local Khaleeji identity is expected.
The Bilingual Approach (Arabic + English): In Gulf markets with large expatriate populations (UAE: 88% expat, Qatar: 85% expat, Kuwait: 70% expat), bilingual audio is not just a nice-to-have — it is a market reality. The most effective pattern: Arabic hook for emotional engagement → English for technical/product details → Arabic CTA for warmth and action. This mirrors the natural code-switching behaviour of Gulf residents.
Dialect Mistakes That Damage Brands:
- Using Egyptian Arabic for a premium UAE government campaign — sounds incongruent with local identity
- Using MSA for a casual consumer app ad — sounds robotic and distant
- Mixing Gulf sub-dialects carelessly (Kuwaiti expressions in a Saudi ad) — signals inauthenticity
- Using Levantine Arabic and assuming it reaches Gulf youth — younger Gulf audiences increasingly prefer their own Khaleeji dialect
- Ignoring dialect entirely and defaulting to English — dismissive of Arabic-first audiences
Ramadan Audio Guidelines: The Most Important Season in MENA Advertising
Ramadan is not just the biggest advertising season in MENA — it is a fundamentally different emotional landscape that requires a complete shift in audio strategy. Brands that get Ramadan audio right build deep cultural loyalty. Brands that get it wrong face backlash and long-term reputation damage.
The Ramadan Audio Shift: Ramadan audio must transition from commercial energy to spiritual warmth. The emotional register moves from "buy this" to "we are part of your community." This is not a cosmetic change — it requires different music, different voice delivery, different sound design, and different pacing.
Music Guidelines:
- Use spiritual and peaceful music only — oud-based melodies, soft qanun, gentle orchestral arrangements with Arabic maqam influences
- Maqam Hijaz and Maqam Bayati are the most Ramadan-appropriate scales
- Upbeat pop, EDM, and high-energy music are inappropriate during fasting hours — they clash with the reflective, communal mood
- Post-iftar (after sunset): energy can increase slightly as the evening social atmosphere begins, but should remain respectful
- Suhoor-adjacent content (pre-dawn): very calm, intimate, almost whispered audio — this is a quiet, private moment
Voice Delivery:
- Slower pace than standard advertising — 120–130 WPM vs. 145–160 WPM normally
- Warmer, more intimate tone — the voice should feel like a family member, not a salesperson
- Generosity-focused messaging — Ramadan is about giving, community, and gratitude
- Avoid hard-sell urgency — Ramadan audiences reject aggressive promotional language
- Consider dual-gender voice: male voice for family/community messaging, female voice for food/home/children
Sound Design:
- Iftar cannon (midfa) — the iconic sound that signals the breaking of fast. Using this sound in the first 2 seconds of an ad instantly signals "this is a Ramadan message"
- Arabic coffee preparation sounds — dallah, cups clinking, cardamom grinding
- Family gathering ambience — gentle conversation, children playing, dishes being prepared
- Prayer beads (misbaha) — subtle, rhythmic, contemplative
- Water pouring — after a day of fasting, the sound of water is emotionally charged
Timing Strategy:
- Pre-iftar (1–2 hours before sunset): highest media consumption — audiences are waiting and browsing. Best for brand awareness and emotional campaigns
- Iftar moment: sacred — avoid commercial messaging during the actual iftar
- Post-iftar (8 PM–12 AM): social, relaxed, entertainment-seeking. Acceptable for more promotional messaging
- Late night (12 AM–3 AM): Ramadan late-night culture is huge in the Gulf — younger audiences are active on social media
- Suhoor (pre-dawn): intimate, limited audience, food/beverage brands only
What to Absolutely Avoid:
- Upbeat or party-style music during fasting hours
- Using the adhan (call to prayer) in any commercial context — deeply inappropriate
- Hard-sell or urgency-driven audio — "Limited time offer!" feels disrespectful during Ramadan
- Frivolous or comedic audio during the first week of Ramadan (the most spiritual period)
- Ignoring Ramadan entirely — in MENA, brands that do not acknowledge Ramadan appear culturally disconnected
National Day Campaigns: Patriotic Audio by Country
National Day campaigns are the second-largest seasonal advertising moment in the Gulf (after Ramadan). Each GCC country has its own National Day with distinct traditions, emotional registers, and audio expectations. Getting the audio right is essential — National Day content that feels generic or borrowed from another country's celebration is immediately rejected by audiences.
UAE National Day (December 2): The UAE celebrates its unification with themes of unity, diversity, future vision, and tolerance. Audio should blend modern ambition with heritage respect.
- Music: Modern production with traditional Emirati elements — ayala (traditional dance) drums, oud, contemporary orchestral arrangements
- Voice: Confident, proud, forward-looking — bilingual (Arabic + English) works well given UAE's multicultural identity
- Sound design: Desert wind, falcon calls, fireworks, crowd cheering
- Emotional register: Pride in progress, unity of the seven emirates, vision for the future
Saudi National Day (September 23): Saudi Arabia's National Day celebrates the kingdom's founding with themes of heritage, transformation, and Vision 2030 ambition. Audio has shifted in recent years from purely traditional to a blend of heritage and modernity.
- Music: Traditional Saudi ardha drums and sword dance rhythms blended with modern cinematic production. Increasingly, pop and hip-hop elements are acceptable for youth-targeting campaigns
- Voice: Strong, proud, patriotic — Saudi Najdi or Hejazi dialect depending on campaign positioning
- Sound design: Drums, crowd chanting, fireworks, desert ambience
- Emotional register: Kingdom pride, transformation narrative, heritage meets future
Kuwait National Day (February 25) and Liberation Day (February 26): Kuwait uniquely celebrates two consecutive days — National Day and Liberation Day (marking the end of the Iraqi occupation). Audio must honour both celebration and remembrance.
- Music: Kuwaiti folk elements (sawt tradition) with modern arrangement. Liberation Day audio is more solemn and reflective
- Voice: Warm, communal, grateful — Kuwaiti dialect
- Emotional register: National Day = joy and celebration; Liberation Day = gratitude, resilience, remembrance
Qatar National Day (December 18):
- Music: Qatari traditional music with modern production — liwa rhythms, pearl diving songs reimagined
- Voice: Proud, heritage-focused — Qatari dialect
- Emotional register: Heritage preservation, national identity, sporting achievement (post-2022 World Cup pride)
Bahrain National Day (December 16):
- Music: Bahraini pearl diving songs, khaleeji arrangements with contemporary production
- Voice: Warm, island-heritage — Bahraini dialect
- Emotional register: Maritime heritage, cultural diversity, community warmth
Oman National Day (November 18):
- Music: Omani traditional instruments (sarangi influence), subtle, elegant arrangements
- Voice: Dignified, measured, respectful — Omani dialect
- Emotional register: Quiet pride, natural beauty, cultural preservation, Sultan Haitham era vision
Universal Rules for All National Day Campaigns:
- Never mix one country's patriotic symbols with another's — each nation's identity is distinct
- National anthems or their motifs must be used respectfully and with appropriate permissions
- Avoid over-commercialising the moment — National Day audio should feel patriotic first, promotional second
- Duration: National Day campaigns typically run 1–2 weeks before and 2–3 days after the date
Regional Compliance: Advertising Regulations Across MENA
MENA advertising is regulated at the national level, with each country maintaining its own regulatory body and standards. Audio advertising must comply with the specific regulations of every market it targets. Non-compliance can result in ad bans, fines, and reputational damage.
UAE — National Media Council (NMC):
- All advertising content requires NMC approval before publication
- Specific guidelines on content appropriateness, cultural sensitivity, and product claims
- Audio must not contain content that conflicts with UAE values, traditions, or public order
- Healthcare, financial, and educational advertising have sector-specific additional requirements
- Arabic language must be included in all advertising (English-only ads require Arabic subtitles or voice)
Saudi Arabia — GCAM (General Commission for Audiovisual Media):
- GCAM regulates all audiovisual media content, including audio advertising
- Content must comply with Islamic values and Saudi cultural norms
- Music in advertising is now widely accepted (a significant shift from pre-2019 regulations)
- Female voice talent is permitted in advertising (another recent change)
- Vision 2030 entertainment reforms have significantly liberalised advertising creative standards
- SASO (Saudi Standards Organisation) applies additional technical standards
Common MENA Compliance Requirements:
- Arabic language is mandatory in all consumer advertising across GCC countries
- Comparative advertising (naming competitors) is generally restricted across MENA
- Price claims must include VAT (5% in GCC) and all applicable fees
- Disclaimers must be clearly audible — not spoken faster or quieter than the main message
- Products prohibited in advertising: alcohol, tobacco, gambling (in most MENA markets)
- Pharmaceutical advertising requires health ministry pre-approval in all GCC countries
- Financial product disclaimers (risk warnings) are mandatory across MENA
Cultural Compliance (Beyond Legal): Legal compliance is the minimum. Cultural compliance determines whether the ad succeeds:
- Avoid romantic or intimate audio between unrelated male and female voices — this can be culturally inappropriate in conservative markets
- Respect religious observances — do not schedule upbeat promotional audio during prayer times
- Food and beverage advertising during Ramadan fasting hours should avoid consumption sounds (eating, drinking) before iftar
- Humour must be culturally calibrated — what is funny in Egypt may not translate to Gulf audiences
- Children's voices in advertising are acceptable but should never be in adult-product contexts
ZorgSocial Validate Hub for MENA: The Validate Hub includes a dedicated MENA Compliance ruleset that automatically flags:
- Content that may conflict with NMC, GCAM, or other national regulations
- Missing Arabic language elements
- Cultural sensitivity concerns (seasonal, religious, regional)
- Industry-specific compliance gaps (healthcare, finance, pharma)
- Audio pacing issues in disclaimer sections
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