EPISODE · Jun 11, 2026 · 7 MIN
Lebanese Founders Are Turning Constraints Into a Start-Up Advantage
from AUB@Work
Episode Title: Lebanese Founders Are Turning Constraints Into a Start-Up AdvantageEpisode Description:Lebanon’s start-up founders face limited capital, ongoing instability, and a small domestic market. But at a New York Tech Week event cohosted by AUB’s Talal and Madiha Zein Innovation Park, known as iPark, and Impersonas, Lebanese founders and innovation leaders argued that those same pressures have helped create an entrepreneurial edge.This episode explores how diaspora networks, crisis-tested adaptability, deep talent, and institutional support are helping Lebanese entrepreneurs build global companies far beyond Lebanon.In This Episode:We look at four advantages Lebanese founders can build on now:Diaspora reach: how Lebanese entrepreneurs draw on global networks of capital, mentors, operators, and technologists.Crisis-tested adaptability: why navigating instability can sharpen the problem-solving skills start-ups need.Existing strengths: how sectors such as health care, higher education, technology, and the creative industries offer foundations for innovation.Institutional support: how iPark helps turn talent, resilience, and ideas into scalable ventures.Featured Voices:Kamal S. Shehadi, Lebanon’s minister of state for technology and artificial intelligence, and minister of the displacedRich Ziade, CEO of AboardKhaled Kteily, CEO of LegacyMichele Haddad, CCO at Synova Life Sciences and entrepreneur-in-residence for one of iPark’s flagship programsMaha Zouwayed, director of iParkKey Quotes:“The diaspora has been a source of capital, ideas, and volunteers.” — Kamal S. Shehadi“We flourish wherever you drop us.” — Rich Ziade“The second you define yourself as a victim is the second you lose.” — Khaled Kteily“The willingness to adapt your thinking and to navigate change is a Lebanese skill that can become a business advantage.” — Rich Ziade“At iPark, we focus on collaboration rather than competition. And it works.” — Maha ZouwayedWhy It Matters:The episode reframes Lebanon’s start-up story around possibility rather than limitation. The country’s challenges remain real, but its founders are showing how constraints can produce adaptability, global ambition, and a distinctive way of building companies.Listen to learn:How Lebanon’s diaspora strengthens its start-up ecosystemWhy adaptability is a practical business advantageWhere Lebanese founders may have the strongest competitive edgeHow iPark is helping make entrepreneurial success more repeatableWhy Lebanon’s next innovation challenge is not only producing exceptional founders, but building systems that help them scale
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Lebanese Founders Are Turning Constraints Into a Start-Up Advantage
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