MRI Software’s Schalk Vorster shares insights on how AI, data readiness, and unified platforms are redefining the property management discipline in the UAE and GCC
Middle East real estate has entered a phase where operational performance matters as much as ambition. PropTech across the UAE and GCC has shifted from a digitisation experiment to the infrastructure that runs portfolios, with regulators in Dubai and Abu Dhabi pushing transparency, standardised reporting, and data-driven operations.
Schalk Vorster, Regional Director for the Middle East at MRI Software, sees the regional market mirroring a global move from scale to measurable outcomes. His view places AI, data readiness, and platform integration at the centre of how developers, asset owners, and facilities managers will compete. Vorster shared where value is being realised, what holds organisations back, and the disciplines that will separate the leaders.
Interview Excerpts
How is PropTech evolving across the Middle East, and are we seeing a shift from growth to performance?
The Middle East real estate market is undergoing one of its most significant transformations, defined less by scale than by sophistication. PropTech across the UAE and GCC has become core operational infrastructure rather than basic digitisation. Government-led initiatives in Dubai and Abu Dhabi have accelerated the shift, mandating transparency, standardised reporting and data-driven operations. The conversation has moved from how to digitise towards how to unify, optimise and demonstrate measurable performance. Investors expect real-time visibility and tenants expect seamless experiences.
“Platforms such as MRI Agora provide a unified view across leasing, asset performance, tenant engagement and financial outcomes.”
Where is AI delivering real, measurable impact in real estate?
The discussion around AI in real estate has matured well beyond the hype cycle. MRI Software now applies AI to specific, high-value problems where outcomes are quantifiable. Within MRI Property Management X, the Ask Agora capability lets managers query portfolio data in natural language, returning lease status, payment history or vacancy rates in minutes rather than hours. AI also automates month-end close processes, reducing errors and compressing timelines. Facilities teams gain predictive maintenance that shifts operations from reactive to proactive. Energy management aligns with UAE Net Zero 2050, optimising performance and generating measurable ESG data. Sustainability becomes a performance metric.
What is holding organisations back from realising value at scale?
Barriers to scale rarely concern technology access, since most GCC organisations can reach world-class PropTech. The challenge begins with the operating model. Fragmented data environments remain a persistent obstacle, leaving no single team with a trusted, unified view of portfolio performance. Decisions get made on incomplete information, and layering AI over poor data produces unreliable outputs. Manual processes compound the problem, even where investment has been substantial. The skills gap is real, with few professionals bridging operational expertise and data literacy.
“Misalignment between business, operations and IT undermines adoption. MRI addresses this through implementation discipline, professional services and a partner ecosystem.”
How critical are data readiness, integration, and unified platforms?
Data readiness is the foundation on which everything else is built. Without clean, structured and consistently accessible data, AI cannot scale, analytics cannot be trusted and reporting cannot meet governance requirements. Portfolio complexity across the UAE and GCC ranks among the highest globally, spanning residential, commercial, retail, hospitality and mixed-use assets with different reporting rhythms. Integration has become a strategic imperative, giving leadership a single source of truth across operations, compliance and financial outcomes. MRI Agora unifies data, ensures governance and supports automation across the lifecycle. The architecture directly supports investor confidence and compliance under frameworks such as RERA and DLD.
What will differentiate successful real estate organisations going forward?
Execution discipline will differentiate the next phase of Middle East real estate. Capital and technology are now table stakes, so the organisations that pull ahead will operationalise PropTech consistently across complex portfolios. Treating technology as ongoing operational infrastructure, rather than a finished project, demands strong data governance, clear ownership and alignment between business and IT. AI must be woven into core workflows covering lease renewals, reporting cycles, energy forecasting and tenant risk. Strategic partnerships with regionally fluent providers will matter more than fragmented vendor relationships. Alignment with UAE Vision 2031, Saudi Vision 2030 and Net Zero 2050 will shape procurement and investment.
Source: Tahawul Tech

