Leading with Integrity
Fadia Jabbour shares insights into building GVF on trust, purpose, and people first leadership, and how she is redefining success in the region’s procurement, construction and fit-out sectorsFadia Jabbour didn’t set out to build the biggest firm in the room.
She set out to build the most trustworthy one, an organisation where expertise is inseparable from integrity, where people are treated as the business’s most valuable asset, and where a client’s vision is protected, not just delivered.
Three years after acquiring GVF MC in Dubai and launching GVF Interiors in Qatar and GVF General Contracting in Saudi Arabia, along with earning recognition among Qatar’s Top 25 Best workplaces, and Best Organisation led by a Woman, she is demonstrating that doing right by people and building a high performing business are not opposing ideas.They are the same ambition.
There is a particular kind of professional frustration that is hard to name but impossible to forget: working in places that fall short of what a workplace could be, where talent goes unacknowledged, communication is weak, and the gap between the culture that is promised and the culture that is lived becomes quietly demoralising.
Most people absorb that frustration and move on. A few carry it differently: as a blueprint for something better.
Years of working across high-end fit-out and construction projects, understanding the real cost of materials, the weight of procurement decisions, and the gap between a beautiful design and one that can actually be delivered.
"When I built GVF’s culture, I wanted to eliminate those frustrations,” she tells us, with the kind of quiet directness that makes you believe every word.
"I wanted to build a company where people feel seen, heard, and respected every single day.
”That instinct to build something real, not just something profitable runs through everything GVF does.
Excerpts: Q: You acquired GVF in 2022 rather than starting from scratch.
What made that the right move and what vision were you car-rying when you walked through that door?
A: I wasn’t looking to build an empire overnight.
I was looking to do something purposeful with what I actually knew. By that point in my career, I had spent years working on some of the most technically demanding fit-out and procurement projects in this region.
So rather than immediately launching a full fit-out company and competing on volume, I made a more deliberate choice: build around expertise first.
The timing amplified everything. Saudi Arabia was entering one of its most ambitious development phases.
We began investing in high-end fit-out programmes projects with internationally recognized designers attached where our experience in luxury de-livery set us apart.
Three years later, what began as a consultancy mindset has evolved into something more complete.
It has moved from concept to execution.
But the principle has never changed: deep expertise, deployed with purpose.
Q: GVF brings together design, procurement, execution, and HR under one integrated platform.
What does this offer clients that working with separate specialists does not?
A: Peace of mind. That may sound simple, but it is genuinely rare in this industry, and almost impossible to manufacture.
When a client works with separate specialists, the communication gaps between them can become extraordinarily costly.
At GVF, we manage all of those conversations internally, ensuring alignment from the outset.
We’ve had clients come to us with beautiful, fully developed concepts, and we’ve had to show them honestly and thoughtfully that what was envisioned could not be delivered within the specified budget.
What we never do, however, is discard the vision. We find a way to honour the vision while making it achievable.That is the difference between a partner and a service provider.
"We find a way to honour the vision while making it achievable.
That is the difference between a partner and a service provider.”
Q: In a market full of competitors, what does GVF genuinely do differently? Not the marketing version the honest one.
A: We stay small enough to careand I mean that in a very precise way.
It is a deliberate structural choice, not a constraint we are working around.
I have seen organisations grow beyond a certain size and begin to lose the very qualities that made them effective in the first place.
At GVF, the person who understands your brief is the same person overseeing the outcome.
The most authentic way to describe what differentiates GVF is this: we treat every project as if our reputation depends on it, because it does.
In a market where promises are plentiful and delivery is often inconsistent, we have built something that is both difficult to establish and easy to lose: a reputation for doing exactly what we say.
We remain accessible, proactive, and deliberately lean in how we operate.
Q: GVF’s expansion into HR consultancy may seem unexpected for a fit-out firm. Where did that decision genuinely come from?
A: It came from our own journey.
When I took over GVF, one of my absolute priorities was building the kind of internal culture I hadn’t always experienced in my own career.
I invested heavily in our people practices, structured engagement programmes, continuous training, clear career pathways, and an environment where people genuinely feel they belong to something, rather than simply being employed by someone.
We were recognised as Great Place to Work Certified for 2024–2025 and named among Qatar’s Top 25 Best Workplaces.
We have also been certified for 2025–2026, with our updated ranking expected to be announced soon.
Then something unexpected happened: clients and partners began asking us how we did it.
They wanted to understand our ap-proach to HR, how we built engagement, how we structured teams, and how we retained strong talent in a market where retention is a real challenge.
From those conversations, the consultancy offering grew organically.
We began supporting clients in strengthening workforce structures, improving how they manage and develop their people, handling change management and systems integration, and building workplace cultures that actually perform.
But I want to be specific about what makes our HR practice distinct, because it isn’t a generic HR offering.
We have assembled a team of highly specialised professionals operating at C-suite and executive level, people with genuinely international career histories and deep expertise in niche HR disciplines.
Their backgrounds span organisational design, talent strategy, executive coaching, total rewards architecture, learning and development transformation, and HR technology implementation across multiple markets and sectors.
This is not a team of generalists giving broad advice.
These are people who have sat in the room where those decisions are made at the most senior levels, in some of the most complex organisations.
When we advise a client on their people strategy, we are drawing on a quality of experience that is genuinely rare in this region.
We believe strong businesses are built through their people first. Everything else follows.
Q: Being named among Qatar’s Top 25 Best Workplaces clearly means something personal. Why does this recognition land dif-ferently?
A: Because I built it from a very personal place.
I have worked in environments where the talent was remarkable, but the culture undermined it, where people were capable of so much more, yet felt invisible, undervalued, or simply not heard.
I know what that costs a person, not only professionally, but in the way it follows them home.When I shaped GVF’s culture, I made a conscious decision: this company would not replicate those dynamics. We would be a place where people are treated as full human beings, not just productivity units, where there is real communication, real appreciation, and real psychological safety to speak freely without fear.
Seeing that come to life, watching team members grow in confidence, step into responsibilities they didn’t know they were ready for, and develop a genuine sense of belonging to something larger than their individual role, is far more meaningful than any project milestone.
The Great Place to Work recognition matters because it is not self-declared.
It comes from our own people. You cannot manufacture that.
You can only earn it, consistently, one interaction at a time. I am very proud of it and even more motivated to protect it.
Q: What has genuinely shaped you as a leader, and what does leadership actually require of you on the hard days?
A: I want to answer this transparently, because the honest answer involves some difficulty.
When I first took over GVF, I was shaping an organisation while simultaneously learning the specific contours of a new market, managing client relationships that needed rebuilding, and making decisions that carried real financial and reputational risk.
There were moments of genuine uncertainty not the performative kind that leaders often reflect on in retrospect, but the kind where you are sitting with a decision and genuinely unsure of the right answer.
What I learned during those periods is that a leader’s most important responsibility is not only strategic clarity, but emotional con-sistency.
Teams take their energy from their leader.
If I allowed pressure to become visible in ways that unsettled the people around me, that energy would move through the entire organisation.
So I developed a practice of carrying the weight privately where nec-essary, while still bringing forward momentum into the room, even on days when I was finding both difficult to do.
Resilience, for me, is not the absence of doubt.
It is the willingness to act with clarity despite it, to keep moving, to stay present with the team even when the pressure is real, and to believe in the destination clearly enough that others are willing to travel toward it, even when they cannot yet see it.Authenticity is the other principle I anchor myself to.
I do not believe in a performance of leadership, the curated confidence or carefully managed image.
It is exhausting to sustain, and people see through it.
I try to lead as myself: direct, consistent, straight-forward about what I know and what I don’t, and genuinely invested in the people around me.
Q: Qatar has been central to GVF’s story. What has this country genuinely meant to you beyond the business?
A: This question touches something real.
Qatar is not a market to me; it is the place where I was professionally formed.
The projects I worked on here, their scale, their tech-nical demands, and the standards they required, shaped my understanding of what quality actually means in practice.
But beyond the professional chapter, I raised my family here.
I built friendships here that have nothing to do with business, and eve-rything to do with the extraordinary warmth and generosity of this country and its people.
I arrived as a fresh graduate with a lot of ambition, and Qatar gave me the environment where I could dream, grow, and discover more than I had allowed myself to imagine.
I realised, over time, that the vision I was carrying was far larger than I initially believed.Shukran Qatar, and I say that not as a closing line, but as something I genuinely feel.
This is the country that gave me the confi-dence to build something lasting.
And our commitment here is not behind us; it is very much ahead of us.
"Qatar gave me the environment in which I could dream and grow and discover, and I realised that the vision was larger than I had allowed myself to imagine.
”Q: Are there any new services, sectors, or markets that GVF is planning to explore?
A: Saudi Arabia has been a significant chapter for us.
We’ve contributed to major landmark developments and are actively involved in Qiddiya through a strategic joint venture with a company that shares our values and standards.
That alignment matters to me as much as the commercial logic.
Iraq gave us a successful delivery and opened a market we believe holds real potential.
We will continue developing that presence carefully and with intention.
The UAE is firmly on our horizon.
The fit-out, procure-ment, and design market there is highly sophisticated and aligns well with what we offer.
But for us, expansion has never been about planting flags.
It is about building genuine, long-term partnerships in markets where we can deliver real value.
We don’t enter a market to win one project and move on.
We enter to stay, to grow relationships, and to build a reputation that opens doors organically over time.Alongside this geographic growth, I am also building the group structure I have always envisioned.
KOR Spaces, our branded office furniture venture, is already launched.My longer-term vision is to develop a group of complementary, specialised businesses, each strong in its own discipline, yet all connected through a shared philosophy: quality without compromise, people at the centre, and trust as the foundation of every cli-ent relationship.
We are also preparing to introduce another business venture in the future, which I will announce in due course.
Ultimately, my broader vision is not simply to grow one company, but to build an ecosystem of specialised businesses that comple-ment one another, each with its own expertise, yet unified by a shared commitment to quality, innovation, and client-focused solu-tions.
This structure allows us to deliver greater value, offering clients integrated capabilities across multiple disciplines while main-taining depth in each one.
Q: Finally, what do you want GVF to be remembered for?
A: For being real.
Not the most visible, not the company with the most impressive portfolio deck or the most dramatic growth story but the one that said what it would do, and did it.I also hope that the way we treat our people becomes part of how GVF is remembered.
We are three years into what I intend to be a long journey.
The company has transformed considerably, but the principles that have guided us from the beginning quality, care for people will not change with scale.
If anything, the responsibility to protect them only intensifies as the organisation grows.
Because these are not just statements we make about ourselves; they are what we have to embody every day to deserve the trust that has been placed in us.
That is the standard I hold GVF to.
And I do not intend to lower it.
May 20, 2026 | 05:44 PM