Egypt | November 24, 2025
DXC Technology and ITIDA have entered a new partnership aimed at expanding Egypt’s digital delivery capabilities, signing a memorandum of understanding (MoU) to strengthen the country’s position as a global hub for advanced technology and high-value digital services.
The agreement, announced during a ceremony attended by Prime Minister Mostafa Madbouly, outlines a plan to expand DXC’s Egypt workforce by 42%. The hiring push will target skilled roles across application development, service management, analytics, SAP services, insurance solutions, and ServiceNow-based offerings.
For DXC, this partnership aligns with its broader strategy to shift from traditional outsourcing models toward modern digital delivery centers. Company executives highlighted Egypt’s deep talent pool, multilingual capabilities, and strengthening ICT infrastructure as major reasons behind the expansion.
From the government’s point of view, the collaboration supports Egypt’s long-term “Digital Egypt” strategy, which focuses on transforming the country into a competitive global player in digital innovation, production, and service delivery. For context, Egypt has invested heavily in ICT infrastructure (about $6 billion) in recent years, and trains close to one million youth annually in digital skills.
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Under the MoU, ITIDA will connect DXC to its national talent pipeline, support training through affiliated institutions such as the Information Technology Institute (ITI) and the National Telecommunication Institute (NTI), and offer access to the Software Engineering Competence Center (SECC) for professional certifications.
The partnership also complements the government’s push to attract more global companies into its offshoring and digital services ecosystem. With its strategic location, competitive costs, and rapidly expanding tech workforce, Egypt has already drawn more than 55 multinational and local firms into its growing delivery sector.
In addition, the collaboration could create momentum for Egypt as an emerging digital hub. As global companies look to diversify delivery centers beyond traditional markets like India and Eastern Europe, Egypt’s blend of affordability, geography, and talent positions it as an increasingly attractive alternative.
For DXC, the expansion signals strong confidence in Egypt’s ability to support complex, high-value digital services for clients across Europe, the Middle East, and Africa. Both sides expect the partnership to accelerate skill development, strengthen service quality, and reinforce Cairo’s place on the global digital map.

