Vision 2030 gets cited in every Saudi SaaS pitch deck. Rarely does the pitch explain what the program actually requires operationally. For forms and surveys — the operational surface where digital transformation becomes a clicked submit button — the answer is more specific than the headline targets suggest.
What Vision 2030 actually mandates around digitisation
The National Transformation Program inside Vision 2030 sets measurable targets for e-government services, digital education, and citizen engagement. A partial list:
- 95% of government services available digitally by 2030.
- 100% of public-school students on digital learning platforms.
- Top 20 ranking in the UN e-Government Development Index.
- Citizen satisfaction with digital services above 85%.
Every one of these targets has a forms layer underneath it. A government service going digital means a form replaces a paper process. A digital learning platform means teachers, students, and parents fill in surveys, feedback, and consent forms. Citizen satisfaction is measured by surveys. Forms aren’t the headline; they’re the substrate.
The forms angle, concretely
Ministry of Education
The shift from paper to digital touches student registration, parent consent (trips, activities, medical), teacher evaluations, NCAAA accreditation surveys, and satisfaction research. Each one is a form with specific legal weight.
Universities and higher education
NCAAA accreditation cycles require large-scale student-experience surveys, alumni tracking, and employer-feedback loops — all form-driven. The KPI timelines are annual; the forms need to ship fast and capture bilingual responses cleanly.
Healthcare
Ministry of Health and regional clusters are digitising intake, consent, satisfaction, and workforce surveys. PDPL applies strongly to health data (special category under PDPL Article 6).
Ministries generally
Every service that moves from Absher or a local portal to full digital needs form infrastructure behind it — often with Nafath authentication, sometimes with Hijri date handling, always with Arabic-first rendering.
Data-residency implications
Public-sector data increasingly wants to be processed in-Kingdom. For SaaS vendors, that’s the difference between being on the approved list and being on the “can we host this yourselves” workaround list. Our own Dammam roadmap (Q3 2026) is explicitly about landing on the first list.
Three anonymised patterns we’ve seen
- A university migrating from Google Forms to a PDPL-aligned platform for its NCAAA self-study surveys — driven by procurement, not IT.
- A regional health cluster replacing paper intake with bilingual digital forms, reducing time-per-intake from 18 minutes to 4.
- A municipality running citizen-satisfaction surveys with Hijri-dated follow-ups, which their previous tool couldn’t handle natively.