Mariam Kuchuloria, Managing Director of the EBA Georgia,
has been officially elected to the Board of Directors of the European Business
Organisations Worldwide Network (EBOWN) for the 2026-2027 term.
As part of the global leadership team alongside
representatives from major international markets, this directorship places
Georgia at the forefront of the global European business ecosystem.
What does this mean for EBA Members and Georgian
companies? Lets explore together with Mariam Kuchuloria
Why is global positioning such a critical focus for
EBA Georgia and its member companies right now?
For EBA Georgia, global positioning is a core commercial
necessity rather than a luxury. Georgian businesses operating to high European
standards need to look beyond our traditional geographic borders to scale
sustainably. By positioning EBA on the global stage, we achieve two things.
First, we elevate Georgia’s profile as a premium, trusted investment hub for
international corporations looking at the Caucasus region. Second, we give our
local members the international visibility required to connect directly with
global supply chains, helping them diversify away from volatile regional
markets.
What exactly is the EBO, and what practical benefits
does it provide?
EBOWN stands for the European Business Organizations
Worldwide Network. It is the only global network of EU-centric business
organizations operating outside the European Union, currently active in over 60
markets.
The benefits for our member companies are concrete and
measurable. Alignment with EBOWN serves as a badge of corporate transparency
and institutional quality, which immediately builds trust with foreign
investors. Furthermore, through EBOWN, an EBA member gains a direct gateway to
trusted business networks, trade partners, and joint-venture opportunities in
Asia, the Americas, Africa, and the Middle East, successfully bypassing
traditional gatekeepers. Finally, EBOWN maintains a direct line of communication
with the European Commission in Brussels, which means that if our members face
regulatory barriers or export compliance bottlenecks, we have the architecture
to elevate those issues straight to European policymakers.
As the EBA Georgia’s Managing Director, you were
elected by the representatives of up to 60 countries to the EBOWN Global Board
of Directors for the 2026–2027 term. What does this election mean for Georgia’s
private sector?
This is a milestone moment for Georgia’s business ecosystem.
Having myself elected to the global board, alongside newly elected Chair Stefan
Ernst from EBO Korea and other global leaders, is a huge responsibility but
also big privilege, that means Georgia now has a direct seat at the table where
global European business architecture is shaped.
“Georgia’s inclusion in the global governance of
EBOWN confirms our country’s growing strategic and economic importance. This
position is a powerful tool to open new global doors for Georgian
business.”
For our members, this means direct representation. Local
corporate challenges and the commercial potential of Georgian enterprises will
be voiced directly within the steering circles of international trade. It
fundamentally transitions EBA Georgia from a participant in international trade
to an active shaper of it.
Beyond EBOWN, EBA Georgia has also joined the
Enterprise Europe Network (EEN) as an International Partner. How does this
complement your mission?
If EBOWN handles global institutional placement and
macro-advocacy, EEN is our hyper-practical commercial accelerator for small and
medium enterprises. EEN is the world’s largest support network for SMEs with
international ambitions.
Through the Enterprise Europe Network partnership, EBA gives
its members direct access to the Europe-Wide Matchmaking Database, a powerful
platform linking Georgian businesses with over 500 business support
organizations and up to half million companies for targeted trade B2B matches,
joint ventures, or R&D partnerships. It also provides tailored guidance on
EU single market intelligence, export standards, and environmental or
sustainability compliance to aid with regulatory alignment. Lastly, it assists
Georgian companies in tapping into European technology transfers, digital
transformation best practices and EU cascade funding opportunities to drive
innovation.
Looking ahead, what are the next strategic milestones
for EBA Georgia under this expanded global umbrella and can any business
operating in Georgia approach you to benefit from these platforms?
Our immediate roadmap focuses on bringing these global
networks directly to the local market through upcoming forums, workshops, specialized
compliance training for local exporters and export development support service.
Regarding accessibility, the answer is a resounding yes. Any
business legally operating in Georgia, whether a large multinational, a growing
mid-sized enterprise, or an ambitious startup can approach EBA Georgia. Our
doors are wide open to any organization committed to doing business
transparently and striving to meet international standards. You do not need to have
the European investment to join us; you simply need a shared vision for
international growth, European standards and competitive excellence. We
encourage any business looking to expand globally or enter the European single
market to reach out to our team and leverage these powerful new platforms.