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Digital Fluency Is Now a Core Skill for Private Practice Lawyers in the UAE

By Alex Hepworth

Digital activity in the UAE is now regulated in the same way as traditional business activity. Recent changes, including mandatory permits for online advertising and influencer activity, make this clear. Digital behaviour is no longer informal or low risk. It is regulated, enforceable, and closely monitored.

For private practice, this matters. Law firms are seeing changes in both client demand and hiring needs. Digital knowledge is no longer a nice to have. It is quickly becoming essential.

Digital Activity Is Now Legal and Regulated Work

Online advertising, influencer marketing, and digital brand activity are now covered by clear rules. What was once handled after problems arose is now subject to approvals, compliance requirements, and penalties.

This follows a pattern the UAE legal market knows well:

  • New commercial activity grows quickly
  • Regulation follows
  • Enforcement becomes real

For law firms, digital activity is no longer a side issue. It is becoming a regular source of advisory, regulatory, and dispute work.

What This Means for Private Practice Hiring

This change does not replace core legal skills. Strong experience in commercial, employment, and regulatory law is still critical. What has changed is how those skills are used.

Law firms are increasingly looking for lawyers who can:

  • Advise clients on online and digital business activity
  • Spot regulatory risk early
  • Work comfortably with commercial and marketing teams

Lawyers who cannot engage with digital issues are becoming less competitive, even in roles that are not labelled as technology focused. 

Digital and AI Knowledge as a Hiring Advantage

AI tools are now widely used in legal work, including research, document review, and compliance checks. The real value is not simply using AI but understanding the risks and how it should be managed.

Private practice lawyers with digital and AI knowledge are better able to:

  • Oversee AI-assisted legal work safely
  • Advise clients on legal and regulatory risk
  • Help clients put sensible rules around AI use

This is especially important in employment, compliance, and regulatory matters, where AI use can affect data protection and decision-making.

Growing Demand for Media and Advertising Advice

The regulation of digital advertising is increasing demand for legal advice in areas such as:

  • Advertising permits and approvals
  • Influencer and brand agreements
  • Advertising rules, disclosures, and enforcement risk

Many law firms are expanding their media, TMT, and regulatory practices as a result. This is driving demand for mid-level and senior lawyers who can cover both commercial and regulatory work.

Enforcement Is Changing Client Expectations

The risk of fines and enforcement action has changed how clients view digital activity. It is no longer seen as low risk.

Clients are increasingly asking their law firms for lawyers with:

  • Compliance and regulatory experience
  • Experience dealing with regulators
  • A practical approach focused on preventing problems

Transactional experience alone is often not enough where digital activity is closely regulated.

What This Means for the UAE Private Practice Market

Regulation of digital and online activity will continue to increase. Clients will rely more on external lawyers for advice in this area.

For private practice lawyers, digital knowledge will increasingly affect:

  • Career progression
  • Role scope and seniority
  • Long-term demand for their skills

For law firms, competition for lawyers with digital and regulatory experience will continue to grow.

Contact Buchanan
To discuss private practice roles or law firm hiring needs in the Middle East, please contact: alex.hepworth@wearebuchanan.com