Longtrepreneur continues to bring the best-in-class tech and business leaders to get their take on long-term thinking in the world of Commerce, Corporate Communications, Technology, Media and Entrepreneurship.
This week’s “Take the L” series guest is a personality who needs no introduction: Ray Dargham Founder Step Conference).
Here is the conversation in an interview format between Yawar Abbas (Longtrepreneur) and Ray Dargham (Founder, CEO Step Group).
For Ray Dargham, stagnation is the true enemy. The moment his world becomes predictable, his energy drains. What propels him instead is the lure of the uncharted — the adventure of building something that stretches him just beyond his comfort zone. That instinct, more than any formal strategy, is what sparked the earliest days of Step.
The company’s conference business didn’t emerge from a carefully architected plan. It was a bet on intuition — a decision to do something he genuinely enjoyed at a moment when the MENA region was primed for it. That timing made all the difference. Step’s media arm came later, shaped deliberately by the rise of BuzzFeed in the mid-2010s. For a while, Step’s regional adaptation of that model thrived. But as BuzzFeed’s fortunes waned, anything structurally tied to that playbook inevitably felt the decline as well.
There’s a parallel universe where Step never happened. In that version, Dargham builds a tech startup instead. In the early 2010s he had already built the MVP for a food app and came close to launching it. Choosing not to pursue it became the fork in the road that left room for Step to take shape. He still believes the app would have succeeded — but the path he didn’t take ultimately unlocked the one that defined his career.
Guiding him through these inflection points is a simple north star: create meaningful things, and do it with integrity. He tries to build in a way that leaves the world net positive.
His inspirations reflect that ethos. As a teenager and throughout his early twenties, he obsessed over Steve Jobs — especially the Stanford commencement speech that shaped his relationship with creativity and risk. Fadi Ghandour played the regional equivalent. Dargham first met him briefly in high school through a program he participated in, never imagining Ghandour would later become one of his investors. The connection remains one of those “dots only connect looking backward” moments.
Today, Dargham sees the MENA tech scene accelerating in tandem with the Gulf’s rapid economic ascent — one of the most powerful regional climbs in recent memory. He hopes the Levant, once politically stabilized, will reclaim its tech potential as well. The talent, he says, is already there; it just needs the right environment.
Dubai sits at the center of his own story. To him, it represents a modern version of the American dream — a place where people from the global south go to test their ambition. Dargham lived that journey. Now based in the United States, he’s writing his next chapter.
Behind the builder, though, is a deeper personal narrative. Dargham lost his mother in his twenties, years after losing his father. Losing both parents so young is still the hardest experience of his life, but he remains anchored by the lessons they left him.
Life in the U.S. has changed his rhythms, too. Once, he started his mornings with quiet reflection. Now, the time difference with the Middle East means his day begins with a flood of messages and calls. He’s still trying to reclaim that early morning space.
Ask him who he is at his core, and his answer is disarmingly simple: a human being trying to leave the world net positive — to give more than he takes. Everything else, he says, is just part of the journey.
That journey was nearly derailed during COVID. Running an events business in a world where events were impossible was existential. But Step survived — and came out more resilient than before.
Looking ahead, Dargham imagines a fifty-year future for Step: a global brand, deeply woven into the startup ecosystem, supporting and investing in founders around the world.
And when asked who he believes should be featured in a series about the builders who transformed him, his shortlist is clear: Fadi Ghandour, Jeremiah Owyang, and Amjad Masad — the people whose ideas and trajectories shaped his own.
