mashroo3k Consulting offers a feasibility study for a wool yarn manufacturing factory project in Saudi Arabia, ensuring the highest profitability and the best payback period. This is achieved through detailed studies of the Saudi market size, analysis of local and international competitors’ strategies, and the provision of competitive pricing offers.

The wool yarn factory in Saudi Arabia provides ordinary wool yarn products, by manufacturing wool fibers extracted from goats and lambs, using advanced technological techniques.
The wool yarn factory aims to provide products at competitive prices, so mashroo3k is keen to guide the investor on how to choose the best production lines and identify the required specialties from technicians and consultants to increase the efficiency of manufacturing wool yarns with the best quality and increase competitive advantages in light of the increasing market needs and demand growth in the targeted sectors.

Mashroo3k Consulting provides investors wishing to invest in the wool yarn factory project in Saudi Arabia with comprehensive feasibility studies with the highest profit return and the best payback period.

Executive Summary
Study the project’s services/products
Studying the market size
Risk study
Technical study
Financial study
Organizational and management study
The Kingdom of Saudi Arabia has paved the way for development with its ambitious Vision 2030, which aims at economic diversification, the renaissance of non-oil sectors and increasing the contribution of the private sector to GDP, and this can only be achieved through the renaissance of industry and mining as two main tributaries in major economies, and the Kingdom is determined to increase their participation in its GDP by about 15%. When talking about industry in the Kingdom, it should be noted that it was not born out of the moment, but rather it has been extended and rooted since the discovery of oil in the Kingdom in the late thirties of the last century. Over the decades, the Kingdom spared no effort to develop its industry; it established the Industrial Development Fund (1974), the Royal Commission for Jubail and Yanbu (1975), and SABIC in 1976. The roles and tasks undertaken by these institutions and the programs they worked on to grow the industrial sector and develop its performance and working mechanisms are no secret to anyone. As a result of the efforts exerted years ago in this direction, the number of factories in the Kingdom today has increased to more than 10,000 factories. We, Mashreq, believe in the importance of the industrial sector and its role in driving the economy, so we will present its most important indicators below so that anyone wishing to invest in it can be aware of them: