Roundtables are 30-minute expert-led discussions designed for up to 20 attendees who are interested in a particular topic. There is time for attendees to connect and explore collaborative opportunities in the format.
Some of the winners from the Audience Choice vote-a-thon are listed below. What a response, we asked you to vote for the topics you would most like to see at the event. More winners will be announced over the next few weeks. The first set of roundtables need some tidying up.
The early bird pricing ends on July 29th. You can save hundreds of dollars if you buy your pass before the deadline.
Hot topics are covered in these five roundtables. Your Disrupt dance card is going to fill up fast, because you are using Artificial Intelligence to change the fashion and retail industries.
Kathy Zhou is the co- founder of Queenly.
The fashion and retail industries have shown an urgent need for disruption in the wake of a global Pandemic and an Economic downturn. Small business owners are struggling with social media-driven growth tactics as consumers increase their online shopping.
Kathy Zhou will show how she built a centralized marketplace to solve these problems for the growing formal-wear industry, as well as creating a tailored computer vision and machine language data pipeline for a formerly offline industry.
The speaker is the co- founder and CEO of Crossing Minds.
The personalization industry is in need of an update. Customers are losing faith in online businesses because they don't have their best interests in mind. Business owners are trying to figure out how to meet high customer expectations while still selling their product.
Robicquet shows how personalization can help customers find their next favorite products and business owners can walk away happy.
Emily G.- Cebrin Lombn is the co- founder and CEO of Froged.
Are startup's prepared for measures that extend their runway while building a success model? European start-ups are better prepared than their American counterparts.
The co- founder and CEO of Bux is speaking.
Europe is seeing a growing number of U.S. tech investors. European startups are catching up fast and are starting to close the gap with Silicon Valley, but both sides are still working on scaling.
What can we learn from the other side of the pond? How can you scale your company around the world? We are going to discuss the scaling dilemma in this session.
The director of open government products at the Government Technology Agency of Singapore spoke.
Open Government Products is an experimental team within the Singapore government that works on public sector problems. The distribution of relief aid to citizens was made easier because of the elimination of paper forms in the government. This was achieved through the use of bureaucratic vulnerabilities.
Hongyi Li will talk about how to shepherd products through bureaucratic obstacles and how to structure a team to maximize creativity and impact in a constrained environment. The most important problems in our society are usually the most bureaucratically defended. We need to learn how to hack the bureaucracy in order to solve the most important problems.
The event takes place on October 18. You can save up to $1,300 if you buy your pass before July 29th.
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