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Shortlisted at Cambridge Tech Week: What It Meant for Ked-AI

Early-stage startups rarely get the chance to be in the same room as the people shaping the future of technology, and Cambridge Tech Week is one of those rare exceptions. Held across a couple of days this September, it drew thousands of attendees from across the world, from founders and investors to researchers, policymakers, and some of the most respected names in the global tech ecosystem. It is not a conference in the traditional sense. It feels more like a collision of ideas, people, and ambition, all gathered in one of the world's most storied centres of innovation.

For Ked-AI, being shortlisted for the Innovation Alley Pitch Competition out of hundreds of global applicants was a moment worth pausing on, not because it defined us, but because of where we were when it happened. We were early, still building, still figuring things out, and yet something about what we were creating was compelling enough to earn a place among some of the most promising startups in the world.

What the week was actually like

The conferences, roundtables and debates centred largely on AI. They centred on its potential and its complexity, how to integrate it meaningfully, how to manage its risks, and how to ensure that the technology serves people rather than the other way around. These are questions we think about constantly at Ked-AI, so being in rooms where some of the world's leading minds were wrestling with the same things was both validating and humbling in equal measure.

What struck me most was not the calibre of the speakers or the energy of Innovation Alley, though both were remarkable. It was the collaborative spirit of the whole week. In a space that could easily have been competitive and guarded, people were genuinely generous with their time, their insights, and their encouragement. For a founder in the middle of an MVP release, that kind of generosity lands differently than it might at any other point in the journey. I left with insights I am still processing, connections I genuinely value, and a clearer sense of why what we are building matters.

What it means for Ked-AI going forward

Being shortlisted at Cambridge Tech Week did not change our direction, but it reinforced it. The conversations we had, the feedback we received, and the perspectives we were exposed to all pointed toward the same thing we have been building toward: that the future of learning needs to be smarter, more personalised, and more connected than anything that currently exists. We are still early in that journey, but we are building something real, and Cambridge Tech Week reminded us that the right people are beginning to notice.