Every autumn, Amsterdam briefly transforms into a hub for everyone working with artificial intelligence professionally. World AI Week, the multi-day event cluster around AI in the Netherlands, draws thousands of visitors from home and abroad to the Dutch capital each year. Conferences, workshops, investor panels and informal side events alternate, providing a broad picture of the state of AI in Europe.
The initiative explicitly positions itself as more than a single conference. Various organisations, communities and companies programme their own activities under the umbrella of the week, making the overall offering wide-ranging: from technical deep-dives for engineers to policy debates on AI regulation and pitch sessions for early-stage startups.
For the Dutch startup and tech scene, the event serves a practical purpose. It concentrates touchpoints that would otherwise be spread across the year and lowers the threshold for international participants to travel to Amsterdam.
Format and programme
World AI Week is not a monolithic festival with a single stage, but a distributed format. The organisation behind the week puts together an overarching programme, but actively encourages external parties to organise accredited side events. These can range from corporate dinners and open hackathons to investor breakfasts or thematic panel discussions in co-working spaces across the city.
The core of the week typically consists of one or more conference days featuring keynotes and panel discussions. Recurring themes include the application of large language models in business, the current state of the European AI Act, responsible use of AI, and the funding of Dutch AI startups. Speakers come from academia, industry and government alike.
Alongside content sessions, there is explicit room for matchmaking: structured moments at which startups connect with venture capital funds, corporates look for pilot partners, and researchers meet potential clients.
Growth in participation and visibility
According to the organisers, the number of registered participants has grown steadily over recent editions. Exact visitor figures per edition are not always made public, but the week reportedly now attracts several thousand professionals. A growing proportion of attendees come from other European countries, which increases the event's international profile.
The growth is partly linked to the broader rise of AI as a business topic. Whereas AI events a few years ago attracted mainly a technical and academic audience, legal professionals, HR directors and executives from non-technology companies are now present as well. This broadening of the audience reflects how deeply AI-related questions have penetrated various sectors.
Position in the European AI events calendar
Europe now has a busy calendar of AI events, with names such as VivaTech in Paris, Web Summit in Lisbon and a range of national conferences. World AI Week distinguishes itself through its explicit focus on the Dutch and Benelux ecosystem, combined with a European-facing programme.
Amsterdam as a location offers logistical advantages: the city is easily accessible from the rest of Europe, is home to a number of large tech companies and knowledge institutions, and has an active startup community. Initiatives such as the Amsterdam Institute for Advanced Metropolitan Solutions and the presence of universities with strong AI research groups contribute to the local ecosystem that serves as the backdrop for the week.
Competition for attention is nonetheless considerable. The organisers of World AI Week face the challenge of continuing to differentiate as the number of AI-related events worldwide increases and corporates organise their own summits.
Relevance for founders and investors
For Dutch AI startups, the week is one of the few moments at which a large concentration of potential investors, customers and partners is present in one place. Several venture capital funds active in the Dutch market, including parties focused on deep tech and enterprise software, are represented every year.
Startups that participate report that the week is useful for accelerating conversations already in progress, rather than for making entirely new contacts. That pattern is familiar from similar events: the value often lies in the informal margins, not only in the official agenda.
For investors, the week offers an efficient way to see many companies in a short period of time and to gauge the temperature of the ecosystem. Panel discussions on the funding climate and exits also provide insight into how other funds are assessing the market.
Points of attention and caveats
As with many events in the tech sector, the quality of World AI Week can vary from edition to edition and is heavily dependent on the composition of speakers and participants. Visitor reviews are not published centrally, making an independent quality assessment difficult.
In addition, the distributed format is a double-edged sword. The abundance of side events makes the programme rich, but also difficult to navigate. Participants must select what is relevant to them, which requires preparation. Organisers have worked in previous editions on better digital tools to support this.
For those considering attending, it is advisable to determine in advance what specific goal participation should serve and to filter the programme accordingly. The week offers enough content for a wide range of profiles, but those who attend without a clear agenda can quickly find themselves spread too thin.