Thursday 11 June 2026 6:12 pm

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Thursday 11 June 2026 6:13 pm

Who gets to help shape the future? In London’s tech sector, we know that diversity is still our greatest strength, writes Russ Shaw from day four of London Tech WeekAs the main stage programme at Olympia draws to a close, London Tech Week enters the exciting fringe phase.Across the city, dozens of events continue the conversations that have defined the week, bringing together founders, investors, policymakers, educators and technology leaders from a remarkable range of backgrounds and markets. It’s a reminder that London Tech Week is far more than a single venue or conference programme. It’s a city-wide showcase of one of London’s greatest strengths: its diversity.Over the course of the week, attention has understandably focused on major government announcements, yet some of the most valuable conversations have taken place away from the headline stages. As artificial intelligence becomes increasingly embedded across society, questions of representation, inclusion and participation are becoming more prominent. The technologies being developed today will shape how people access services, interact with businesses and navigate everyday life. Ensuring a broad range of perspectives contribute to that process is therefore an essential part of building successful technology ecosystems.At the start of the day, I attended a roundtable hosted by executive search firm Spencer Stuart, which brought together leaders from a variety of backgrounds in education, tech and not-for-profit to discuss how education can be improved to prepare young people with the right skills for a future engulfed by AI. I was inspired by the passion and creative ideas during the session with a commitment to work together and connect these various sectors.The discussion focused on a simple but important question: who gets to help shape the future?Technology has always been at its strongest when it draws on a wide range of experiences, backgrounds and viewpoints. Diverse teams bring different perspectives to product development, problem-solving and innovation, helping organisations better understand the people they serve.Several participants highlighted the need to strengthen pathways into all kinds of careers from an earlier stage, involving schools, educators and local communities more directly in conversations about emerging technologies. As AI becomes a larger part of the economy, ensuring that opportunities are accessible to as many people as possible will be increasingly important.The TLA Tech for Disability event explored how inclusive design can improve products and services for everyone. Discussions examined the ways financial services, digital platforms and identity systems are experienced by people with disabilities, highlighting opportunities for technology companies to build products that are more intuitive, accessible and user-focused from the outset.What emerged from the conversation was a broader point. Inclusion is not simply about removing barriers. It’s about expanding participation and ensuring technology reflects the needs of the communities it serves.The datasets, assumptions and design decisions that underpin emerging technologies all benefit from a diversity of inputs. The broader the range of voices involved, the more effective and representative those systems are likely to become.Events hosted by TLA Taiwan, exploring AI beyond borders, and Tech in Ghana highlighted London’s ability to bring together technology communities from across the world. Similar conversations were taking place throughout the city, connecting entrepreneurs, investors and innovators from Europe, Asia, Africa, the Middle East and Latin America.Few cities can convene such a broad mix of perspectives within a single ecosystem.That convening power has been one of the defining themes of this year’s London Tech Week. Across the week, discussions have brought together governments, researchers, investors, founders and technology leaders from different markets and sectors.London occupies a unique position at the intersection of global capital, world-class research and international talent. The diversity of voices represented across the week reflects that position. As London Tech Week approaches its conclusion, day four provided a timely reminder that technology is ultimately about people and ‘the human factor’.The investment announcements, policy discussions and technical breakthroughs that have shaped this year’s event all depend on sharing different ideas, experiences and perspectives.That spirit of collaboration has been visible across Olympia, across the fringe events and across the city itself. It remains one of London’s greatest strengths and one of the key reasons the capital continues to play such an important role in the global technology ecosystem.Russ Shaw is a founding partner of London Tech Week