Sesame Summit 2026 – application open

Ben’s List

Are you an event organizer?

We started an online community for our Coffee with Sesame BFFs and you might be eligible to join the party 🙂

I still remember the Telegram chats, Facebook groups and even our own mobile app where event organizers & Tech event lovers would come together to discuss, share tips and debate the future of our industry.

If I would have known we were bound to U-Turn into total disruption, I would have launched an online community way earlier. Or maybe an online event platform..? It’s more profitable.

Look, this week is on par with the previous ones but it’s got a stronger community flavor for obvious reasons. Ping me if you’d like to join our group of 30+ event founders gathering at pro.sesamers.com.

Product

LinkedIn is Also Developing Audio Rooms, Tapping into the Audio Social Trend

“With other platforms providing bigger audience reach, and tools with which influencers can broadcast to their already established audiences, that could be a more appealing option, and could stop new users drifting to Clubhouse instead. Even more problematic is that these platforms are looking to launch Android versions of the functionality before Clubhouse has its own Clubhouse app.”


Community

300+ Community-Driven Founder Resources Guide

Looking for some inspiration to reinforce your community-building efforts? Tap into this incredible treasure trove of videos, podcasts, investors, founders, articles, books, platforms/tools & company case studies!

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We asked community leaders what their first step as a new Chief Community Officer would be

“While this may vary depending on your company and community, relationships with Marketing, Product, and Support are arguably the ones to cultivate first. That means helping the various role-players understand the value of community for their parts of the business, as well as finding out how their teams operate, and what insight and support you could give each other.”

Demystifying NFTs: A Thread


Food

Rethinking Food and Agriculture 2020-2030

“We are on the cusp of the deepest, fastest, most consequential disruption in food and agricultural production since the first domestication of plants and animals ten thousand years ago. This is primarily a protein disruption driven by economics. The cost of proteins will be five times cheaper by 2030 and 10 times cheaper by 2035 than existing animal proteins, before ultimately approaching the cost of sugar. They will also be superior in every key attribute – more nutritious, healthier, better tasting, and more convenient, with almost unimaginable variety. This means that, by 2030, modern food products will be higher quality and cost less than half as much to produce as the animal-derived products they replace.”

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Food, Farming, and the Fate of Planet Earth

“Producing food is perhaps the single most important — and absolutely necessary — activity humans engage in. Without it, we would literally cease to exist as a modern civilization. And the need for food is increasing, as populations continue to grow and more people shift towards meat-rich diets. The crucial thing for our future is to find ways to feed a growing world without ultimately destroying the planet we all depend on.”

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Croplands and pastures cover ~37% of the world’s ice-free land area (Foley et al., 2011)

Art

Take Up Space: AR Artwork

Super cool integration of “augmented” typography and artwork… IRL, otherwise known as augmented reality  

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Games

Doom x Twitter


Wellness

The 7 types of rest that every person needs

“We go through life thinking we’ve rested because we have gotten enough sleep — but in reality we are missing out on the other types of rest we desperately need. The result is a culture of high-achieving, high-producing, chronically tired and chronically burned-out individuals. We’re suffering from a rest deficit because we don’t understand the true power of rest.”

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Tool

Be Your Chillin’ – Technology x Human Nature

for mindfulness & chillin

  • Pub Lab

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Events 2 days ago

Last week, I spent three days at Bits and Pretzels in Munich — a startup-focused event with a distinctly Bavarian flavor. Think Oktoberfest meets startup conference, complete with dirndls, lederhosen, and more beer than you might expect. As someone building an AI-powered event platform, I went in with a specific mission: Observe how startups actually market themselves at events. Here’s what I discovered: GoodBytz: The power of good demos What they did: Robotics startup GoodBytz set up a booth where its robots prepared kaiserschmarrn (a traditional German dessert) all day long. Why it worked: Nothing beats seeing a product in action. While other booths had brochures and demos, GoodBytz’s robots were actually cooking. The smell, the movement and the end result stirred together an experience that people will remember and talk about. The lesson: If you have a physical product, show it in action. The old writing adage generalizes well: Show, don’t tell.  Let people see, hear and touch the product. WeRoad: The bathroom hack What they did: Posted “Missing Investor” flyers in bathroom stalls with QR codes pointing to their website. Why it worked: Pure genius. Every startup at the event was looking for investors, but the “Missing Investor” headline, while a bit on the nose, proved irresistible. Plus, bathroom stalls are one of the few places where people have 30 seconds to actually read something. The lesson: Think about where your target audience’s attention will remain undivided. Sometimes, the most effective marketing leverages the most unexpected places. Emqopter: Visual impact matters What they did: Designed a bright orange booth that displayed their drone prominently. Why it worked: In a sea of grey, white, beige and brown, Emqopter’s bright orange booth was impossible to overlook. The drone was real, too, and proved a real conversation starter. The lesson: Your booth is competing with hundreds of others. Make it visually distinctive and ensure your product is the hero. Quests: Community building using the product What they did: Created a busy, branded booth with accessories (toy car, traffic cones, a bulletin board) and used their anti-loneliness app to build communities among founders at the event. Why it worked: Quests used their product to solve a real problem right at the event, and the busy booth design generated energy and curiosity. The lesson: Use your product to solve a problem at the event — if it’s possible, of course. Demonstrate your value in real time. Dyno: Event-themed marketing What they did: Distributed branded electrolyte packs with the tagline “Your hangover ends. Your pension lasts – with Dyno.” Why it worked: Dyno aligned its messaging perfectly with the Oktoberfest theme. Every attendee was thinking about beer and hangovers, so Dyno’s goodies were quite relevant. The tagline was clever, memorable, and directly addressed a pain point most people at the event might have to deal with later. The lesson: Tailor your marketing to the event’s theme and culture. The more you tie your messaging and product to the context, the more memorable you become. So, what did I learn? Event marketing is about more than just showing up and setting up a booth; you have to understand your audience and create experiences that people will remember. Here’s what really struck me: most startups and even big companies don’t know how to leverage events properly. They book the booth, show up and hope for the best; maybe they bring some branded pens and a pop-up banner. Then they’ll go back home and wonder why they spent €5,000 in exchange for 50 business cards that never convert. The startups that stood out at Bits and Pretzels understand something fundamental: event ROI isn’t about booth size or location; it’s about strategy, creativity and planning. None of the startups above improvised on-site, or planned something the night before the event in their hotel rooms. They laid everything out 4-6 weeks before the event. A solid pre-event strategy is what separates successful event marketing from expensive booth rental.  But what matters most for early-stage startups is that you don’t need a massive budget to stand out. WeRoad’s bathroom stall hack probably cost €50 to print the flyers. A standard booth package at Bits and Pretzels would go for €3,000 to €5,500. The ROI difference is staggering when you compare the cost per meaningful conversation. That’s the difference between simply spending money and investing smartly. Building Sesamers has taught me that helping startups find the right events is only half the equation. The other half is helping them understand how to maximize ROI once they’re there. Good props aren’t a marketing expense; they’re opportunities to meet customers, investors and partners, and strike up engaging conversations.

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New Materials 3 days ago

Lios Group, the Irish startup behind SoundBounce, was a winner of JEC Composites Startup Booster 2018, and has been making significant strides since taking home the award.

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New Materials 1 week ago

Tree Composites aims to accelerate the energy transition with innovative composite joints.

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