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Here are Europe’s top tech events and trade shows that founders can’t afford to miss this year

The tech events and trade shows you can’t miss in Europe this year

The European tech scene is gearing up for a dynamic second semester. From the blazing advancements  in AI to sustainable solutions and developer insights, Europe continues to solidify its position as a hub for tech innovation. If you’re looking to forge new partnerships, discover groundbreaking technologies, or simply stay ahead of the curve, here are some events that you’d better not miss. 

Of course, if you’re a busy founder, you may wonder how to pick from this list of excellent events. Fear not, that’s exactly why we’ve put together a definitive guide to event strategy

Without further ado: Here’s our meticulously curated list of the top European tech events and trade shows slated for the rest of the year: 

IFA Berlin 2025

When: September 5 – September 9, 2025 Where: Berlin, Germany

IFA Berlin is one of the world’s oldest and most important trade shows for consumer electronics and home appliances. It’s a massive international showcase where manufacturers, retailers, and media converge to unveil the latest innovations in smart home technology, entertainment, personal devices, and beyond. 

For startups building hardware, smart home, wearable, or consumer IoT products, IFA offers ample media exposure as well as the opportunity to connect with distributors and retailers from all over the world. 

While IFA may not be the place to find a Series A investor, it’s where you can secure the partnerships that get your product onto store shelves.

Shift Conference 2025

When: September 14 – September 16, 2025 Where: Zadar, Croatia

Held in the scenic city of Zadar, Shift is a prominent and growing developer-focused conference that brings together software engineers and tech enthusiasts in a dynamic setting. The vibrant conference delves deep into cutting-edge development practices, new programming paradigms, and the evolving craft of software development, and has a reputation for having engaging speakers. 

For tech startups, Shift offers a fantastic opportunity to recruit talent and stay sharp on the technical front. You can showcase your company’s engineering culture, meet potential hires, and engage with a community that’s passionate about building.

The Drop 2025

When: September 16 – September 18, 2025 Where: Malmö, Sweden

The Drop is a highly curated investment conference with a strong focus on deep tech and climate solutions. It’s less about volume and more about quality, bringing together serious investors and founders who are tackling massive, complex problems, with an atmosphere that’s more intimate and conversational than a typical conference. 

If your startup is working on groundbreaking technology with a long-term vision, The Drop is great for connecting with investors who will have the patience and expertise to back a high-risk, high-reward venture.

FDDAY (France Digitale Day) 2025

When: September 17, 2025 Where: Paris, France

FDDAY is a one-day deep dive into the French startup ecosystem. It’s all about bringing together  the local ecosystem (founders, investors, and corporate partners) in a high-energy setting. 

If you’re a startup based in France, or considering entering the market, this event is your entry point. It’s perfect for networking with French VCs, understanding market nuances, and seeing what’s new in one of Europe’s most dynamic tech hubs.

AI & Big Data Expo Europe 2025

When: September 24 – September 25, 2025 Where: Amsterdam, Netherlands

This event is for anyone trying to commercialize AI and big data solutions. It offers a deep dive into the practical applications and strategic implications of artificial intelligence and big data across various industries.

For startups specializing in AI, machine learning, data analytics or data-driven solutions, this expo provides a great platform for showcasing your technology to a diverse audience of potential clients (enterprises, SMEs), connecting with integration partners, and staying abreast of regulatory and ethical considerations.

Bits & Pretzels 2025

When: September 29 – October 1, 2025 Where: Munich, Germany

Bits & Pretzels is a high-energy “founders festival” that blends serious business with a focus on community, notably including traditional Bavarian elements during Oktoberfest. Its strength lies in fostering authentic, often informal, connections between founders and investors. 

For founders, this event presents an excellent opportunity to meet with VCs and other entrepreneurs in a more informal setting. The atmosphere is designed to break down barriers and foster relationships that can lead to mentorship, partnerships and, of course, funding.

Beyond the standard tech event circuit, founders should be thinking about where their customers are doing business. These gatherings are where you can find genuine B2B leads, forge partnerships, and secure contracts. For a more complete calendar of industry-specific events, click here.

How to Web 2025

When: October 1 – October 2, 2025 Where: Bucharest, Romania

How to Web is a key conference that aims to shine a spotlight on the entrepreneurial talent emerging from the CEE region. If your startup is from this part of Europe or targeting these markets, this event will provide crucial regional exposure. 

It’s also a great place to connect with investors who are specifically interested in the CEE region, and founders can get amazing practical advice on how to scale a business there.

Italian Tech Week 2025

When: October 1 – October 3, 2025 Where: Turin, Italy

Italian Tech Week has quickly become the hub for Italy’s growing tech scene, connecting Italian founders with international opportunities. For a startup from Italy, or one looking to enter the market, this event offers direct access to local investors and corporate partners. 

Founders will get a great chance to understand the specific dynamics of the Italian ecosystem and build a network in one of Europe’s significant, though often underrated, innovation hubs.

Nordeep

When: October 2 – October 3, 2025 Where: Espoo, Finland

The Nordic region’s deep tech business summit, this event is all about connecting science with business. It brings together funding, expertise, and talent specifically meant for  startups working on complex, science-based technologies like quantum computing, biotech, or new materials. 

If your company is built on a foundational scientific breakthrough, Nordeep is where you’ll find the specialized investors and corporate partners who can understand the long-term potential of what you’re building.

Pollutec 2025

When: October 7 – October 10, 2025 Where: Lyon, France

This is not a general tech conference, but an international trade show dedicated to environmental equipment, technologies, and services.

For startups in climate tech, greentech or the circular economy, this is a vital platform. Founders will get direct access to municipalities, industrial clients and public sector organizations that are looking for real-world solutions to environmental challenges. 

It’s the place to secure the partnerships and contracts needed to scale an impact-driven company.

World Summit AI

When: October 8 – October 9, 2025 Where: Amsterdam, Netherlands

A global gathering of the AI ecosystem, World Summit AI is where big tech, enterprises, startups and academia converge to discuss the future of artificial intelligence. If you’re an AI startup, this summit will provide excellent visibility and direct networking with top minds, potential clients and VCs in the field. 

It’s also a great chance to see what’s happening at the cutting edge and position your company within that conversation.

Sifted Summit 2025

When: October 8 – October 9, 2025 Where: London, UK

Hosted by the eponymous tech media outlet, Sifted Summit is known for its high-quality, unfiltered content. The event focuses on candid conversations about the realities of building and scaling a company in Europe in an intimate and curated atmosphere. 

This summit is perfect for founders seeking honest advice from successful entrepreneurs and investors, and for making meaningful connections without the pressure of a massive conference.

SaaStock Europe

When: October 13 – October 15, 2025 Where: Dublin, Ireland

 Dedicated to the B2B SaaS community, SaaStock is a conference where founders, executives, and VCs can focus on the unique challenges of scaling a SaaS business. The agenda is practical, covering everything from growth strategies to go-to-market execution. 

For a SaaS startup, this conference provides a targeted environment for networking with investors who specialize in your business model, learning from founders who have been there, and connecting with potential customers.

Oslo Innovation Week

When: October 20 – October 24, 2025 Where: Oslo, Norway

As it says on the tin, Oslo Innovation Week is a week-long series of events across the city showcasing  the Nordic innovation ecosystem, with a focus on impact and collaboration.

If you’re looking to get a foothold in the Nordic market, this is a great entry point. You’ll get a chance to network with local investors, find partners, and understand the unique culture of innovation in Norway.

UNLEASH World 2025

When: October 20 – October 22, 2025 Where: Paris, France

UNLEASH World is a major global conference focused on HR technology and the future of work. It explores how cutting-edge technology is transforming human resources, talent management, and the overall employee experience. 

For HR edtech (workforce learning), or future of work startups, UNLEASH offers a path to connect with corporate HR leaders, chief people officers, and enterprise buyers actively seeking innovative solutions to contemporary talent challenges. 

VDS 2025

When: October 22 – October 23, 2025 Where: Valencia, Spain

Valencia turns into a global tech hub during this event’s two-day run. With themes ranging from deep tech to health tech, it’s a versatile event, that offers founders exposure to the Mediterranean tech scene, a startup competition, and networking opportunities with a diverse group of stakeholders.

Smart City Expo World Congress 2025

When: November 4 – November 6, 2025 Where: Barcelona, Spain

SCEWC where city leaders, policymakers, and companies come together to discuss the future of cities and urban innovation. 

For startups in urban tech, IoT, sustainable infrastructure, or mobility, this event is where founders can connect with municipal decision-makers, urban planners, and large integrators. You’ll also get crucial opportunities to pilot solutions, secure government contracts, and understand the complex needs of modern cities.

Web Summit 2025

When: November 10 – November 13, 2025 Where: Lisbon, Portugal

A massive, sprawling event that covers virtually every area of technology, Web Summit’s scale is both its biggest strength and weakness.  

For a startup, Web Summit offers a shot at massive exposure and connecting with a huge pool of VCs. The key is to be highly organized and use your networking tools effectively to cut through the noise and find the conversations that matter.

Slush 2025

When: November 19 – November 20, 2025 Where: Helsinki, Finland

Slush is perhaps the event for connecting startups and investors in a unique, high-energy, and often intense environment. It often feels more like a music festival than a tech conference, with its dark, atmospheric lighting. 

Renowned for its sophisticated matchmaking tool and a core focus on facilitating investment discussions, Slush is meticulously designed to create concrete pathways for capital. 

For any startup actively seeking funding, particularly those around the Series A stage, Slush is a must-attend. Its matchmaking system directly pairs founders with relevant investors, dramatically increasing the likelihood of productive meetings, and its entire atmosphere is geared to foster deal-making.

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la fabrique a nuage la barbe a papa sans sucre qui revolutionne le snacking 1726502154
Startups 2 days ago

The founders behind NUAGE, the sugar-free cotton candy rated Nutri-Score A, share their playbook for event strategy, budget, and pipeline ROI. If you’ve walked the aisles of a French food trade show recently, chances are you’ve seen — or tasted — a small cloud of the impossible: cotton candy with zero sugar and a Nutri-Score A. Behind it is Re.Snack, a startup founded in 2023 near Dijon by Vanessa and Florian, on a mission to reinvent confectionery. Their first product, NUAGE, is built on Sucr’A, a proprietary sugar substitute developed with AgroSup Dijon that uses plant fibres (isomalt and inulin) to recreate cotton candy’s signature melt-in-the-mouth texture — without sugar, allergens, colourants, or preservatives. The traction speaks for itself: revenue up from €200K to €7M in two years, distribution from 100 to 5,000 points of sale, more than 15,000 online orders, national TV exposure on M6 — and a reported acquisition offer from Lindt that the founders turned down. They’d rather build a brand than become a subcontractor. A sugar-free, fat-free popcorn is next. But what caught our attention is how they grew. For Re.Snack, trade shows aren’t a marketing expense — they’re the core of the sales machine, with a dedicated budget, pipeline targets, and hard ROI thresholds. So we sat down with the team and asked the five questions every founder should be able to answer about their event strategy. Sesamers: Let’s start with the basics. What role do events play in your sales motion — sourcing net-new pipeline, accelerating open deals, or closing? Re.Snack: Events are our number one growth channel. They generate new business, strengthen relationships with existing customers, and accelerate ongoing opportunities. In the food industry, people buy products, but they also buy the team behind them. Face-to-face interactions build trust much faster than emails or calls. That’s a big claim — number one channel. Does the budget reflect it? What share of your sales & marketing spend goes to events, and what target does it carry? Around 25% of our sales and marketing budget is dedicated to events. We consider them a strategic investment rather than a communication expense. Our objective is that every euro invested generates multiple times its value in qualified commercial opportunities over the following 12 months. Twelve months is a patient window. When you look across the whole portfolio of events, what does the blended pipeline ROI actually come out to? On average, we generate between 8x and 12x pipeline ROI across our major trade shows. Some flagship events, such as SIAL or ISM, can significantly outperform that because they concentrate the world’s key retail buyers in one place. Meetings are easy to count, revenue less so. Which events actually convert — not just into conversations, but into business? The events that convert best are those attended by decision-makers with active buying projects. For us, SIAL Paris, ISM, Snack Show, and major retail buying conventions consistently generate tangible business. Success isn’t measured by the number of meetings, but by the quality of follow-up and execution afterwards. Last one on the numbers: at what point do you decide an event has earned a bigger budget? What’s your threshold for scaling up? We increase investment once an event consistently delivers at least a 5x pipeline ROI and proves it can generate repeatable business over multiple editions. We look at long-term customer value rather than immediate sales, because retail cycles can take several months. Before we let you go — for the food founders reading this, what would be your top 5 events? My top five would be: What founders should take from this Beneath the answers sits a playbook any startup can copy, whatever the industry. Events have a job description. Re.Snack doesn’t attend trade shows to “be visible” — events source new business, deepen existing relationships, and accelerate open deals. If you can’t name the job an event does in your sales motion, you have travel expenses, not a strategy. The budget is an envelope with a target attached. A quarter of sales & marketing spend, set deliberately and measured against a pipeline expectation over 12 months. No target, no budget. ROI is measured blended, on a realistic clock. Individual events fluctuate; the portfolio number — 8–12x pipeline-to-cost in Re.Snack’s case — is what tells you whether the channel works. And the attribution window matches the sales cycle: judging a trade show by orders signed on the show floor would kill investments that pay off two quarters later. Conversion beats meetings, and follow-up is where ROI is made. The filter is decision-makers with active buying projects — not badge scans. The event budget implicitly includes the week after the show, not just the days of it. Budget growth follows proven return. A 5x floor, plus repeatability across multiple editions, before a single extra euro flows. One great year doesn’t unlock more spend; a pattern does. Run this way, events stop being a cost centre with nice catering — and become a growth channel with receipts. Company background via nuage.resnack.fr, France 3 Bourgogne-Franche-Comté, and Traces Écrites News.

Sesame Summit 2026 Workshop
Events 1 week ago

This week I read about a hackathon claiming 6,000 attendees over a single weekend. The venues hosting it can’t accommodate more than 1,000 people. Nobody in the comments asked how the math worked. That gap between the claim and the room is what this article is about. For most event organizers, event metrics are marketing, not measurement. Once you understand how attendance numbers are built, why ROI stays a black box, and why matchmaking is often bad on purpose, you’ll read every post-event press release differently. Here’s a decoder. The vocabulary nobody explains to you The event industry has precise definitions. It just doesn’t advertise them. UFI, the global association of the exhibition industry, publishes calculation standards and auditing rules for all of them. Independent bodies like ABC audit against them. Here’s the short version. Visitor. One human being who came to the event. If I attend all three days, I’m one visitor. Visit. One entry through the doors. My three days now count as three visits. UFI accepts both figures in its audits, defines visits as visitors plus repeat visits, and requires the term used to be clearly indicated on the audit certificate. Guess which number ends up on the homepage. Attendee / participant. No standard definition. These are the marketing words. They can mean visitors, visits, registrants, exhibitor staff, speakers, press, students or the organizer’s own team, in any combination. When you read “50,000 participants,” you’re reading a number with no agreed method behind it. Registrant. Someone who signed up. Free registration events love this one, because no-show rates of 30 to 50 percent are common and registrations cost nothing to inflate. Exhibitor. Elastic too. UFI distinguishes direct exhibitors, who contract with the organizer, from co-exhibitors, who are part of a shared stand (think country pavilions). Both count. Daily exhibitor. A company present for a single day, typical in startup zones and rotating programs. A startup using a shared booth on day 2 only counts as one exhibitor, exactly like the anchor brand that paid for 400 sqm across the full show. Pavilion / delegation. A block of space booked by one entity, usually a national export agency, a region or a corporate, then filled with smaller companies. One contract, one invoice, 25 logos. Pavilions are how organizers cluster small booths into themed areas, and how “1,200 exhibitors” can describe wildly different realities. Net vs. gross exhibition space. Net is the square meters actually rented. Gross includes aisles, catering areas and that giant entrance arch. As a rule of thumb: net space is 50% of gross space at an average show.  The prosumer padding One more layer on the attendance side. Many events count audiences that are professional on paper only. Student groups bused in for the afternoon. Employees of a corporate partner who run one workshop on day 3. Startup founders’ plus-ones. Locals with a discounted badge. I’m not saying these people have no place at events. Some of the best energy on a show floor comes from them. But if you’re an exhibitor paying for access to buyers, a headline number that mixes procurement directors with second-year students is not relevant. Ask for the audience breakdown by profile. If the organizer can’t produce one, that tells you something too. The ROI black box Here’s the uncomfortable part: almost nobody wants to know if an event actually performs. CEIR, the research arm of the U.S. industry association IAEE, paused its exhibitor spend research for years and only resumed it in late 2025. Its 2026 Marketing Spend Decision Report finds that management evaluates exhibition ROI mainly on lead volume and post-show closed deals, and documents a gap between what practitioners track and what leadership actually cares about. The industry’s reference dataset on exhibitor spending had not been refreshed since 2017. Read that again: the largest B2B marketing channel went eight years without updated benchmarks. The exhibitor side confirms the fog. Vendelux’s 2026 B2B Events Survey of 120+ marketing and events leaders found that 86 percent can’t accurately attribute ROI to events, and 98 percent struggle to justify event spend to leadership. Yet 80 percent are maintaining or growing their sponsorships anyway.  Organizers benefit from this fog. Some only release their data points after the event is over, when your booking decision for next year is already locked in early-bird pricing. Others share nothing beyond the headline number. Try asking for the seniority breakdown of last edition’s visitors, or the ratio of buyers to service providers walking the aisles. I wrote before that founders systematically underestimate what events cost them, hence my 2:1 preparation rule. The other side of that equation is just as broken: they can’t estimate what events return, because the data to do so is withheld. The GDPR excuse When pushed, some organizers invoke GDPR as the reason they can’t share more. Let’s be precise. GDPR restricts sharing personal data: names, emails, badge scans tied to individuals. It says nothing about aggregated, anonymized statistics. “42 percent of our visitors have purchasing authority” contains zero personal data. An organizer who can’t tell you that either doesn’t know it or doesn’t want you to know it. Neither answer is reassuring. If startups are solving it, ask why organizers aren’t A whole category of companies now exists to answer a question organizers could answer themselves: was this event worth it? Full disclosure: at Sesamers we’re building mytradeshow.ai on this exact gap, so I have a horse in this race. Here are five others working the same seam: Sit with the logic for a second. Organizers gather and process the registration data, the badge scans, the floor plans, the exhibitor contracts. They are the best-placed actors in the world to measure event performance. If third parties have to reconstruct that picture from the outside, it’s because the people holding the data have decided that transparency isn’t always in their interest. Bad matchmaking is a feature One last thing, and it’s my favorite. Whenever an event’s matchmaking is mediocre, don’t

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Events 3 weeks ago

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The event runs four co-located programs: AI Everything Europe for real-world AI applications, North Star Europe for startups with a €50,000 equity-free pitch prize, GISEC Europe for cybersecurity, and GITEX Quantum Expo for quantum commercialisation. The first edition in 2025 drew 21,650 attendees and 755 startups.gitexeurope.com RAISE Summit 2026 📍 Paris, France  |  🗓 8–9 Jul 2026 RAISE Summit 2026 brings together 9,000+ AI leaders, founders, investors and policymakers at the Carrousel du Louvre in Paris, with 350 speakers, enterprise AI discussions, a startup competition with a €10M+ prize pool, and an AI hackathon drawing 7,000 developers. The 2026 edition adds an invitation-only CxO Summit for Fortune 1000 executives, with closed-door sessions featuring executives from Mercedes, AXA, and Capgemini. 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Worth the trip if MENA or Gulf markets are on your roadmap. onegiantleap.com TechBBQ 2026 📍 Copenhagen, Denmark  |  🗓 26–27 Aug 2026 TechBBQ 2026 takes place at the Bella Center Copenhagen on August 26–27, bringing together 10,000+ founders, investors, and innovators from across Europe and beyond. Forbes named TechBBQ one of the hottest startup events in Europe for 2026. The event features dedicated matchmaking, pitch competitions, and a strong life sciences program, particularly valuable given Denmark’s outsized position in European biotech and pharma. The format is known for its deliberately warm, hygge-infused atmosphere: the kind of event where meaningful conversations actually happen rather than badge-scan exchanges. Side events run across Copenhagen throughout the week. techbbq.dk IFA Berlin 2026 📍 Berlin, Germany  |  🗓 4–8 Sep 2026 IFA 2026 takes place at Messe Berlin from 4 to 8 September. In its 102nd year, one of the most established consumer electronics and home appliances trade shows globally draws 215,000+ visitors from 140 countries and 1,800+ exhibitors. IFA Next is the dedicated startup zone connecting early-stage companies with investors, global retailers, and tech media. For hardware founders, consumer tech builders, and anyone touching smart home, AI devices, or connected mobility, this is a commercial platform rather than a networking conference. The distinction matters: you come here to sell and to be discovered, not to collect business cards. ifa-berlin.com Infobip Shift 2026 📍 Zadar, Croatia  |  🗓 13–15 Sep 2026 Infobip Shift 2026 takes place September 13–15 in Zadar, bringing together developers and engineers from around the world. The 2026 edition welcomes confirmed speakers from NVIDIA and Apple, with central themes covering cutting-edge technology platforms, career growth in tech, and practical AI tools. 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