Friday, 29 August sees the Work In Fintech AI Summit arriving at Google King’s cross for an immersive event and crash course where students can discover and learn about the future of AI and Fintech. With a hackathon, talks, mentoring sessions and more, it’s the perfect opportunity for the leaders of tomorrow to get a glimpse of what the Fintech field has to offer.
The Work In Fintech AI Summit on Friday, 29 August is designed to compress
years of exposure into a single catalytic day at Google’s King’s Cross (Pancras
Square) campus in London. Students will step into a dynamic environment where
Fintech operators, artificial intelligence (AI ) practitioners and investors share what they know, then
ask participants to build. Speakers include Narinder Patti, Head of Strategic
Business – Fintech, Google, Christian Nentwich, PhD, Founder, Duco
and Chris McConville, Head of KCX at Kepler Cheuvreux. The goal is simple
and ambitious at once, to “bridge the gap between academia and real-world
skills,” as Matthew Cheung, CEO at ipushpull and founder of Work in Fintech,
puts it.
Matthew Cheung, CEO at ipushpull and founder of Work in Fintech.
Cheung’s vantage point is practical. Having co-founded what would later
become newsquawk, the information and news service for traders, he now leads
ipushpull, a platform that digitizes and automates workflows across capital
markets and has spent his career at the intersection of business and
technology. That background shaped Work in Fintech’s core belief that talent is
universal while opportunity often is not, and so the organization leans into
inclusion and access by design in order to encourage those who might not enter
finance to do so.
This 29th August at @Google HQ, London, The WIF AI Summit is back!
Join us for a power-packed day featuring:
✅ 20+ world-class speakers & mentors
✅ High-impact networking sessions
✅ Expert-led lectures & panels
✅ Hackathon & hands-on learning opportunitiesMany… pic.twitter.com/pML3CHbpDv
— Work in Fintech // workinfintech.eth (@WorkinFintech) August 19, 2025
Cheung will also moderate a panel at the upcoming Finance Magnates London Summit on the topic “FX Tales: Stories from the Floor”. Veteran heads of sales will join the panel and share their keys to success, from talking to traders and managing CRM shenanigans to building lasting relationships.
From Talks to a Hackathon and Investor-Style Pitches
“The day starts with talks and panels from founders and CEOs which are
focused on the skills young people need to thrive,” says Cheung. There is even
a dedicated session on networking that is immediately put to the test during
breaks and lunch. In the afternoon, participants form teams for a mentored
hackathon, then pitch their solutions (which they’ve been working on for weeks)
to a panel of “Dragons’ Den judges” made up of industry leaders, with prizes
that can include mini-internships, event tickets, mentorships and more.
The event will provide a wide range of opportunities for participants of all backgrounds.
Cheung explains the arc of the day in practical terms: attendees are
pushed out of their comfort zones in networking, public speaking, team dynamics
under deadlines and applied AI skills. “Not only does the event give them
direct exposure to the latest tech, but just as importantly, it gives them the
confidence to engage and build relationships with founders, CEOs and industry
leaders,” he says.
AI Tools: Lowering the Barrier to Building
A key design choice is that teams can ship without heavy coding
backgrounds. As Cheung notes, because of today’s AI and no-code tools, “you do
not need to be a coder to participate in our hackathons.” Participants use a
mix of AI and product tools that can include Google AI Studio, Firebase Studio,
Vertex AI, Glide, Figma, Canva and Coda, while mentors provide context and challenge
teams to push further.
Inclusion as a Feature, Not a Slogan
Accessibility is core to the model. The selection process weighs
enthusiasm, curiosity and their potential to benefit from the experience, not
just grades, with outreach through universities and community organizations and
an effort to remove financial or logistical barriers. The hackathon focus on
underserved talent is intentional, says Cheung, because, among other factors, “diverse
teams build better solutions” and the summit is about levelling the playing
field so overlooked talent can prove itself.
Next event is on 29th august, apply for tickets now 👇🏻https://t.co/cAOrBQmVi9
— Work in Fintech // workinfintech.eth (@WorkinFintech) August 24, 2025
Echoing this sense of inclusion, Cheung defines success as seeing “outsiders
become active contributors,” building new connections and mentors, and
ultimately securing “a job or internship” or the self-belief to pursue a career
in Fintech or AI. He points to previous winners who progressed to pitch on
stage at the Doers Summit in Athens, with the community even rallying together
to create and fund a GoFundMe page to cover travel.
Are you ready to become the first truly AI-enabled Bank? 💰
AI in Finance is excited to announce the speakers who will discuss how financial services are being transformed through agentic AI implementation, hyper-personalised customer experiences, enterprise-wide AI adoption and… pic.twitter.com/WOSt3bSueb
— London Tech Week (@LDNTechWeek) August 22, 2025
Judges score pitches on originality, use of tools, team collaboration,
technical execution, relevance and clarity. An “investment-ready” student
project shows problem-solution fit, a credible development path and a team that
can execute. The 10-person panel includes Fintech founders, CEOs, supporters
and senior tech leaders from sponsors.
Beyond the Day: Pathways That Stick
The summit is designed as a starting point. After the event, Work in
Fintech facilitates mentorship pairings, introductions to hiring partners and,
where possible, internships or extended project work with sponsors. The aim is
to turn the momentum of build-and-pitch into tangible next steps. As Cheung
frames it, the summit is a “launchpad, not a finish line.”
The Bigger Picture
The AI Summit’s mission is both practical and optimistic. It convenes a
partner ecosystem of universities, community organizations, founders and
corporate sponsors to provide platforms, mentors and more. The ambition is to
turn curiosity into capability at scale so that the Fintech industry becomes
stronger, more innovative and more representative, and so young people see a
future they can own.
Register or learn more: https://lu.ma/m471f4vp.
For more stories around the edges of Fintech, visit our dedicated pages.
Friday, 29 August sees the Work In Fintech AI Summit arriving at Google King’s cross for an immersive event and crash course where students can discover and learn about the future of AI and Fintech. With a hackathon, talks, mentoring sessions and more, it’s the perfect opportunity for the leaders of tomorrow to get a glimpse of what the Fintech field has to offer.
The Work In Fintech AI Summit on Friday, 29 August is designed to compress
years of exposure into a single catalytic day at Google’s King’s Cross (Pancras
Square) campus in London. Students will step into a dynamic environment where
Fintech operators, artificial intelligence (AI ) practitioners and investors share what they know, then
ask participants to build. Speakers include Narinder Patti, Head of Strategic
Business – Fintech, Google, Christian Nentwich, PhD, Founder, Duco
and Chris McConville, Head of KCX at Kepler Cheuvreux. The goal is simple
and ambitious at once, to “bridge the gap between academia and real-world
skills,” as Matthew Cheung, CEO at ipushpull and founder of Work in Fintech,
puts it.
Matthew Cheung, CEO at ipushpull and founder of Work in Fintech.
Cheung’s vantage point is practical. Having co-founded what would later
become newsquawk, the information and news service for traders, he now leads
ipushpull, a platform that digitizes and automates workflows across capital
markets and has spent his career at the intersection of business and
technology. That background shaped Work in Fintech’s core belief that talent is
universal while opportunity often is not, and so the organization leans into
inclusion and access by design in order to encourage those who might not enter
finance to do so.
This 29th August at @Google HQ, London, The WIF AI Summit is back!
Join us for a power-packed day featuring:
✅ 20+ world-class speakers & mentors
✅ High-impact networking sessions
✅ Expert-led lectures & panels
✅ Hackathon & hands-on learning opportunitiesMany… pic.twitter.com/pML3CHbpDv
— Work in Fintech // workinfintech.eth (@WorkinFintech) August 19, 2025
Cheung will also moderate a panel at the upcoming Finance Magnates London Summit on the topic “FX Tales: Stories from the Floor”. Veteran heads of sales will join the panel and share their keys to success, from talking to traders and managing CRM shenanigans to building lasting relationships.
From Talks to a Hackathon and Investor-Style Pitches
“The day starts with talks and panels from founders and CEOs which are
focused on the skills young people need to thrive,” says Cheung. There is even
a dedicated session on networking that is immediately put to the test during
breaks and lunch. In the afternoon, participants form teams for a mentored
hackathon, then pitch their solutions (which they’ve been working on for weeks)
to a panel of “Dragons’ Den judges” made up of industry leaders, with prizes
that can include mini-internships, event tickets, mentorships and more.
The event will provide a wide range of opportunities for participants of all backgrounds.
Cheung explains the arc of the day in practical terms: attendees are
pushed out of their comfort zones in networking, public speaking, team dynamics
under deadlines and applied AI skills. “Not only does the event give them
direct exposure to the latest tech, but just as importantly, it gives them the
confidence to engage and build relationships with founders, CEOs and industry
leaders,” he says.
AI Tools: Lowering the Barrier to Building
A key design choice is that teams can ship without heavy coding
backgrounds. As Cheung notes, because of today’s AI and no-code tools, “you do
not need to be a coder to participate in our hackathons.” Participants use a
mix of AI and product tools that can include Google AI Studio, Firebase Studio,
Vertex AI, Glide, Figma, Canva and Coda, while mentors provide context and challenge
teams to push further.
Inclusion as a Feature, Not a Slogan
Accessibility is core to the model. The selection process weighs
enthusiasm, curiosity and their potential to benefit from the experience, not
just grades, with outreach through universities and community organizations and
an effort to remove financial or logistical barriers. The hackathon focus on
underserved talent is intentional, says Cheung, because, among other factors, “diverse
teams build better solutions” and the summit is about levelling the playing
field so overlooked talent can prove itself.
Next event is on 29th august, apply for tickets now 👇🏻https://t.co/cAOrBQmVi9
— Work in Fintech // workinfintech.eth (@WorkinFintech) August 24, 2025
Echoing this sense of inclusion, Cheung defines success as seeing “outsiders
become active contributors,” building new connections and mentors, and
ultimately securing “a job or internship” or the self-belief to pursue a career
in Fintech or AI. He points to previous winners who progressed to pitch on
stage at the Doers Summit in Athens, with the community even rallying together
to create and fund a GoFundMe page to cover travel.
Are you ready to become the first truly AI-enabled Bank? 💰
AI in Finance is excited to announce the speakers who will discuss how financial services are being transformed through agentic AI implementation, hyper-personalised customer experiences, enterprise-wide AI adoption and… pic.twitter.com/WOSt3bSueb
— London Tech Week (@LDNTechWeek) August 22, 2025
Judges score pitches on originality, use of tools, team collaboration,
technical execution, relevance and clarity. An “investment-ready” student
project shows problem-solution fit, a credible development path and a team that
can execute. The 10-person panel includes Fintech founders, CEOs, supporters
and senior tech leaders from sponsors.
Beyond the Day: Pathways That Stick
The summit is designed as a starting point. After the event, Work in
Fintech facilitates mentorship pairings, introductions to hiring partners and,
where possible, internships or extended project work with sponsors. The aim is
to turn the momentum of build-and-pitch into tangible next steps. As Cheung
frames it, the summit is a “launchpad, not a finish line.”
The Bigger Picture
The AI Summit’s mission is both practical and optimistic. It convenes a
partner ecosystem of universities, community organizations, founders and
corporate sponsors to provide platforms, mentors and more. The ambition is to
turn curiosity into capability at scale so that the Fintech industry becomes
stronger, more innovative and more representative, and so young people see a
future they can own.
Register or learn more: https://lu.ma/m471f4vp.
For more stories around the edges of Fintech, visit our dedicated pages.