QuantumSpace at WMF 2026: From Vision to Market Validation
Written by Zineb Chahbouni
From June 24 to 26, QuantumSpace took part in WMF – We Make Future 2026 in Bologna, one of Europe’s largest and most established events dedicated to artificial intelligence, innovation, and digital transformation. With over 70,000 attendees, hundreds of international speakers, and a broad ecosystem of startups, investors, corporations, and research centers, WMF has become a key meeting point for those shaping the future of technology.
After the introduction of our new application domains during AI Week, WMF was not a launch moment, but an opportunity to continue a trajectory already set in motion and bring it into a broader, international context.

QuantumSpace participation marks another important step for the development of the Company.
Building on What Comes Next
WMF marked a natural continuation of the path we opened in the previous weeks.
Being there meant putting our work into direct conversation with founders, investors, and industry professionals, and testing how our direction holds beyond the initial launch phase. What emerged clearly is that the need we are addressing is not isolated.
There is also a visible shift in how organizations frame AI. The focus is moving away from experimentation and isolated use cases toward integration, reliability, and decision support.
Across sectors, organizations are dealing with increasing volumes of complex, fragmented data, while still lacking effective ways to interpret and operationalize it. Organizations are rich in data but poor in usable knowledge, and bridging this gap is becoming a defining challenge for teams operating in high-complexity environments.

Our team participated at the Event with enthusiasm and professionalism.
A Clear Signal from the Market
Throughout the event, conversations converged in a very consistent direction.
There is a growing awareness that collecting data is no longer enough. The real challenge is making sense of it, extracting meaning, and turning it into something that can concretely support decisions. This is where our approach sits, and seeing this reflected across different profiles and industries was a strong confirmation that the path we are pursuing is relevant.
One of the most consistent signals was how similar these challenges are across industries that, on the surface, appear very different. Whether in healthcare, advanced industrial environments, or other data-intensive domains, the underlying need remains the same: reducing complexity without losing depth.
At WMF, this translated into exchanges that went beyond surface-level interest. We engaged with venture capital firms, angel investors, and strategic advisors in conversations that are expected to continue over the coming months, laying the groundwork for longer-term relationships and future opportunities.
From an investment perspective, there is increasing attention toward technologies that can sit on top of existing data infrastructures and make them more intelligible, rather than replacing them entirely. This reflects a broader shift toward scalable, integrative solutions that can adapt to real operational contexts.

The technologies developed at QuantumSpace were showcased to a wide audience.
Looking Ahead
WMF 2026 helped consolidate what we had already started to build.
It gave us the opportunity to validate our direction, strengthen our positioning, and open conversations that are now moving into a more concrete phase. The focus from here is clear: continue developing technologies that turn complex data into accessible and actionable knowledge, while advancing the relationships and insights generated during these days.
The groundwork is in place. What WMF ultimately reinforced is that the next phase of innovation will not be defined by how much data we can generate, but by how effectively we can interpret it. That is where real competitive advantage is starting to emerge.

Our participation gave us the opportunity to bring our technology into a broader, international context.






