Doers Summit Brings Global Startups to Dubai November 26th–27th
The two-day summit at Dubai Silicon Oasis will bring together over 3,000 founders and investors for hands-on sessions and investor pitches.
Cyprus-based The Doers Company will bring its flagship Doers Summit to Dubai Silicon Oasis on November 26th–27th, convening more than 3,000 founders, investors and ecosystem leaders for a two-day programme focused on cross-border partnerships and innovation.
The Dubai edition marks a step in the organiser’s push to scale the summit into a global platform with active chapters in Athens, Limassol, and Dubai.
“Dubai is the next step in our evolution from hosting an event to creating a movement," said Stylianos Lambrou, co-founder and CEO of The Doers Company. "Doers Summit exists to turn introductions into deals and playbooks into execution.” Across three stages, the programme will feature hands-on workshops, practical case studies, and Q&As centred on innovation and scaling. Speakers include Markus Fuhrmann, co-founder of Delivery Hero; Uri Levine, co-founder of Waze; Alisa Adel from Airbus; Nikos Moraitakis, CEO of Workable; and Demetris Skourides, Chief Scientist for Research and Innovation, Republic of Cyprus.
India will have a prominent presence with speakers such as former Union Cabinet Minister Suresh Prabhu, Prof. Milind D. Atrey of IIT Bombay, Dr Huzaifa H. Khorakiwala of Wockhardt Limited, Ameya Prabhu of NAFA Capital Group, and Avinash Mudaliar of HTLabs and OTTplay.
Networking will include founder breakfasts, investor roundtables, rooftop salons and invite-only mixers, while the Startup Spotlight and Doers Pitch will give entrepreneurs the chance to present to an investor jury with follow-up meetings. The Doers Company is known for initiatives such as Doers United and Elevate Summit, with its flagship Doers Summit standing as a meeting ground for founders, investors, and ecosystem leaders across Europe, the Middle East and Africa.
Tickets are available at doerssummit.com/city/dubai.
- Previous Article 81% of Saudi Companies Now Use Industry-Specific AI














