AI Workshops · June 2026
From Zero to a Sales Forecast in 2 Hours
Most AI training ends with a certificate and a slide deck nobody reopens. I'd rather a team leave the room having built something they use the next morning. Here's what that looks like — in the words of the people who built it.
Hands on keyboards, on your own data
The workshops aren't a lecture about AI. People bring their real work — their spreadsheets, their codebase, their backlog, their messy CSV exports — and we build with it live. The goal is simple: ship one real thing. That constraint changes everything, because "I watched a demo" and "I made this with my own data" are completely different experiences.
The overnight hackathons engineers love
For technical teams, the format that lands hardest is the overnight hackathon — a focused 24-to-36-hour build where engineers ship something end to end with AI in the loop. There's something about the clock, the pizza, and a working demo at the end that turns "interesting" into "I'm never going back." Engineers who came in skeptical tend to be the ones still building at 2am.
The same problem, from every angle
The other thing that makes a session click is getting different perspectives in the same room. The engineer, the ops lead, the marketer, and the CEO all see the same problem differently — and AI is the first tool flexible enough to serve all of them at once. When they build side by side, the engineer learns what the business actually needs, and the CEO learns what's now suddenly possible. That shared understanding is half the value.
Case studies
Excel → Postgres, with Baniql
Baniql's team was running a growing operation on a tangle of spreadsheets that had quietly become load-bearing. Over the workshop we modeled the data properly and stood up a real Postgres database in its place — with their own people doing the building, so they could own and extend it after we left. The deliverable wasn't a lesson about databases; it was their database.
A 36-hour full-stack hackathon, with PulseTech
With PulseTech we ran a full-stack overnight hackathon. Engineers shipped working features end to end — including a sales forecast for their MedBox product, built from scratch in about two hours, no code written by hand.
I feel like a superhero with Claude. You can make anything. I can make any dashboard or visualization without writing a single line of code. We just built a MedBox sales forecast from scratch in about two hours.
Getting the CEO in the room, with Chhaya
The Chhaya session worked because the CEO was building alongside the team, not observing from the back. When the person who sets direction has felt for themselves what these tools can do, adoption stops being a memo and starts being the default — the mandate and the muscle memory arrive at the same time.

What people say
It works for non-engineers too. A PriyoShop copywriter who worried AI would flatten his voice left having turned ten weeks of social data into a dashboard, and shipped a landing page:
As a copywriter, I was afraid AI would cost me my voice. By the end of the training I'd built a massive dashboard from 10 weeks of social data with one prompt, and shipped a landing page for PriyoShop. My personal assistants never get tired, never get creative blocks, and give brutally honest feedback — without charging a penny.
Alex didn't just talk about AI, he showed how leaders can actually use it to think faster, decide better, and execute with clarity. This wasn't training for the sake of learning. This was capability building for scale.
The brief session with Alex brought our QA team into the AI era. Things haven't been the same since… it wasn't cheap but the ROI was insane.
Probably one of the best company investments in training I've personally ever made, or at least delivered the highest ROI. A few die hard AI fans now! Including me.
Why “build something real” sticks
A demo teaches you that something is possible. Building it yourself, with your own data, teaches you that you can do it — and that's the part that survives contact with Monday morning. The teams that win the next decade won't be the ones who attended the most AI talks; they'll be the ones whose people reach for these tools by default.
Workshops and hackathons delivered for PriyoShop, PulseTech, Jibble Group, Ling App, Chhaya, and Baniql, across Bangladesh, Thailand, Indonesia, and Malaysia. If you want this for your team, you can build a proposal in a couple of minutes — pick the modules, tell us who's joining, and we'll come back within 24 hours.