CSRBOX with AICTE Hosted a High-Level, Closed-Door Pre-Summit Event in Bengaluru Ahead of ..........
CSRBOX, in collaboration with the
All India Council for Technical Education (AICTE), convened a high-level,
closed-door pre-summit event ahead of the India AI Impact Summit 2026 at The
LaLiT Ashok, Bengaluru. The invitation-only convening brought together
policymakers, academia, industry leaders, and civil society organisations to
deliberate on the future of AI-led skilling, workforce readiness, and inclusive
innovation across India.
Highlighting the importance of
collaborative ecosystem-building in accelerating AI adoption, Mr Bhomik Shah,
Founder & CEO, CSRBOX Group, said, “The India AI Impact Summit aims to
catalyse collaboration across government, industry, academia, and development
partners to ensure AI adoption remains inclusive and outcome-driven. This
pre-summit convening is an important step toward building scalable skilling and
workforce transformation models for India’s AI future.”
Aligned with the Summit’s vision
of enabling an accessible and inclusive AI future for the Global South,
discussions focused on strengthening education and employment ecosystems to
ensure equitable participation in India’s digital transformation across Tier 1,
Tier 2, Tier 3, and emerging geo-cluster regions.
Senior leadership from AICTE
outlined national efforts to embed Artificial Intelligence across technical
education through curriculum modernisation, interdisciplinary learning
pathways, mandatory internships, faculty development programmes, and expanded
research fellowships. The dialogue highlighted the growing need to strengthen
faculty preparedness and deepen industry engagement to accelerate the
translation of academic research into industry-relevant solutions.
Dr N. H. Siddalinga Swamy,
Advisor II, All India Council for Technical Education (AICTE), Government of
India, chairing the convening, emphasised the scale of AI integration and the
importance of institutional readiness. He stated that,
“AI is now embedded across
engineering disciplines in more than 1,000 institutions, and strengthening
faculty readiness and industry collaboration will be critical to translating
learning into real-world applications.”
The convening also featured
distinguished dignitaries, Dr Y. P. S. Berwal, Director, Directorate of
Technical Education, Government of Haryana; Dr Shobha G, Director, Department
of Collegiate Education, Government of Karnataka; Mr John Hongray, Assistant
Director, North Eastern Regional Office, AICTE; and Mahip Singh, CEO,
Innovation Hub, Dr A.P.J. Abdul Kalam Technical University (AKTU), Government
of Uttar Pradesh. They shared policy and state-level implementation
perspectives on strengthening AI-driven workforce development ecosystems across
regions.
More than 40 leaders from
corporates, government institutions, academia, and implementation agencies
participated in the dialogue, sharing insights from AI skilling pilots,
workforce readiness programmes, and partnership models integrating technology,
financing, and last-mile implementation. Industry participation included
Capgemini, Lenovo India, EY GDS, IBM, Biocon, Zscaler, Hitachi, Cognizant
Foundation, GE Healthcare, Bosch India Foundation, Kyndryl, and Oracle,
reflecting growing private sector engagement in strengthening India’s AI talent
ecosystem.
Participants emphasised the
importance of transitioning from standalone training initiatives to integrated
ecosystem models linking skilling programmes with employment, entrepreneurship,
and innovation pathways. Anurag highlighted the need for the industry to move
beyond short-term training interventions and contribute to end-to-end skilling
models that connect learning with real employment outcomes and workforce
transition pathways.
Discussions also underscored the
importance of embedding ethical, transparent, and human-centric AI principles
into education and workforce development frameworks. Rumi emphasised the need
to integrate responsible AI practices into skilling programmes to build trust
and ensure inclusive and equitable technology adoption across diverse
communities.
State representatives and
implementation partners further highlighted challenges related to curriculum
relevance, digital infrastructure, programme continuity, and alignment between
skilling interventions and career pathways. These insights informed emerging
geo-cluster-based implementation approaches aimed at improving scalability and measurable
employment outcomes.
The pre-summit dialogue will
contribute to the development of a principle-based collaborative charter
guiding cross-sector partnerships and policy alignment under the India AI
Impact Summit 2026, with a focus on advancing responsible and scalable AI
adoption across sectors.































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