Reflecting on the 3rd Global IT Summit and what it means for the future of UK business
There’s a particular kind of energy in a room when people stop talking about collaboration and actually start practising it. That was the City Hall conference floor last Wednesday and Thursday, where the 3rd Global IT Summit brought together business leaders, educators, technologists, local government figures and community voices for two days that were less about polite networking and considerably more about getting under the skin of where growth, prosperity and resilience actually come from in 2026.
Digital Media Technology Solutions (DMT Solutions) was proud to support and sponsor the Summit, and having sat through the panels, fireside chats and the inevitable corridor conversations that often turn out to be the most valuable part of any conference, we wanted to do more than say thank you. We wanted to unpack what was actually said, and why it matters to anyone running a business right now.
What Was the Global IT Summit, Exactly?
Now in its third year, the Global IT Summit has built a reputation as one of the more substantive gatherings on the Indian/UK business and technology calendar, not a trade show with a technology theme bolted on, but a genuine cross-sector convening of business, education, government and community stakeholders working through the practical mechanics of growth.
This year’s agenda reflected that ambition. Across two days, sessions covered AI and Cloud Computing, London as a Global Fintech Corridor for Cross-Border Transactions, Women in Technology, Cyber Security, Data Analytics and Quantum Computing, the Indo-UK Free Trade Discussion, and a fireside chat on AI for Digital Transformation in Manufacturing 4.0. The Deputy Mayor of London for Business and Growth, Howard Dawber, also joined to speak on the importance of cross-regional collaboration as London plans its next phase of economic expansion with the Indo-UK Free-Trade Agreement (FTA).
If that list looks broad, that’s deliberate. The organisers clearly understand something we see daily in our own work with clients: growth doesn’t happen in a single department or down a single channel. It happens at the intersection of technology, finance, talent, trade and trust, and increasingly, no single business solves all five in isolation.
When Did It Happen, and Why Does the Timing Matter?
The Summit ran on the 10th and 11th of June 2026, at City Hall, and coincided with London Tech Week. The timing is worth pausing on. UK businesses are currently navigating a genuinely unusual mix of pressures: rising operating costs, tightening margins, a fast-maturing AI landscape that’s shifted from hype to implementation, and a renewed push for international trade corridors as the UK looks to diversify beyond its traditional partners and partner with India.
In that context, a Summit built around AI adoption, fintech infrastructure, cyber resilience, data strategy and international trade isn’t just timely, it’s almost a checklist of the exact pressure points keeping business owners and C-suite leaders awake at night. When the Deputy Mayor of London for Business and Growth uses his platform to talk about cross-regional collaboration, that’s not ceremonial language. It’s a signal that the conditions for growth are increasingly being built collaboratively, between public and private sectors, rather than waiting for.
Why This Matters to Your Business (Even If You Weren't in the Room)
Here’s the part that’s easy to miss if you treat conference recaps as nostalgia pieces for attendees. The themes covered at the Global IT Summit aren’t abstract industry chatter; they map almost exactly onto the operational decisions sitting on most leadership teams’ desks this year.
AI and Cloud Computing:Â The conversation has moved well past “should we adopt AI” into “how do we deploy it without creating new chaos.” Businesses exploring AI chatbots, intelligent agents, and machine learning-driven process automation are no longer early adopters taking a risk; they’re catching up to an operational baseline. The organisations winning here are the ones treating AI as an infrastructure decision, not a marketing one.
London as a Global Fintech Corridor: Cross-border transaction infrastructure, open banking, and frictionless international payments are quietly becoming a competitive differentiator. Businesses still routing international payments through legacy, multi-step processes are absorbing cost and delay that more technologically integrated competitors simply aren’t.
Cyber Security:Â Every digital transformation initiative expands the attack surface. As businesses adopt more cloud infrastructure, AI tooling, and open banking connectivity, cyber resilience ceases to be an IT department concern and becomes a board-level risk management priority.
Data Analytics and Quantum Computing:Â The data conversation has shifted from “we collect a lot of data” to “we need that data to actually talk to itself.” Data silos remain one of the most persistent and underestimated drags on operational efficiency in mid-sized and enterprise businesses alike.
Indo-UK Free Trade:Â With trade discussions between the UK and India continuing to develop, businesses with ambitions in manufacturing, technology services or cross-border commercial relationships have a genuine window to position early, rather than reacting once frameworks are finalised.
AI for Manufacturing 4.0:Â The fireside chat on AI-driven digital transformation in manufacturing underscored a theme we hear constantly from clients in industrial and production sectors: the businesses pulling ahead are the ones using AI for predictive operations and process optimisation, not just back-office automation.
How DMT Solutions Connects to Every One of These Conversations
This is where we’ll be candid rather than coy: we didn’t just attend the Global IT Summit out of professional curiosity. We supported it because every single theme on that agenda sits squarely inside the work we do daily for our clients.
On AI and technology optimisation:Â DMT Solutions builds AI chatbots, intelligent agents and deep learning-driven automation that remove inefficiency from real business processes, not theoretical ones. Whether that’s customer-facing AI agents, internal workflow automation, or bespoke software that finally gets your systems talking to each other instead of operating as isolated silos, this is core to our Technology division.
On data flow and open banking: We use open banking technology to remove data silos and let financial and operational data move freely across your organisation, which is precisely the infrastructure challenge underpinning London’s ambitions as a fintech corridor. Our open banking payment gateway allows for frictionless banking, reducing transaction costs, financial compliance, instant payouts, simplified invoicing, and payment gateway consolidation.
On cost efficiency: A conversation we’d argue deserves its own seat at every business growth summit. Our Commercial Procurement Solutions division operates with the buying power of an FTSE 250 company. That’s not a marketing line; it’s a structural advantage that lets us negotiate energy, telecoms, business insurance, payment terminals, waste management and business rates contracts at rates individual businesses, even substantial ones, typically cannot access alone. Through rigorous cost audits and supplier renegotiation, we routinely identify savings of up to 60% on overheads that most finance directors assume are already optimised. If digital transformation is about doing more with what you have, procurement optimisation is about freeing up the capital to fund that transformation in the first place. It’s a free, no-obligation audit, and for many of the businesses we work with, it’s the single highest-ROI conversation they’ll have all year.
On growth strategy and market positioning: Whether it’s an Indo-UK trade opportunity, a fintech ambition, or simply scaling marketing and lead generation through AI-led SEO, PPC and content strategy, our Digital and Media divisions exist to help businesses translate ambition into a measurable go-to-market plan.
In other words, the Summit didn’t introduce us to new ideas. It confirmed, from a room full of credible, experienced voices across business, government and academia, that the problems we solve every day are exactly the problems sitting at the top of the UK business agenda in 2026.
A Word of Thanks
None of the above diminishes the real purpose of this piece, which is gratitude. The Global IT Summit doesn’t happen without genuinely generous people giving their time, expertise and energy.
Thank you to our panellists, speakers and those who contributed: Natalia Pickett, Subhayu Ray, Maurizina De Silva, Dr. Anthony A. Avornyo, Debdut Mondal, Jack Francis Kelly, Martin Mackay, Dean Williams, Yelena Mackay, Mahesh Ramachandran, Deeksha Ahuja, Nayan Gala, Paul Hu, Roop Bhadury, Niranjan Ramakrishnan, Shivalkar Paramanandam, Anandh Kannan, Allen Sam, Mohit P, Stuart Kerr for the depth and candour of their insights.
Thank you to our volunteers and contributors  Ashash Y and Siri Manjunatha, whose work behind the scenes made two demanding days look effortless.
A special thank you to our Master of Ceremonies, Radhika Iyer, for steering the room with skill and warmth throughout.
Thank you to the Deputy Mayor of London for Business and Growth, Howard Dawber, for joining us and reinforcing just how seriously London’s leadership is thinking about regional collaboration as a growth lever. And thank you to every attendee who showed up not just to listen, but to question, challenge and connect.
Official photography and video from the Summit are still being processed, so we’re working with phone imagery and some ‘unofficial photos,’ yet the conversations and connections made in that room were the real output of the event, and no camera fully captures that.
What's Next?
If the Summit left you thinking about where AI, data, procurement or growth strategy fits into your own business plan, we’d encourage you to keep that thread going.
DMT Solutions offers a free, no-obligation cost audit across energy, telecoms, insurance, business rates and more; often the fastest way to free up budget for the transformation projects discussed at events like this one.
The Global IT Summit reminded everyone in that room that growth is rarely a solo pursuit. We’ll be carrying that thinking into every client conversation we have between now and the next one.





