Sesame Summit 2026 – application open

Exploring the SaaS Universe

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Where should we begin for those who may never have heard of B2B Rocks? What sets this event apart from other events?

Like similar events, we like technology for the wealth creation, innovation, and opportunities created. However, we are also excited by our industry’s possibilities. Technology entrepreneurship is creating a worldwide network of optimistic problem solvers with shared values precisely when our world needs these types of people.

So for B2B Rocks, our industry is really about people and disruption.

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This year’s central theme is “How Tech and entrepreneurship can empower change?” Why such an impact-driven theme?

We believe innovation should lead to better outcomes for people and the Earth. Otherwise, what is the point? Look at technology’s promise.

Take Fintech: FinTech can increase access and reduce costs to financial services. FinTech can positively impact peoples’ lives, especially in the developing world. Or IoT and Big Data which can improve how we manage water. Managing water is vital to our collective economic and personal well-being. Better water management could even help prevent wars. Technologies like AI, Big Data, and 5G, along with empowered people, will help us revolutionize whole industries.

The key to bringing these solutions to market is empowering people. We want entrepreneurship to spread to the four corners of the globe. Growing talent is critical both to the continued expansion of our industry and the Planet. It is also why we support Women-In-Tech and 1% for the Planet.

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How will this year’s event be structured?

Many founders and industry influencers will share their experiences on June 9 & 10 on various subjects from growth to international scaling on all themes, including marketing, sales, customer success, raising capital, bootstrapping, PLG, etc., with particular attention paid to increasing proximity and knowledge exchanges.

Participants can schedule Braindates or facetime with the speakers, and the evenings will wrap up with music, beverages, and networking, emphasizing attendee facetime with people whose success they’d like to replicate.

Finally, we added a third day, the 11th, focusing on team building and networking activities.

The conference is drawing attention from numerous leading companies worldwide. What makes B2B Rocks so valuable to a global audience?

Well, in one word opportunity.

Start-up investment and value creation in Europe are booming. Europe not only has over 65 cities with unicorns, most in the world but just a dynamic, diverse, deep technology ecosystem of start-ups and scale-ups of all sizes.

Entrepreneurs want to know how to do it. Investors want to know who is doing it. And corporations, once innovation laggards, are now very interested in using technology to disrupt instead of being disrupted.

Everybody is paying attention because not only are all the industry indicators pointing up, but the rate of innovation and value creation is accelerating across Europe and the world.

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What makes B2B Rocks such a great opportunity for SaaS entrepreneurs?

How and who builds great companies is changing.

Before, start-ups were the domain of an intrepid elite with the right combination of education, access to capital, and courage. And because SaaSes didn’t exist, they built more from scratch, slowing innovation while increasing risk.

Thanks to SaaSes and the democratization of tech entrepreneurship, the risks, time-to-market, and capital needed to start a company, all the historic barriers have been significantly reduced.

The results? Looking at the numbers, tech entrepreneurship and the rate of innovation continue to accelerate.

What are the investors most excited about at B2B Rocks this year?

Many people like to ominously state the obvious that there is more money than ever waiting to be invested. Somehow believing a lot of money is a bad thing.

The truth is investors are increasingly sophisticated, and so are entrepreneurs. Today’s start-ups start with a more substantial business foundation than ever. Not every company will become a unicorn. Some ideas can create huge profits by serving a niche or being acquired.

Investors are savvy people. They understand the correlation between market size, people power, ideas, and financial opportunity. Europe and the world check all the right boxes.

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What are some key learnings attendees can expect to take away from the event?

Today, the fastest way to build the technology behind a company is often using pre-existing SaaS services, no-code/low-code, and off-the-shelf infrastructure for many services.

Similarly, the fastest way to build your organization, your talent, your value proposition, and get funded is to co-opt the ideas of successful entrepreneurs who have gone before you.

B2B Rocks is an opportunity to learn about the latest lego blocks, both ideas, and technology you can use to build your company and, of course, do some networking.

Regarding the World Pitch Contest, what opportunities will participants have to connect with investors or other ecosystem players thanks to the competition?

Starting at the top, the four finalists will present in Montpellier Capital Risk along with other start-ups, in addition to the prizes offered.

Additionally, just being at the event and speaking with investors will provide many opportunities for young companies to hone their skills and get visibility.

Pitching is one thing. The experience of meeting and being vetted by investors takes it to a whole other level.


Join us at B2B Rocks in Montpellier (June 9-10) & get your tickets for free by using our code GNO!EO% smrs.link/B2BRocks

© All photos courtesy of B2B Rocks

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Event strategy for VC

When I started working in VC, conferences were treated as a nice extra. Something you sprinkled on top of a sourcing strategy that lived elsewhere, often in a partner’s address book. Being an investor meant you mainly had to spend a few days out of the office per week for dealflow meetings, you attended the occasional panel slot if you had a friend on the programme team, shared a few tweets and that was it. But today conferences are part of the core marketing infrastructure that keeps the firm in the flow of founders, operators, LPs and peers. These events act as a pretext to re-engage with warm or cold leads, whether a fund is at the beginning of their investment cycle or deep in fundraising for their next flagship fund.  Every tech city has its own flagship event. If you are a generalist VC, chances are you can easily identify 20 conferences that you are expected to show up at, and 40 that you could attend.  So, where do you start? How do you really decide whether it’s a good reason to attend? Most investors only see the tip of the iceberg: the logo of the headline conference. They rarely see the resource constraints that come with executing the field work. That tension creates too familiar operational dramas for marketing teams, including last-minute “Where is my ticket?” message, partner demands for main-stage slots, and the flurry of FOMO driven interest because another prestigious fund has been announced as a partner. And yet, despite common belief, investors don’t attend conferences for the parties.  When I look at the 100 plus conferences I have attended over my career, I tend to group the real reasons into 10 buckets. 1. Qualified dealflow Good conferences act as magnets. They pull in the startups that are relevant for a specific thesis, geography or stage. For generalist VCs, niche events are a way to see a concentrated sample of the market in two days. For more specialist firms, these events are a way to go deeper into a vertical, and to be visible in that niche. 2. On-the-shelf networking Conferences provide “on the shelf networking”: the infrastructure of meetings, lounges, apps and social events is already built. You simply step into it. For investors, that is valuable across several fronts: they can connect with  founders and future founders, operators for senior hires, practical experts and   LPs exploring new funds.  3. LPs and the (secret) permanent fundraise Most funds are always fundraising. Events that attract LPs are therefore particularly attractive. Even a handful of good LP conversations can justify several days out of the office, especially if this involves underground Berlin (Super Return) or a roundtrip to the French Riviera (IPEM).  4. Media relationships Some partners only have meaningful conversations with journalists at conferences, mainly because engaging with the media is not part of their day-to-day routine. For them, conferences provide an efficient way to concentrate press engagement in one place without having to pitch themselves. For marketers handling complex logistics across several markets, an event is often the one moment where the stars align. 5. Thesis signalling Good investors have local-based theses and want to attract dealflow consistently across several years, whether or not they have cash to invest. Attending Stockholm-based conferences is a way to say, “we are serious about the Nordics” without having to buy billboards in the airport (although some folks do exactly that). In that sense, VCs and event organizers are sometimes competing as community enablers. Both are trying to become the natural node for a given ecosystem. 6. Speaking and thought leadership Speaking slots are a form of social currency in venture – and comes with a few perks such as “speaker dinners”. Many partners enjoy being on stage and the status premium associated with it. I guess there’s a reason why some people are more interested in how they will look like on their Slush stage picture than what they are going to say. Beyond ego, speaking opportunities give VCs a platform to articulate their thesis, test a narrative in front of a live audience, and attract founders at the very top of the funnel. Some of the best inbound I have seen has come within a week of a talk. A founder who heard a line and followed up. A journalist who spotted a quote for a later story. Someone who waited backstage with a pitch. This is part of why VCs can be VERY intense about speaking slots. From their perspective, stage time is not simply a visibility perk. It is a key input into the marketing engine. 7. Curation Some conferences have a strong reputation for curation. You trust that if you turn up at TEDx, DLD, or similar events, you will be challenged and inspired. For investors who spend most of their year buried in spreadsheets, this is attractive. Alas, I think the content quality has nosedived these last couple of years so it’s less true. 8. Portfolio support Serious investors use conferences to help portfolio companies with commercial introductions, support them on talent hunting, offer stage visibility and access to LPs, journalists, and peers. When a portfolio company is having a big moment, everything else tends to rearrange around it.  9. IRL experiences Many VC franchises have grown used to operating digitally. What is often missing is a reliable in person interface for the broader community around the fund. Conferences solve this by using those moments to crystallise the community you are building.  A simple breakfast, an LP catching up with several of your founders in one afternoon: these are small touches, but repeated over ten years they are part of how trust compounds.  10. Watching to competition Conferences are one of the few places where you can literally see how competitors behave with founders, with LPs, with the media and with each other. Who is always surrounded by founders. Who is quietly building a niche. Who is sponsoring heavily in a

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Europe’s defence technology sector is witnessing unprecedented investment momentum, driven by shifting geopolitical realities and increasing demand for autonomous surveillance solutions. At the forefront of this transformation sits Rift, a Paris-based startup that has just secured €4.6 million in Series A funding to build Europe’s first on-demand aerial reconnaissance network. The round was led by AlleyCorp, the New York-based venture firm known for backing enterprise technology companies. This investment signals growing transatlantic interest in European defence tech capabilities, particularly as NATO allies prioritise technological sovereignty and autonomous reconnaissance systems. AlleyCorp leads aerial reconnaissance funding round AlleyCorp’s decision to lead this round reflects a broader strategic shift among US investors towards European defence technology startups. The firm, which has previously backed companies like MongoDB and Paperless Post, sees significant potential in Rift’s approach to democratising aerial intelligence gathering across civilian and military applications. “Rift’s technology addresses a critical gap in the European surveillance market,” noted a spokesperson from AlleyCorp. “Their ability to deploy on-demand reconnaissance missions using autonomous systems represents exactly the kind of dual-use innovation we expect to define the next decade of defence technology.” The investment comes at a time when European governments are accelerating defence technology procurement, with the EU’s European Defence Fund allocating €8 billion for collaborative defence research and development programmes. This regulatory tailwind positions Rift advantageously within a market expected to reach €24 billion by 2027. Building Europe’s autonomous surveillance network Rift’s platform combines advanced drone technology with artificial intelligence to provide real-time reconnaissance capabilities across multiple sectors. Unlike traditional surveillance methods that require significant infrastructure investment, the company’s on-demand model enables clients to access aerial intelligence through a software-as-a-service platform. The startup plans to use the funding to expand its autonomous fleet and enhance its AI-powered analytics capabilities. With operations currently focused on France and Germany, Rift aims to establish coverage across major European markets by 2026, positioning itself as the continent’s primary alternative to US-based surveillance providers. “European organisations need surveillance solutions that comply with GDPR and other regional privacy regulations,” explained Rift’s CEO. “Our platform is built from the ground up with European data sovereignty in mind, something that resonates strongly with both government and enterprise clients.” This funding positions Rift to compete directly with established players like Palantir and Anduril, whilst offering European clients the regulatory compliance and data localisation they increasingly demand. As defence technology becomes increasingly intertwined with civilian applications, Rift’s European-first approach may prove to be its strongest competitive advantage.

energy infrastructure funding, grid technology investment, BESS funding
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