Quantum Keynote Speakers

Quantum computing is a fundamentally new form of computation based on quantum mechanics. Instead of classical bits that are zero or one, it uses qubits that leverage superposition and entanglement to explore many possibilities at once, enabling new approaches to complex simulation, optimisation and secure communications.

The industry is accelerating rapidly. The global quantum computing market is forecast to grow from about USD 3.5 billion in 2025 to roughly USD 20 billion by 2030, a compound annual growth rate of 41.8%. This pace of change makes it essential for organisations to understand the strategic impact. Hiring a quantum computing keynote speaker helps leaders grasp real-world opportunities, risks and how to prepare for quantum-enabled innovation.

Alex Hern

AI Writer for The Economist & Former UK Technology Editor at The Guardian

Corey O’Meara

Chief Quantum Scientist at E.ON Digital Technology & Co-Founder of NovaSpraytec

Cristina Criddle

Technology Correspondent for the Financial Times Specialising in AI & Social Media

David Gee

AI-Aware Cyber Risk Authority, Global-Head of Technology & CISO Leader, Bain, JS Careers & Emertel Advisor

Dr Alex Connock

Senior Fellow at Oxford University, Professor of Media & Artificial Intelligence, Award-Winning AI Educator & Routledge Author

Dr Radhika Dirks

AI Advisor, Founder & CEO of XLabs & Ribo AI, Among Deloitte’s Top Women in the AI World & Forbes’ 30 Women in AI to Watch

Erica Farmer

Co-Founder of Quantum Rise Talent Group & Finalist in the 2025 Speaker Awards

Ian Beacraft

CEO and Chief Futurist of Signal and Cipher

Ilya Feige

Global Head of AI and Machine Learning for Cerberus Technology & Former Teaching Fellow for Harvard University

Krysta Svore

Vice President of Applied Quantum Computing Research at NVIDIA

Oscar Diez

Head of the Quantum Computing Sector at the European Commission

Quantum computing is a fundamentally different approach to computation that harnesses the strange but powerful principles of quantum mechanics. Classical computers use bits that are either 0 or 1 to represent information, whereas quantum computers use quantum bits, or qubits, which can exist in a superposition of states, effectively allowing them to represent many possibilities at once and explore vast solution spaces simultaneously. Core quantum phenomena such as superposition, where a qubit can be both 0 and 1 at the same time, and entanglement, where qubits become deeply correlated so the state of one instantly affects another, give quantum machines their potential edge over classical systems for certain problem types. Quantum computers operate using quantum circuits composed of quantum gates that manipulate qubits based on these principles, enabling fundamentally different computation strategies for tasks classical computers struggle with, such as simulating complex physical systems or solving optimisation problems with many interacting variables.

Although still in early stages, quantum computing is rapidly progressing from theoretical research toward practical application, with a growing ecosystem of hardware, software and algorithm development. Real-world experiments are already demonstrating potential impact, for example, a recent collaboration between IBM and HSBC reported a 34% improvement in prediction accuracy for quantum-assisted financial modelling compared to traditional methods. As the complexity and scale of quantum processors continue to improve and hybrid quantum-classical workflows become more viable, industries such as pharmaceuticals, materials science, logistics and finance are all exploring quantum strategies to gain a competitive advantage. For organisations seeking to navigate this emerging frontier, hiring a keynote speaker on quantum computing can provide clarity on how this technology works, where it matters most, and how to prepare strategically for the opportunities and challenges ahead, turning abstract scientific promise into actionable business insight.