StudierAI at the Night of Ideas 2026: AI for Young People’s Vision

StudierAI at the Night of Ideas 2026: AI for Young People’s Vision
StudierAI at the Night of Ideas 2026: AI for Young People’s Vision
StudierAI alla Notte delle Idee 2026: AI per la visione dei giovani

What is the most common mistake in the way students use AI tools in studying or at work?Night of Ideas 20263) Take care of your personal presentation. All you need is a 15-second mini-pitch: degree program + interest + what you’re looking for. Example: “I’m in my second year of Economics, I’m interested in AI’s impact on marketing. I’m looking for ideas for a project and contacts for an internship.”Simple and memorable.StudierAI4) Networking without anxiety: focus on quality. Between a talk and a panel, pick one person, ask a specific question, listen, and close with a clear request: “May I message you on LinkedIn to ask for a resource?” or “Would it make sense if I sent you my CV for feedback?”.start for free5) Follow up within 24–48 hours. A short message with context (“We spoke at the Night of Ideas”), a thank-you, and a micro-proposal (a question or a resource). The follow-up is where the event becomes an opportunity.

StudierAI at the Night of Ideas: AI tools to plan your career and build connections

StudierAI at the Night of Ideas: AI tools to plan your career and build connections
Notte delle Idee 2026 a Palazzo Farnese: perché conta per gli studenti

During the evening, many ideas will be inspiring. The risk, however, is walking away with scattered notes and no next step. That’s whereStudierAIcomes in: practical support for students who want to use AI in aresponsible, results-orientedway, especially when it comes to planning careers and professional relationships.Charting the path of tomorrow – Young people’s visionBefore the event, you can use AI-based tools to:

Clarify goals: turn vague interests into a 30-day plan with micro-actions (courses, projects, readings, applications).quality contentExplore paths: compare possible roles and understand which skills are truly missing between you and your goal.people to meetStrengthen your profile: improve your CV and LinkedIn with a focus on results, projects, and keywords consistent with the industry.AI for university studentsDuring the event, AI helps you be more effective without being artificial: you prepare a short pitch, note the essential information (name, role, topic discussed, next step), and turn every conversation into a sensible follow-up. After the event, you can reorganize the takeaways into a roadmap: what to study, who to reconnect with, which opportunities to keep an eye on.

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who we are. The Night of Ideas can be an evening that “inspires you,” or a turning point that gets you organized: the difference is made by preparation and continuity.also means recognizing one point: university is no longer just “study and then work,” but learning to navigate a market in which roles and skills change rapidly.the future of artificial intelligenceis not a slogan: it’s a set of tools and processes that are already rewriting how information is found, how content is produced, how data is analyzed, and how decisions are made.

For a student, the question isn’t “will AI replace me?”, but:how can I use it to increase my valueand to make more informed choices. In practice, the most common challenges today revolve around four areas:

  • Orientation: understanding which roles really exist (and which are emerging) beyond “classic” titles.
  • Skills: distinguishing between “trendy” skills and transferable skills (writing, analysis, problem solving, collaboration, data literacy).
  • Career choices: deciding where to specialize without closing doors, creating a “T-shaped” profile (broad base + one depth).
  • Impact: understanding the ethical and social implications of AI (bias, privacy, transparency) and how to talk about them credibly.

In this context, events like the Night of Ideas work like “mirrors”: they allow you to test your intuitions against different perspectives (academic, institutional, professional) and to understand which questions are worth pursuing over the coming months. If you leave the event with 2–3 clear priorities (one skill to develop, one project to start, one person to reconnect with), you’ve already made a real step up.

How to prepare for the event (and really make the most of it): questions, goals, and networking

Going to an event without preparation is like opening ten browser tabs and then saving nothing. To make the most of the evening, set a simple plan:goal, questions, contacts.

1) Define a goal in one sentence. Examples: “understand which AI skills are required in my field,” “find an idea for a thesis/project,” “meet 3 people who work in related areas.” A clear goal helps you choose which panels to attend and who to talk to.

2) Prepare 5 “good” questions. Not generic (“what do you think about AI?”), but situated. Some useful examples for students:

  • What is one skill you see underestimated by new graduates in your field, but that really makes the difference?
  • What kinds of projects (thesis, internship, volunteering, hackathon) are most credible for breaking into the sector?
  • What is the most common mistake in the way students use AI tools in studying or at work?

3) Take care of your personal presentation. All you need is a 15-second mini-pitch: degree program + interest + what you’re looking for. Example: “I’m in my second year of Economics, I’m interested in AI’s impact on marketing. I’m looking for ideas for a project and contacts for an internship.”Simple and memorable.

4) Networking without anxiety: focus on quality. Between a talk and a panel, pick one person, ask a specific question, listen, and close with a clear request: “May I message you on LinkedIn to ask for a resource?” or “Would it make sense if I sent you my CV for feedback?”.

5) Follow up within 24–48 hours. A short message with context (“We spoke at the Night of Ideas”), a thank-you, and a micro-proposal (a question or a resource). The follow-up is where the event becomes an opportunity.

StudierAI at the Night of Ideas: AI tools to plan your career and build connections

During the evening, many ideas will be inspiring. The risk, however, is walking away with scattered notes and no next step. That’s whereStudierAIcomes in: practical support for students who want to use AI in aresponsible, results-orientedway, especially when it comes to planning careers and professional relationships.

Before the event, you can use AI-based tools to:

  • Clarify goals: turn vague interests into a 30-day plan with micro-actions (courses, projects, readings, applications).
  • Explore paths: compare possible roles and understand which skills are truly missing between you and your goal.
  • Strengthen your profile: improve your CV and LinkedIn with a focus on results, projects, and keywords consistent with the industry.

During the event, AI helps you be more effective without being artificial: you prepare a short pitch, note the essential information (name, role, topic discussed, next step), and turn every conversation into a sensible follow-up. After the event, you can reorganize the takeaways into a roadmap: what to study, who to reconnect with, which opportunities to keep an eye on.

If you want to arrive at the evening with a plan already in place,sign up for freeand set your goals. And if you’re interested in the project behind the platform and how it works with students, take a look atwho we are. The Night of Ideas can be an evening that “inspires you,” or a turning point that gets you organized: the difference is made by preparation and continuity.

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