Barco, a global technology company that builds visualisation and collaboration systems, wanted its people to experiment with AI across their own domains. The programme ran simultaneously across five countries: Belgium, Taiwan, the United States, the United Kingdom and the Netherlands, spanning R&D, commercial and product development teams.
The split was deliberate: learn and practise with internal tools, discover and find inspiration with external ones, with the usual care for confidential data. Every sprint carried a contest: a real question, open to all participants, judged by peers. Winners were announced in the plenary sessions and received a physical encouragement award: a Clippy built from building blocks, the accidental mascot of everything AI-related that nobody asked for but everyone recognised. In the third sprint, each domain ran its own contest, introduced in a short video by a manager from inside that domain posing a problem they were actually facing.
The live sessions ran twice on the same day to cover thirteen time zones: a European-morning slot for Taiwan and Europe, a European-afternoon slot for the United States and Europe. Each drew over two hundred of four hundred participants. Reach per assignment hovered around twenty-five percent, which is high for a voluntary, multi-site programme.
Several contest outcomes were taken into daily processes afterwards. The programme turned AI experimentation from a private hobby into a shared practice across an entire global workforce.
From trying alone to learning together, across five countries and 13 time zones.