Inside Silicon Slopes Summit: A Leading Business and Technology Event
Published on
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April 10, 2026
Last updated on
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April 10, 2026
Time to read
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12
Valentina Ibinete
Marketing Lead
Silicon Slopes Summit is one of the largest and most recognized business and technology events in the world. As every year, the sixth edition took place in Salt Lake City, Utah, being celebrated for the first time at the Vivint Arena.
Bruno Bologna, our CEO, Daniel Castro and Valentina Ibinete from our Business Development team, participated in the event alongside Alex Charpentier, Director of ROAM Social, one of Kaizen’s partners based in Tacoma, Washington State.
We’d like to share our impressions about the Summit with you! Spoiler alert: if you're in Utah, don't miss it next year!
Who should attend?
The tech community in Utah is thriving, and it's not just because of all the startups that are popping up. It's because of events like Silicon Slopes Summit, where people from all over the world come together to learn about new technologies and best practices, and do networking that will help them empower their businesses.
This event has become an annual tradition for entrepreneurs, founders, tech executives—and even aspiring founders with a burning startup idea! It's also the place to be if you're looking for some big announcements from major companies in Utah's tech ecosystem. There's no better way to get plugged into what's going on in Utah than by attending this summit!
Tracks
As I walked through the doors of this year's tech conference, I encountered booths staffed by companies from all over the globe, eager to show off what they've got and meet new people. And you'll get to do it all while sipping on complimentary drinks, eating delicious food, and listening to some of the biggest names in tech.
This year's speakers hailed from Utah's own rich and diverse tech community and included big names like Allison Abraham, Chairwoman and Director of Overstock; Aaron Skonnard, Co-Founder and CEO of Pluralsight; Richard Williams, President of Utah Tech University; Dave Wright, Co-Founder and CEO of Pattern, among many more!
Silicon Slopes Summit 2022 at Vivint Arena
This year the Summit scaled down its agenda featuring +20 sessions in only 4 tracks: Community, Ethos, Future and Growth.
“We’ve done this a million different ways…”, says Clint Betts, CEO and Co-founder of Silicon Slopes. “The first year we maybe had five or six tracks…the second year, seven. One year I had twelve. What we've learned over the years is like what the community wants more condensed programming. So this year we are doing only four tracks.” 1
1. Community
Community it’s a hot topic right now, and it’s easy to see why: it can be a powerful force for good and it can bring people together in ways that are truly transformative. The sessions were about how to harness that power and influence your company at the grassroots level. To be clear, we're not talking about just any old community—we're talking about an intentional one. A community that's organized to make something happen. A community that's organized to create change.
2. Ethos
Do you ever wonder why you're doing what you're doing? What drives you to achieve your goals? How can you become a better leader, mentor, and person? These sessions were about principles.
Principles are the foundation of your business, and when you're building a house, you need a solid foundation. You can't build a house if the foundation is weak—it'll fall over. And just like houses, businesses need to have strong foundations in order to succeed.
That's why it's so important to understand your principles: they're what hold everything together. They're what keep you grounded when things get tough and help you stay focused on what matters most to you and your business.
3. Future
We’re in an age where new technologies like AI, cryptocurrencies, NFTs, decentralized autonomous organizations, are emerging every day making an impact on our community from several industries.
The sessions went around how these technologies are helping us imagine new ways of doing business and even changing how we think about ownership. They move us away from centralized systems that don't take into account the needs of people or nature and toward decentralized systems that do. They also move us away from a world where profit is king and toward one where people come first.
4. Growth
Growth is the mecca for any business but it can be a tricky thing. When your company is doing well, you want to make sure it keeps doing well by making smart decisions about how to grow and maintain growth in a sustainable way. This can be difficult, however—it's easy to get caught up in the excitement of having new customers or more revenue than last year, but if you don't have strategies in place ahead of time, then your growth might not last long enough for you to reap all of its benefits.
Morning Session hosted by Howard Wright, VP, Global Head, AWS Startups
On this track, the sessions dive into what it means to scale and how this affects business's culture, finances, and marketing strategy as well as how these things impact each other over time as the business continue expanding into new markets or hiring staff members.
Wrap up
It was a great honor to play a part in the Silicon Slopes Summit 2022. It was fun to tour together through conferences, breakout sessions, and networking opportunities with the Utah tech community. It's not every day that you get to share with over 20,000 people in the fields of entrepreneurship, technology, marketing, product design, and sales.
But on a more personal level, I certainly hope that our efforts (and those of the other creative folks working on this event) pay off, and that this becomes an annual event that helps us connect with future partners and friends.
The Silicon Slopes community is an amazingly supportive one. It's also one of the most diverse communities in Utah, attracting attendees from a variety of industries—not just tech. If you haven't yet, definitely consider checking it out! My advice? If you're in Utah, don't miss it next year.
Silicon Slopes Summit is one of the largest and most recognized business and technology events in the world. As every year, the sixth edition took place in Salt Lake City, Utah, being celebrated for the first time at the Vivint Arena.
Bruno Bologna, our CEO, Daniel Castro and Valentina Ibinete from our Business Development team, participated in the event alongside Alex Charpentier, Director of ROAM Social, one of Kaizen’s partners based in Tacoma, Washington State.
We’d like to share our impressions about the Summit with you! Spoiler alert: if you're in Utah, don't miss it next year!
Who should attend?
The tech community in Utah is thriving, and it's not just because of all the startups that are popping up. It's because of events like Silicon Slopes Summit, where people from all over the world come together to learn about new technologies and best practices, and do networking that will help them empower their businesses.
This event has become an annual tradition for entrepreneurs, founders, tech executives—and even aspiring founders with a burning startup idea! It's also the place to be if you're looking for some big announcements from major companies in Utah's tech ecosystem. There's no better way to get plugged into what's going on in Utah than by attending this summit!
Tracks
As I walked through the doors of this year's tech conference, I encountered booths staffed by companies from all over the globe, eager to show off what they've got and meet new people. And you'll get to do it all while sipping on complimentary drinks, eating delicious food, and listening to some of the biggest names in tech.
This year's speakers hailed from Utah's own rich and diverse tech community and included big names like Allison Abraham, Chairwoman and Director of Overstock; Aaron Skonnard, Co-Founder and CEO of Pluralsight; Richard Williams, President of Utah Tech University; Dave Wright, Co-Founder and CEO of Pattern, among many more!
Silicon Slopes Summit 2022 at Vivint Arena
This year the Summit scaled down its agenda featuring +20 sessions in only 4 tracks: Community, Ethos, Future and Growth.
“We’ve done this a million different ways…”, says Clint Betts, CEO and Co-founder of Silicon Slopes. “The first year we maybe had five or six tracks…the second year, seven. One year I had twelve. What we've learned over the years is like what the community wants more condensed programming. So this year we are doing only four tracks.” 1
1. Community
Community it’s a hot topic right now, and it’s easy to see why: it can be a powerful force for good and it can bring people together in ways that are truly transformative. The sessions were about how to harness that power and influence your company at the grassroots level. To be clear, we're not talking about just any old community—we're talking about an intentional one. A community that's organized to make something happen. A community that's organized to create change.
2. Ethos
Do you ever wonder why you're doing what you're doing? What drives you to achieve your goals? How can you become a better leader, mentor, and person? These sessions were about principles.
Principles are the foundation of your business, and when you're building a house, you need a solid foundation. You can't build a house if the foundation is weak—it'll fall over. And just like houses, businesses need to have strong foundations in order to succeed.
That's why it's so important to understand your principles: they're what hold everything together. They're what keep you grounded when things get tough and help you stay focused on what matters most to you and your business.
3. Future
We’re in an age where new technologies like AI, cryptocurrencies, NFTs, decentralized autonomous organizations, are emerging every day making an impact on our community from several industries.
The sessions went around how these technologies are helping us imagine new ways of doing business and even changing how we think about ownership. They move us away from centralized systems that don't take into account the needs of people or nature and toward decentralized systems that do. They also move us away from a world where profit is king and toward one where people come first.
4. Growth
Growth is the mecca for any business but it can be a tricky thing. When your company is doing well, you want to make sure it keeps doing well by making smart decisions about how to grow and maintain growth in a sustainable way. This can be difficult, however—it's easy to get caught up in the excitement of having new customers or more revenue than last year, but if you don't have strategies in place ahead of time, then your growth might not last long enough for you to reap all of its benefits.
Morning Session hosted by Howard Wright, VP, Global Head, AWS Startups
On this track, the sessions dive into what it means to scale and how this affects business's culture, finances, and marketing strategy as well as how these things impact each other over time as the business continue expanding into new markets or hiring staff members.
Wrap up
It was a great honor to play a part in the Silicon Slopes Summit 2022. It was fun to tour together through conferences, breakout sessions, and networking opportunities with the Utah tech community. It's not every day that you get to share with over 20,000 people in the fields of entrepreneurship, technology, marketing, product design, and sales.
But on a more personal level, I certainly hope that our efforts (and those of the other creative folks working on this event) pay off, and that this becomes an annual event that helps us connect with future partners and friends.
The Silicon Slopes community is an amazingly supportive one. It's also one of the most diverse communities in Utah, attracting attendees from a variety of industries—not just tech. If you haven't yet, definitely consider checking it out! My advice? If you're in Utah, don't miss it next year.
Applying changes across microservices is difficult because business logic is distributed across multiple services, each with its own data, contracts, and responsibilities.
In our experiment at Kaizen Softworks, we tested whether an AI system could safely apply coordinated changes across a microservices architecture using only minimal input.
Short answer: Yes, but only when the AI has enough architectural context.
Why are coordinated changes in microservices so hard?
In distributed systems, a single business change rarely affects just one service.
It often requires:
Updating multiple microservices
Modifying message contracts
Keeping DTOs (Data Transfer Objects) consistent
Respecting domain boundaries defined by Domain-Driven Design (DDD)
Key entities in this system:
Microservice: An independently deployable service responsible for a specific domain
Aggregate (DDD): A cluster of domain objects treated as a single unit
DTO (Data Transfer Object): A structured format used to transfer data between services
Message/Event: A communication mechanism between services
The complexity is not in the code, it’s in the relationships between components.
The experiment: Can AI reason across services with minimal input?
We designed a controlled experiment to test whether an AI model could apply system-wide changes with limited information.
Input given to the AI:
Message definitions (events between services)
DTOs (data contracts)
Tasks the AI had to perform:
Identify affected aggregates
Determine service ownership
Apply coordinated changes across services
Maintain consistency in messages and DTOs
In other words, the AI had to behave like a software architect, not just a code generator.
What was the biggest obstacle?
The biggest challenge was not technical, it was contextual.
Problem: unclear service naming
Instead of descriptive names like:
order-service
billing-service
Our services were named:
john
sally
roger
This removed any semantic clues about responsibility.
Result: The AI could not infer which service owned which domain logic.
The missing piece: aggregate ownership mapping
To solve this, we introduced a simple but powerful structure:
Aggregate → Service mapping
Order → john
Shipment → sally
Invoice → roger
This created a clear relationship between domain concepts and system components.
Once ownership was explicit, the architecture became understandable.
How we used AI to generate architectural context
Instead of building this mapping manually, we used AI to analyze the codebase and extract:
Where each aggregate was defined
Which microservice implemented it
The relationship between domain and infrastructure
The result was a machine-readable architecture map.
In practice, we used AI to generate the context that AI itself needed.
Results: Can AI safely apply distributed changes?
With the architecture map in place, the AI was able to:
Trace message flows across services
Identify affected aggregates
Locate the correct microservices
Apply coordinated updates
Maintain consistency between DTOs and messages
While not perfect, the system worked reliably as a proof of concept.
What is the real limitation of AI in microservices?
The main limitation of AI is not code generation, it’s architectural understanding.
Without knowing:
Which components exist
How they relate
Who owns what
AI cannot safely modify a distributed system.
AI performance depends more on context quality than model capability.
When can AI safely modify microservices?
AI works well when:
Aggregate ownership is clearly defined
Message contracts are explicit
Architecture is structured and consistent
AI struggles when:
Naming is ambiguous
Relationships are implicit
Context is incomplete
Simple rule: If the architecture is clear, AI can reason. If not, it guesses.
Final thoughts
This experiment revealed something important:
AI doesn’t fail because it can’t write code. It fails because it can’t see the system.
As teams move toward AI-assisted development, the focus will likely shift from:
Writing better code to Designing better systems for machines to understand
At Kaizen Softworks, we see this as a foundational shift.
Because when AI can understand architecture, it doesn’t just generate code, it helps evolve systems.
There's a myth that in flat organizations, everyone decides on everything.
That's not how it works. At least not at Kaizen.
When people hear "no managers," they often picture one of two extremes: either total chaos where nobody is accountable, or endless meetings where 80 people vote on which coffee to buy. The reality is neither.
Not everyone decides on everything. Not everyone votes. What we do have is a clear set of decision-making methods that we choose based on context.
It depends on who's affected and how deep the impact goes
Before choosing how to decide, we ask ourselves a few questions:
Who is affected? A decision that only impacts one team doesn't need the whole company involved. A decision that affects everyone's daily work does.
How deep is the impact? Changing the office furniture is wide but shallow. Changing the salary model is deep and lasting.
Is it reversible? If we can easily undo it, we can move fast and just inform. If it's hard to reverse, we slow down and include more people.
How urgent is it? And here we're careful to distinguish real urgency from anxiety, the pressure to decide quickly because someone already has "the answer" in mind.
These dimensions help us pick the right method. Not every decision deserves the same process.
Our decision-making toolkit
Over the years, we've landed on a few methods that we use depending on the situation:
1. Role-based decisions
Some decisions belong to a specific role. If someone owns a responsibility, say, office logistics or hiring for a team, they decide within that domain. No committee needed. The key is that roles are transparent: everyone knows who owns what, and the scope of each role's authority is clear.
2. Advice Process
When a decision doesn't clearly belong to one role, or when it crosses boundaries, we use the advice process. Here's how it works:
Someone takes the initiative. They identify the problem and own the process.
They gather input from people who are affected and people with expertise.
They seek advice, real conversations, not rubber-stamping.
They make the decision and communicate it, including what advice they incorporated and what they didn't (and why).
The decision-maker is not a committee. It's one person (or a small group) who takes responsibility. But they don't decide in isolation, they bring in the perspectives that matter.
We sometimes call this "Team Advice" when a working group forms around an issue that doesn't naturally fall into anyone's area, and "Area Advice" when a team opens up a topic that exceeds their own scope.
3. Consent (not consensus)
Consent is not "everyone agrees." Consent means "no one has a strong enough objection to block this." We do use a poll, but not to count votes — we use a 1-to-5 scale to measure the level of agreement and surface objections, not to let the majority rule.
We use it in two flavors:
High-participation consent: For decisions with deep, company-wide impact. This is our most expensive and slowest method, which is exactly why we reserve it for high-impact decisions that affect many people. The Board sets the boundaries, for example, when we moved offices, they defined the monthly budget. Then a working group produced proposals, collected feedback, evolved them, and the whole company expressed their position for the final decision. Silence is not approval; we explicitly ask people to weigh in, even if it's just "I have no objection."
Lightweight consent: For decisions that are broad but not deep. Participation is optional, anyone who's interested can jump in. We share the proposal, open a window for objections, and if nobody opposes, we move forward. This gives us speed without sacrificing transparency. If nobody engages, that's a signal too, maybe the proposal doesn't add enough value, or we're using the wrong channel.
4. Inform, don't fake-consult
Not everything needs participation. When a decision has already been made through a legitimate process, the right move is to inform, not to fake-consult. One of the fastest ways to kill self-management is to ask for feedback and then ignore it. If you're not going to change course based on input, don't ask for it, just be transparent about the decision and the reasons behind it.
What we explicitly avoid
Decision by Voting. In a company context, majority rule creates losers. And losers become detractors, often generating more resistance than an autocratic decision would have. Instead of voting, we prefer to evolve a proposal through feedback until it's "good enough for now," and then introduce a review point to adjust later. If voting happens at all, it's the cherry on top, not the main course.
The "surprise" approach. Working behind closed doors and then unveiling a finished decision is a recipe for frustration. Adults don't need surprises. Adults need to feel like they're part of the process. The complaints that follow a surprise aren't about the decision itself, they're about not being included.
Why we work this way
We didn't adopt these methods because they're trendy. We adopted them because they solve real problems:
Better decisions. When you include affected people, you get information you wouldn't have had otherwise. Ideas emerge that no single person would have come up with alone.
Less resistance. A person who feels heard is far less likely to resist a decision, even one they wouldn't have made themselves.
Faster execution. It sounds counterintuitive, but participative decisions often execute faster because people already understand and support them. The time you "save" by deciding alone, you spend later managing pushback.
Distributed authority. When people can make decisions within their domain without escalating everything to a founder, the organization scales. The bottleneck disappears.
Resilience. If a shared decision fails, the group adjusts together. If a top-down decision fails, the blame falls on one person and the chances of proactive correction drop.
The real principle behind all of this
Transparency is the foundation. Every method we use, from role-based decisions to high-participation consent, works because information flows openly. People know what's being decided, who's deciding it, and how they can participate.
Horizontal doesn't mean structureless. It means fewer hierarchical levels, clearer roles, and intentional decision-making processes that match the weight of each decision.
Not everyone decides on everything. But everyone knows how things get decided.