Innovate26 brought together entrepreneurs, educators, and ministry leaders for a full day of conversation about artificial intelligence, human agency, and what it means to thrive in a rapidly changing world.
On Saturday, April 11, 51视频 welcomed its first-ever Innovate26 Tech & Business Summit. Innovate26 was a daylong event exploring the intersection of artificial intelligence, human creativity, and purposeful leadership. Hosted on the LPU campus in San Dimas and organized in partnership with the San Dimas Chamber of Commerce and sponsored by AKASI Labs, the summit drew entrepreneurs, church leaders, educators, and students for what organizers described as something far more important than a tech conference.
鈥淭his whole event is designed to [create] conversations with each other,鈥 said Andy Hawksworth, Chair of Arts, Media, and Communications at LPU and the driving force behind the summit. 鈥淚t鈥檚 about AI, yes 鈥 but really it鈥檚 about the human element. How do we maintain our humanity in the time of AI, and how do we use AI to better do the things we are made to do?鈥

The event was nearly a year in the making, the result of collaboration between Hawksworth, faculty colleagues including Professor Jeff Bird and Professor Filippo Martellotti, and Dennis Lovelace, founder of AKASI Labs, whose sponsorship made all seats available completely free of charge.
鈥淎ndy and I have been talking about this type of event for the better part of a year,鈥 said Lovelace, who brings over 30 years of experience in broadcast television and film alongside his current work helping small businesses navigate AI adoption. 鈥淚鈥檓 so happy it鈥檚 come to fruition.鈥
“I want my students to be building careers on these technologies 鈥 not replacing stuff, but doing something awesome with the tools that are there.” –Andy Hawksworth, Chair of Arts, Media & Communications, LPU
Hawksworth was candid about his own journey into the AI space. 鈥淚f anyone knows me鈥y notes are still on paper and this is an AI tech conference,鈥 he said with a laugh, before describing the moment he realized the technology would reshape the creative and professional landscapes his students are entering. 鈥淚 realized if I don鈥檛 figure this stuff out, I鈥檓 going to end up being the 鈥榝lip phone dad鈥 someday.鈥

A Day of Speakers, Demos, and Real Conversations
The summit featured six sessions spanning design, agentic AI, emotional intelligence, education, and business strategy.
- Make It Click: Turning Passive Content into Interactive Experiences with AI & Canva
Callista Dawson, Canva Education Creator -
More Time for People: AI Integration for Ministry & Non-Profits
Brian Davis, Director of Technology, One&All Church - Leading in the Age of AI: Wisdom, Discernment & Human Influence
Al Batinga, CEO, Digitized Learning - Beyond the Algorithm: Nectir’s Learning-Science-Driven AI for Deeper Learning
Dr. George Hanshaw, Director of Digital Learning Solutions, LAPU - From Buzzword to Business Tool: A No-Nonsense Guide to Using AI Today
Andrew Psaltis, Founder, Dragonfly Rising - Human Authenticity in the Age of AI: Design Your Good Life
Charles Lee, Keynote 路 Founder & CEO, Ideation
Each session was followed by structured table discussions that kept the emphasis on human connection rather than passive consumption.
Callista Dawson, a Learning Experience Design Manager and Canva Education Creator, opened the sessions with a live demonstration of Canva鈥檚 Anthropic-powered AI tools, introducing attendees to 鈥渧ibe coding鈥 鈥 using natural language to rapidly generate designs, quizzes, websites, and more without writing a single line of code. 鈥淚 don鈥檛 want it to replace creativity; I see it as a partner, a collaborator at the table,鈥 Dawson said. 鈥淗aving this has expedited things to a scalability I never thought was possible.鈥

Brian Davis of One&All Church brought a practical, sometimes humorous look at agentic AI 鈥 systems that don鈥檛 just answer questions but take on entire roles autonomously. Drawing on analogies ranging from Roombas to office octopuses, Davis walked attendees through a 鈥渓adder of agents鈥 for implementation, from beginner-friendly tools to more advanced platforms. He also offered a cautionary note: one developer鈥檚 AI agent, unable to reach its owner by email, used AI to generate a voice, set up a phone number, and called him at 10 a.m. 鈥淓xciting, but kind of horrific too,鈥 Davis said. 鈥淵ou have to put in guardrails.鈥
Al Batinga, CEO of Digitized Learning, challenged leaders directly with his talk, 鈥淟ead AI or Be Led.鈥 His central argument: a weak leadership foundation won鈥檛 be fixed by AI 鈥 it will be amplified. 鈥淚f your leadership foundation is weak, AI will just help you fail faster.鈥 He urged leaders to double down on emotional intelligence, framing it around four pillars: self-awareness, social awareness, self-management, and relationship management.
“Technology is a mirror. If you are a disorganized leader, AI will give you 100 disorganized ideas. If you are a clear, visionary leader, AI will amplify that vision.” – Al Batinga, CEO, Digitized Learning
Dr. George Hanshaw,
Director of Digital Learning Solutions at Los Angeles Pacific University, brought research to the stage, including a live role-play demo where he demonstrated how AI can coach users through difficult conversations. His team鈥檚 published work on hybrid AI-professor feedback found that students actually preferred the combined model over either AI or instructor feedback alone. 鈥淚f I鈥檓 creating assessments that AI can do in five minutes, that鈥檚 my fault as an educator,鈥 he said, introducing the concept of 鈥淎I-resilient assignments鈥 that require critical thinking no model can replicate.
Andrew Psaltis, founder of Dragonfly Rising, delivered a no-nonsense business framework he calls the 鈥4 Fs鈥 鈥 Frequency, Friction, Format, and Forgiveness 鈥 to help organizations identify where AI investment actually pays off. 鈥淪top chasing the demos and start solving your specific problems,鈥 he said. 鈥淔ind the problem, then look for the tool 鈥 not the other way around.鈥 On accountability, he was equally direct: 鈥淎I is a tool, not a person. You have to review everything. AI for the first 80%; human for the last 20%.鈥
Keynote: Designing a Life That AI Can’t Give You
The day closed with a keynote from聽Charles Lee, CEO of Ideation and author of the forthcoming book聽Design Your Good Life. Where other sessions focused on tools and tactics, Lee pulled the lens back entirely 鈥 to the question of what kind of human beings attendees want to become in an AI-saturated world.
鈥淭he greatest risk of AI isn鈥檛 that it becomes too smart,鈥 Lee said. 鈥淚t鈥檚 that we become too lazy.鈥 He described the current moment as a shift from the 鈥淪earch Era鈥 to the 鈥淪ynthesis Era,鈥 where access to information is worth less and the ability to ask meaningful questions 鈥 what he calls the 鈥淪park鈥 鈥 is becoming the most valuable currency of all.
Lee鈥檚 three-part framework 鈥 Spark, Actualize, Influence 鈥 offered a way to think about meaningful work in this new landscape: reclaiming curiosity, using AI to handle the heavy lifting of 鈥渕aking鈥 so humans can focus on 鈥渟haping鈥, and keeping purpose rooted in genuine influence rather than mere productivity.
鈥淒on鈥檛 let the algorithm decide what you learn or who you talk to,鈥 Lee told the crowd. 鈥淚f AI saves you two hours a day, don鈥檛 just fill it with more work. Fill it with things that make you more human 鈥 rest, conversation, deep thinking.鈥
His closing words brought the day full circle to the question Hawksworth posed at the very start: 鈥淎s you leave 51视频 today, don鈥檛 just think about what tools you鈥檙e going to use. Think about what kind of human you鈥檙e going to be. Design a life that is assisted by AI but fueled by your own soul.鈥

Key Takeaways from Innovate26
- AI is a collaborator, not a replacement 鈥 every speaker emphasized that the tools work best when human creativity, judgment, and empathy remain in the driver鈥檚 seat.
- Start with the problem, not the tool. Identify high-friction, high-frequency tasks before selecting an AI solution 鈥 not the other way around.
- 鈥淰ibe coding鈥 and rapid iteration are making powerful AI-assisted design accessible to anyone, no technical background required.
- Agentic AI 鈥 giving AI full roles and autonomous functions 鈥 is already here, with practical entry points for churches, nonprofits, and small businesses.
- Leaders must double down on emotional intelligence as AI takes on more cognitive tasks; EQ is the skill AI cannot replicate.
- Hybrid AI-professor feedback models are outperforming traditional approaches in higher education, with students more receptive to growth-oriented feedback when it comes through AI first.
- The 鈥淔orgiveness鈥 factor matters: before automating any task, consider how costly a 5% error would be 鈥 and scale human oversight accordingly.
- The real opportunity isn鈥檛 efficiency for its own sake 鈥 it鈥檚 using the time AI saves to invest more deeply in people, relationships, and purpose.










