Nick Ayton
Boards are being asked to make irreversible capital decisions on AI, quantum and biotech without a credible internal voice on where these technologies are actually heading. The default response is to delegate the question to consultants who repeat last year’s consensus. That leaves the most consequential bets on the desk of leaders without the technical horizon to make them.
Nick Ayton is a futurist and ten-time tech founder who helps boards, investors and family offices read the commercial implications of AI, quantum computing, blockchain and longevity science before competitors do.
Full Profile
Why organisations work with Nick Ayton
- Five decades inside computer science and ten founded start-ups give him a working operator’s view of where deep tech actually breaks, not a consultant’s slide on where it might.
- He translates AI, quantum and longevity science into capital allocation questions a CFO or investment committee can act on, which is rare among futurists who stop at the trend.
- Cointelegraph’s Blockchain Visionary of the Year (2018) and the founding “Sage of Shoreditch” column make him a named voice in the formative debate over Bitcoin, Web3 and digital assets.
- His Living to 150 book and ongoing work on AI-assisted healthcare give him a specific, defensible position on longevity, a topic most technology speakers cannot credibly hold.
- He chairs global summits where deep tech meets investor capital, including the Family Office Summit in Abu Dhabi, so the audience he speaks to most often is the one buyers are trying to reach.
Biography highlights
- Author, Living to 150: A New Era in Personalised AI Healthcare (December 2024).
- Founder of Crix.io, a regulated crypto-exchange, and Chainstarter Ventures, advising family offices on deep tech investment.
- Named Blockchain Visionary of the Year by Cointelegraph (2018); founding writer of the “Sage of Shoreditch” column.
- Named Top Futurist Speaker at the Family Office Summit, Abu Dhabi (2023).
- Has delivered keynotes and faculty addresses at MIT, Harvard, LSE and Berkeley, alongside more than 100 global summits.
- Contributor to Cointelegraph, Irish Tech News, Medium and CryptoCoin.news, with a body of writing spanning AI, quantum, blockchain and longevity.
Biography
Most futurist commentary on AI, quantum and longevity stops at the trend line. Ayton’s work starts where the boardroom question starts: what does this technology mean for the next ten-year capital decision? After five decades in computer science and ten founded companies, he speaks to investors and operators in their own language.
His early move into blockchain produced Crix.io, one of the first regulated crypto-exchanges, and the Cointelegraph column that named him Blockchain Visionary of the Year in 2018. The “Sage of Shoreditch” writing remains a reference point in the formative period of digital assets, when most institutions were still deciding whether to take the category seriously.
The work has since broadened into quantum computing, synthetic biology and longevity science. His 2024 book Living to 150 sets out a specific argument for personalised AI healthcare as the next investable frontier, and he advises family offices on how to position capital around it. He chairs global summits where this audience gathers, including the Family Office Summit in Abu Dhabi.
What separates Ayton from the futurist field is the audience he was built for. Family offices, founders, and the investment committees behind frontier-tech bets do not want a vision deck. They want someone who has built companies in the category, taken the losses, and can name which signals matter. That is the brief he answers.
Key speaking topics
- Artificial intelligence and the next decade of enterprise value
- Quantum computing and its commercial timeline
- Blockchain, Web3 and digital asset infrastructure
- Longevity sciences and personalised AI healthcare
- Frontier technology investment for family offices
- Synthetic biology and biological computing
- Capital raising and venture strategy in deep tech
Ideal for
- Boards and investment committees making long-horizon capital decisions on AI, quantum or biotech
- Family offices and private capital allocators positioning around frontier technologies
- Founders and CTOs in deep tech who need a credible external voice on category direction
- Financial services and fintech leaders mapping the next wave of digital asset infrastructure
Audience outcomes
- A clearer read on which deep tech signals carry commercial weight and which are noise
- A working vocabulary for AI, quantum and longevity that holds up in front of technical and capital audiences
- Specific examples of where capital is already moving in frontier tech, drawn from family office and founder networks
- A sharper sense of which technology bets compound over a decade and which expire within two