TechCrunch Disrupt 2026: Speaker Proposal Deadline Closes Today
Today is the final day to submit a speaker proposal for TechCrunch Disrupt 2026. What this means for those working in the Claude ecosystem and applied AI.
If you have something concrete to share about how you're using AI in production—whether with Claude Code, MCP servers, or custom agents—today is your last chance to pitch it from the stage of one of the year's most widely covered technology events. TechCrunch announced this morning that the deadline for submitting speaker proposals for TechCrunch Disrupt 2026 expires today, May 29, 2026.
This is no minor call for speakers: Disrupt is the showcase where product teams, investors, and media converge for days. A well-executed talk can open conversations that would take months to surface through other channels.
What's Being Asked and Who Should Care
The call is aimed at those with genuine perspective on trends shaping the technology industry right now. TechCrunch hasn't publicly detailed selection criteria beyond asking that proposals provide insights that help shape industry conversations. The key, as with any serious speaker call, is avoiding product pitches disguised as editorial content.
For the ecosystem we follow at ClaudeWave, several thematic areas fit naturally with what's being built today:
- Agents in real production: teams that have deployed sub-agents with Claude Code to automate complex workflows, with real metrics on cost, latency, and reliability.
- MCP as an integration standard: adoption of the Model Context Protocol has grown significantly in recent months. There are practical experiences—good and bad—that deserve greater public visibility.
- Hooks and lifecycle automation: using hooks in Claude Code to orchestrate events like `PreToolUse` or `PostToolUse` remains sparsely documented outside specialized forums.
- Governance and control in LLM systems: a concern increasingly weighing on engineering teams relying on models like Claude Opus 4.7 or Claude Sonnet 4.6 for critical tasks.
Format Matters as Much as Content
Disrupt blends formats: panels, individual talks, live demos. Not all proposals fit equally well across formats. If your work has a visual or interactive component—say, a live demo of an agent responding to external tools in real time—that approach typically captures programming teams' attention better than a slide presentation.
It also pays to be realistic: speaking slots at events of this scale are limited and selection is competitive. Submitting today doesn't guarantee anything, but not submitting guarantees nothing will happen.
How to Submit Your Proposal
The application form is available directly through the TechCrunch Disrupt website. Since today is the deadline, don't wait until the last minute: submission systems for deadline-driven calls tend to get overwhelmed. The original announcement doesn't specify the exact closing time, so it's wise to submit as soon as possible.
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Here at ClaudeWave, we value that events like Disrupt maintain an open proposal process: it's one of the few ways small technical teams can reach large audiences without intermediaries. The fact that the deadline is today isn't an excuse to rush the proposal, but it is a reason not to procrastinate further if you've had the idea rolling around for weeks.
Sources
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