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How to build a startup like a sports team

“Dmitry Zaytsev, founder of Dandelion Civilization, explains that startups succeed not by speed alone but by learning velocity. He argues founders must design environments like elite sports teams—built on micro-cycles, trust, and adaptability—to cultivate sustainable, high-performance growth.”

Startups often celebrate speed as if it is a strategy. Move quickly, pivot aggressively, outwork the competition and hope that momentum compensates for uncertainty. But real performance in early stage companies does not come from speed alone. It comes from structure. And the structure that young companies need looks much closer to a high performance sports team than a traditional organisation.

Sports teams operate in an environment of limited time, limited resources and unpredictable challenges. They succeed not by pushing harder but by learning faster. Their advantage comes from the deliberate way they train, reflect, adjust and repeat. The business world is moving toward the same reality. Markets shift weekly, new tools emerge constantly and roles shape themselves around whatever the product becomes next. Output alone cannot keep pace with this degree of movement. Only learning can.

A New Competitive Advantage: Learning Velocity
This is the real transformation happening in the talent economy. Performance is no longer something to manage. It is something to cultivate. It is a property of the system that surrounds people, not only the individuals themselves. The companies that will survive the next decade are those that treat performance as a training challenge, not an administrative one.

Harvard Business Publishing describes this transition through the idea of “speed to skill.” Instead of competing on fixed strengths, organisations now compete on how quickly they can build new capabilities and apply them before the next shift hits. The companies that win are the ones that learn faster than the environment changes.

Elite sports teams operate exactly this way. They measure their readiness not by what they did last season but by how quickly they can improve before the next opponent arrives. Startups should pay attention to this logic, because the conditions are remarkably similar. Both operate under pressure. Both face high volatility. Both must make decisions with incomplete information. And both depend on teams small enough that a single bad week can shift the trajectory of the entire organisation.

What startups should take from sports teams
Traditional performance systems are not built for this. They rely on long cycles, backward looking metrics and rigid expectations. McKinsey’s work on talent and capability building shows that organisations prepared for the future do not rely on such structures. They invest in environments that allow rapid skill development and immediate application inside real work. 

Sports teams mastered this long before companies did. They train through micro-cycles. A contained period of focus. A stretch of intensity. A short interval for reflection. A reset, followed by a new cycle. This pattern builds adaptability without burning people out. It creates consistent improvement because the feedback loops are short, specific and clear. Mistakes are addressed within hours or days, not postponed until the end of the season.

Startups benefit from the same structure. Micro-sprints create momentum and clarity. They break down complexity into manageable segments. They allow the team to see real progress and real gaps quickly. Over time these cycles become culture. People learn to expect improvement, not just activity. They learn to treat challenges as training opportunities rather than threats.

The Founder as Coach, Not Commander
In this environment, the founder cannot lead like a traditional manager. The role is closer to a coach. A commander gives instructions. A coach shapes thinking. A commander focuses on tasks. A coach focuses on conditions. A commander demands results. A coach builds environments in which results become natural.

Gallup’s research demonstrates this shift clearly. Only a small minority of employees feel that performance is managed in a way that motivates them. People respond to clarity, consistent conversations and environments where learning is connected to real outcomes.

Sports teams know this instinctively. Training is not a formality. It is the core of the work. A great coach sees patterns, anticipates friction points and builds structures that strengthen the team’s cognitive and physical system. Early stage founders must adopt the same mentality. Their job is not to push their teams harder. It is to design the environment that produces clarity, trust and improvement.

Trust is the multiplier behind every high performing team. It is not an emotional preference but a cognitive requirement. Google’s Project Aristotle illustrates this point. After studying hundreds of teams, the strongest predictor of performance was psychological safety. Teams capable of speaking honestly, admitting mistakes and sharing half-formed ideas outperformed teams with higher levels of experience or intelligence. 

Psychological safety is the foundation of real performance because learning requires vulnerability. A team cannot train effectively if every mistake feels dangerous. In sports, the entire training environment is designed to surface weaknesses early before they become catastrophic during competition. Startups need the same principle. If your team hides uncertainty, avoids risk or plays small to avoid being wrong, your learning velocity collapses. And when learning collapses, the organisation becomes fragile regardless of how talented the individuals are.

Deloitte’s Human Capital Trends report highlights the same idea through the tension between output and outcomes. Organisations that treat performance solely as a matter of deliverables find themselves unable to adapt. Organisations that balance execution with capability development place themselves ahead of the curve when conditions shift.

Designing Startups Like High Performance Teams
For founders, the message is simple. You are not building a workforce. You are building a cognitive system that must learn under pressure. You are building the environment in which your team becomes faster, clearer and more capable week after week. You are building the architecture that makes performance possible.

Sports teams thrive because performance is built into the rhythm of their season. They do not rely on hope or heroics. They rely on training environments that sharpen attention, clarify roles and transform individual effort into collective strength. Startups that embrace this philosophy gain resilience. They stop reacting to volatility and start training for it. They grow not by working more but by learning better.

The companies that understand this will move with greater clarity. They will adapt faster than competitors. They will scale capability instead of stress. They will build teams that can survive uncertainty rather than collapse under it.

Performance is not something you demand. It is something you design. And the smartest startups are learning what sports teams have known all along. You do not scale effort. You scale the system that makes improvement inevitable.

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$15M fund to support Indian startups in Saudi Arabia

India Accelerator (IA), India’s leading multi-stage, fund-led accelerator, is set to launch its accelerator program in Saudi Arabia, backed by a dedicated $15 million fund to support Indian startups entering and scaling in the Kingdom. The initiative is supported by the National Technology Development Program’s (NTDP) Empowering Accelerators product, advancing Saudi Arabia’s growing innovation mandate under Vision 2030.

The initiative will focus on startups across AI, Sustainability, Electric Mobility (EV), PropTech, and DeepTech- sectors closely aligned with the Kingdom’s Vision 2030 priorities and NTDP’s mission to accelerate technology-led economic transformation.

The first cohort, scheduled for launch in March 2026, will support 8–10 high-potential startups, providing them with structured market-entry support, regulatory guidance, access to local partnerships, and investor connectivity. Applications for the inaugural batch opened on December 8, 2025, and remained open until February 28, 2026.

Ashish Bhatia, Founder, India Accelerator, said: “Saudi Arabia is emerging as one of the world’s most forward-looking innovation markets. Through this partnership with NTDP, we aim to offer Indian startups a trusted, structured pathway to scale in the Kingdom. This collaboration reinforces our commitment to enabling cross-border expansion and building meaningful linkages with global innovation ecosystems.”

Ibrahim Neyaz, CEO of the National Technology Development Program (NTDP), added: “Saudi Arabia and India are home to two advanced startup ecosystems. Through our partnership with India Accelerator, we are opening new pathways that enable Indian entrepreneurs to collaborate with Saudi partners, tap into the Kingdom’s evolving technology and investment landscape, and contribute to the growth of its digital economy. This partnership strengthens the connection between our ecosystems and helps deepen long-term collaboration between the two countries in technology and investment.”

The partnership with NTDP establishes a strong foundation for deeper engagement across the GCC, expanding India Accelerator’s global footprint and advancing its mission to support founders beyond domestic markets.

The National Technology Development Program (NTDP) is a flagship initiative of Saudi Arabia, dedicated to accelerating the Kingdom’s digital economy and positioning it as a global hub for emerging technologies. NTDP drives growth by enabling startups and technology companies through strategic funding, international partnerships, policy integration, and talent development.

Through Products spanning venture financing, incubation and acceleration, R&D-industry collaborations, and global scaling programs, NTDP empowers local and international entrepreneurs to innovate and expand from Saudi Arabia to the world. Aligned with Vision 2030, NTDP is unlocking opportunities in deep tech including AI, robotics, semiconductors, health, and sustainability; while catalyzing job creation, investment, and GDP growth.

India Accelerator (IA), the country’s preeminent seed-stage startup accelerator, and the recipient of the “Best Accelerator of the Country” award from Start-up India in 2022. Our commitment to fostering innovation and supporting upcoming founders has consistently positioned us at the forefront of the Indian start-up ecosystem. Along with the Accelerator, we are also very active in early-stage investments through its Joint Venture ‘Finvolve’ and its 3 AIFs & a Gift City Fund. IA is not just about funding; it is a holistic ecosystem enhancer that provides startups with the necessary tools, mentorship, and network to thrive in the competitive landscape.

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Factorial Capital closes $25 million Fund II

Factorial Capital, an early-stage venture capital firm pioneering a new model for AI investing, announced the close of its $25 million Fund II. The fund will continue Factorial’s thesis of backing technical founders who code, investing at the angel, pre-seed and seed stages in companies building at the frontier of newly possible technology.

Fund II is $25 million and builds on the success of Factorial Capital’s $10 million “proof of concept” Fund I, which includes ten companies already valued at least five times Factorial Capital’s entry price, including Modal, recently valued at over $1 billion. More established firms, such as Sequoia, a16z, Lux, Lightspeed, Red Point and Felicis, have led later-stage rounds in these Factorial portfolio companies.

Matt Hartman founded Factorial Capital in 2023 after spending nearly a decade at Betaworks writing the very first checks into successful technical founders like Hugging Face, Anchor (acquired by Spotify) and others. He founded Factorial after recognizing that technical founders were often best positioned to recommend new investments and wanted to build a model that creates deep alignment to identify the best new technical startups.

Factorial Capital’s model is inspired by Citadel’s multi-manager hedge fund structure, adapted for early-stage venture capital. Factorial partners with a highly curated set of technical founders, including the founders of Venmo, Giphy and Hugging Face, who identify standout companies within their networks. The firm splits its 20% carry evenly, with 10% going to Factorial GP and 10% to the sourcing partner based on the profit they drive.

“Successful early-stage investing in the AI era requires genuine technical understanding, not just pattern matching on traction or pedigree,” said Matthew Hartman, Founder and General Partner of Factorial Capital. “Venture firms are growing institutionalizing at the same time that technology is moving faster than ever — this creates a mismatch at the earliest stage, where experienced VCs can’t write big enough checks and those with finance backgrounds are poorly suited to evaluate the technology.  At the same time, many of the best technologists want to build, not raise capital and run funds. Factorial’s network of exceptional technologists solves both problems by partnering with proven technical founders who bring deep expertise and proprietary dealflow. We don’t care about markets. We care about technical teams with insight into what’s newly possible, backing them early and with conviction.”

“Factorial’s model allows me to focus on my strengths: identifying exceptional technical founders in my network and supporting them on product strategy, while partnering with Matt on investment decisions and helping the founders raise their next round of capital. having the partnership of an institutional fund: Matt’s partnership on investment decisions and ability Matt’s investment experience and the benefits of an institutional capital behind me,” said Iqram Magdon-Ismail, co-founder of Venmo and Factorial Investing Partner. “I see companies being built by people in my network before they’re on anyone’s radar and Factorial gives me the capital and infrastructure to act on that conviction. The economics are structured like a real partnership, and Matt and the team bring the venture expertise to help these founders succeed beyond the initial check.”

Factorial’s portfolio includes Modal (AI hosting infrastructure), Factory AI (AI scoring agents),  Pika (AI video generation)Causal Labs (AI-driven weather prediction for businesses), White Circle (LLM-driven cybersecurity), among others. The firm has become recognized as a strong signal for technical quality in the early-stage AI ecosystem.

Founded in 2023 by Matt Hartman, the first investor in Hugging Face and a nearly decade-long investor at Betaworks, Factorial operates out of New York City and invests in founders who code at the intersection of AI infrastructure, B2B productivity, consumer AI and emerging technology categories.

With Fund II, Factorial will continue to scale its distributed sourcing model, partnering with additional technical founders while maintaining its focus on early-stage companies building at the frontier of what’s newly possible.

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Goldman Sachs opens new office in Riyadh

Goldman Sachs today announced the official opening of its new office and regional headquarters (RHQ) in Riyadh, Kingdom of Saudi Arabia. Located in the King Abdullah Financial District (KAFD), the new office reflects the firm’s ongoing commitment to Saudi Arabia and gives Goldman Sachs the capacity to grow its presence in the Kingdom. Goldman Sachs has had a presence in Saudi Arabia since 2008.

Anthony Gutman, Co-CEO of Goldman Sachs International & Co-Global head of Investment Banking: “The opening of this new office underscores our belief in Saudi Arabia’s transformative journey under Vision 2030 and its rapidly evolving economy. We are committed to contributing to Saudi Arabia’s economic transformation efforts, by continuing our role as an enabler of the import of world-class expertise, human capital and financial capital that meet the evolving needs of the Saudi market.”

Omar Alzaim, CEO Goldman Sachs Saudi Arabia: “This is an important milestone for Goldman Sachs in Saudi Arabia where we continue to expand our local presence since our establishment in 2008. Today’s opening of our new office underscores our unwavering commitment to Saudi Arabia, our ambitious growth plans, and the considerable opportunities we see for doing business within the Kingdom in our four main businesses of investment banking, markets, asset and wealth management.”

Sultan Alobaida, Chief Commercial Officer of King Abdullah Financial District Development and Management Company: “We are excited to welcome Goldman Sachs to KAFD as we expand our community of prestigious global and local institutions. As the business spine of the Kingdom, KAFD continues to be a leading destination for businesses establishing regional headquarters in Saudi Arabia, shaping a world-class business ecosystem aligned with Saudi Vision 2030.”

 

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MENA Startup Funding Slows Sharply in November 2025

Investment activity across the MENA startup ecosystem slowed significantly in November 2025, with 35 startups raising a combined $227.8 million. That marks a steep drop from the $784.9 million recorded in October and a 12% decline compared to November last year. The pullback reflects a market in consolidation mode as funds rebalance portfolios after an unusually active year, as reported by Wamda.

More than half of November’s total was driven by a single debt-backed transaction from erad, which propelled Saudi Arabia to the top of the regional leaderboard. The Kingdom attracted $176.3 million across 14 deals, accounting for more than three-quarters of all capital deployed during the month.

Capital Concentrates in Five Markets
Despite activity spanning 35 startups, funding was tightly concentrated in just five countries. Following Saudi Arabia’s dominant lead, the UAE secured $49 million across 14 deals. Egypt recorded $1.12 million from four transactions, Morocco logged $1.1 million through two deals, and Oman registered one undisclosed round. Beyond these markets, investment activity was minimal, underscoring growing selectivity as the year draws to a close.

Fintech Rebounds on Debt Momentum
Sector-wise, fintech reclaimed its lead, raising $142.9 million across nine deals, largely driven by the same debt-heavy transaction that defined the month. E-commerce followed with $24.5 million across six rounds, while proptech, which topped October’s charts, slipped to third with $18.9 million raised by three startups. The mix highlights investor preference for revenue-linked and utility-driven models, with fintech maintaining structural appeal as consumer-facing sectors grow more cautiously.

Early-Stage Equity Dominates, Late-Stage Absent
Debt overshadowed equity in November, with more than $125 million raised through a single transaction. The remainder was channelled almost entirely into early-stage startups, while no late-stage rounds were recorded—signalling investor caution amid valuation resets. B2B startups captured the lion’s share, with 20 companies raising $197.1 million. B2C ventures lagged, securing just $22.2 million, with the rest split across hybrid models.

Gender Gap Widens
Further Male-led startups absorbed 97% of capital raised in November, leaving only a marginal share for female-led and mixed-gender teams. The disparity remains structural rather than cyclical, showing no signs of narrowing.

Signals for 2026
While November marked the quietest month of the quarter, the slowdown does not indicate structural weakness. Instead, it reflects recalibration after a year dominated by sovereign-backed and foreign-led investments. The absence of late-stage equity, the dominance of debt, and Saudi Arabia’s concentration suggest investors are preserving firepower for 2026.

The coming year is expected to be shaped by mega rounds in AI and adjacent industries. November appears less a warning sign than a pause before the next acceleration cycle, according to Wamda.

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Qwacks raises SAR 1.8 million from Merak Capital

Qwacks, a Saudi gaming technology startup building next-generation tools for game developers, has raised SAR 1.8 million in pre-seed funding from Merak Capital, a Saudi-based investment firm licensed by the Capital Market Authority. The investment marks a significant milestone for one of the earliest companies in Saudi Arabia focused on developing core technology for game creation and live operations.

As the Kingdom’s game development ecosystem expands, demand for advanced infrastructure and developer-focused tooling is emerging rapidly. Local studios are seeking platforms that help them build, test, and scale their projects more efficiently, creating a growing need for homegrown technology that supports this shift from consumer participation toward production and creation.

Founded in 2024, Qwacks is developing a unified technology layer designed to streamline the entire lifecycle of game development. The platform includes three complementary products: Flock, a scalable Backend-as-a-Service for online and multiplayer games; Protokite, an AI-enhanced playtesting system that connects developers with real players; and DataDuck, a market intelligence engine that aggregates data from platforms to help studios validate ideas and identify market opportunities.

The new funding will accelerate the expansion of Qwacks’ technology stack, enabling the company to enhance its platform, deepen product integrations, and serve a wider network of studios across Saudi Arabia and the broader region. It will also support the company’s efforts to strengthen operational capabilities as demand for locally built gaming technology continues to rise.

Abdulelah Alsharif, Vice President at Merak Capital, added: “At Merak, we continue to invest in the people and platforms shaping the future of Saudi Arabia’s gaming sector. Qwacks is addressing a clear gap in the ecosystem and doing so with a vision that aligns with the Kingdom’s broader ambitions. We see their work as a meaningful step toward building the technical foundations that will enable local studios to thrive.”

Anas Alsahli, CEO and Co-founder at Qwacks, commented: “Merak’s investment marks a major milestone for Qwacks. It allows us to accelerate the development of our unified platform and bring advanced backend, playtesting, and market intelligence tools to more studios across the region. Our mission is to give developers technology that removes friction, shortens production cycles, and helps them build better games, and this partnership moves us significantly closer to that goal.”

 

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Türkiye’s Paribu acquires CoinMENA for $240 million

Türkiye’s leading digital asset platform Paribu announced that it has acquired CoinMENA, the largest local crypto exchange in the Middle East and North Africa (MENA), in a transaction valuing the company at up to USD 240 million.

The deal represents Türkiye’s largest fintech transaction to date and the country’s first cross-border acquisition of a digital asset platform. It also underscores the ongoing consolidation of the global digital asset industry, as established regional players seek greater scale, regulatory strength, and broader market reach.

With this acquisition, Paribu will expand its operations from its home market in Türkiye into a region with high crypto adoption. Through CoinMENA, the local entity licensed by Dubai’s Virtual Assets Regulatory Authority (VARA) and the Central Bank of Bahrain, Paribu will access two active digital asset licenses. This expanded regulatory footprint positions Paribu as one of the region’s few regulated multi-jurisdiction operators and supports its strategy of compliance-driven growth into new markets.

Paribu is among Türkiye’s leading companies in the digital asset and fintech sectors, pursuing a growth roadmap focused on regulatory compliance, product innovation, and geographic expansion. In 2024, Paribu introduced Paribu Custody, Türkiye’s first and only digital asset custody provider powered by its proprietary multi-layered security technology, ColdShield®. In October 2025, the Capital Markets Board (CMB) authorized Paribu to establish a brokerage firm, marking its entry into the capital markets. The acquisition of CoinMENA further strengthens Paribu’s role as a regional fintech leader.

Founded in 2020 by Talal Tabbaa and Dina Sam’an, CoinMENA is a licensed crypto asset service provider operating under Bahrain and Dubai regulatory authorities. CoinMENA has raised nearly 20 million USD in total funding from investors, including BECO, Arab Bank Switzerland, Circle, and Bunat Ventures. The platform now serves more than 1.5 million users across 45 countries, offering access to over 50 cryptocurrencies and supporting multiple local currencies across the MENA region.

Yasin Oral, Founder and CEO of Paribu, said: “This transaction is a turning point not only for Paribu but also for the digital asset and broader finance ecosystem in Türkiye and the MENA region. With this acquisition, we have expanded our licensed operations to a wider geography, becoming a regulated player in one of the world’s most crypto-adoptive markets. We are proud to be leading Türkiye’s largest fintech acquisition and its first international digital asset platform deal.”

“CoinMENA, the leading local crypto exchange in the MENA region, is an ideal partner for our regional expansion,” Oral continued. “With this step, we are opening a new chapter in Paribu’s growth journey, extending our presence into the MENA region and contributing to the ongoing consolidation of the global digital asset industry, building on the strong foundation we have established in Türkiye.”

Talal Tabbaa and Dina Sam’an, Co-Founders of CoinMENA, said in a joint statement: “The MENA digital asset market continues to grow and mature, and joining forces with Paribu will help accelerate that momentum. By combining CoinMENA’s regional expertise with Paribu’s technology, we are poised to develop a comprehensive suite of digital asset products for users across Türkiye and the MENA region. This acquisition is the most transformative milestone in CoinMENA’s history. Paribu’s investment validates the strength of what we have built, and together we aim to set new standards for access and innovation in the region’s digital asset space.”

 

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Batch 10 of Sanabil Accelerator by 500 Global announced

500 Global and Sanabil Investments announce the tenth batch of the Sanabil Accelerator by 500 Global. This new cohort aims to foster innovation and drive growth across various sectors, including AI, cybersecurity, data infrastructure, e-commerce, e-commerce enablement, fintech, and martech. Out of 735+ applications received, nine promising companies have been selected for their potential to build from MENA to the world. These nine companies stood out for demonstrating real traction, deep customer understanding, and technology that could scale rapidly.

Demo Day will take place on Wednesday, Dec 17, 2025, with a curated group from the venture capitalist community in attendance.

Building on the success of past batches and the acceleration of 107 startups, the program continues to evolve as the ecosystem matures. This cohort introduced a more execution-driven model, focusing on rapid iteration, founder-to-founder insights exchange, and hands-on operator support. The goal this year was simple: compress time, shorten cycles, and accelerate revenue outcomes, not just share knowledge.

“Over the years, we’ve grown alongside our startups – learning, evolving, and adapting to the dynamic spirit of the MENA region. As we launch Batch 10 of the Sanabil Accelerator by 500 Global, we’re proud to see how far the ecosystem has come and are inspired by the entrepreneurs driving its next chapter of innovation and growth. Another sign of this growth is having founders return to the program with a new company after exiting their previous companies that were participants in past batches. We believe we are entering a new era of maturity in the ecosystem and we are proud to participate in the growth of the movement,” said Amal Dokhan, Managing Partner at 500 Global MENA.

“As more entrepreneurs apply to Sanabil Accelerator by 500 Global than ever before, we see clear evidence of the growing confidence and ambition within Saudi Arabia’s startup ecosystem. At Sanabil, we are committed to empowering exceptional founders with the capital, network and guidance they need to scale globally. The innovations emerging from this program are not only advancing industries, they are contributing to economic diversification, creating opportunities and improving lives in Saudi Arabia and beyond. We look forward to showing the region and the world this next wave of innovators, thinkers, and builders,” said a spokesperson at Sanabil Investments.

The following is the list of Batch 10 companies that have made it through to the final round:

  • Edufi – Buy now, pay later for education.
  • Governata – Enables organizations to adopt Gen-AI faster and more effectively by governing, refining, and enhancing the quality of their data.
  • Local – A QR payments platform helping businesses that serve customers on site get paid in just 10 seconds.
  • Maison Safqa – Turns overstock into revenue by making premium and luxury brands accessible to new customers through online flash events.
  • Raspire – A no-code platform that helps businesses secure their mobile apps and protect user data against cyber threats.
  • Scenario X – An AI and quantum platform empowering financial institutions to make faster, and more insightful risk decisions where traditional models fall short.
  • Seen AI – A platform that boosts brands’ visibility in AI search results, turning prompts into profits.
  • ShipTag – An e-commerce platform that unlocks global sales for local e-commerce brands by managing localization, payments, and shipping for their international orders.
  • WOW AI – Saves e-comm merchants hundreds of hours monthly by proactively giving recommendations, managing promotions, orders and products, all through chat.

With the tenth batch concluding in December, applications for the next cohort are open. Startups from across the MENA region are invited to join a growing community of ambitious founders shaping the future of innovation in the region.

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Canva unveils 2026 design trends

Canva today unveils its third annual Design Trends Report with bold predictions for creativity, social media and brand content in 2026. The company also unveiled a “Design DNA” feature, which offers Canva users a custom recap that celebrates their creative output in 2025.

Trends from Creators, for Creators
By analyzing design and search activity, expert insights from the Canva Designer Advisory Board, and a survey of 1,000 creators across the U.S. and Brazil, Canva has identified 10 design trends that will shape creative and design culture in 2026. The findings paint a clear picture: as creators embrace AI’s power, they also crave the human touches that make design feel personal.

A New Creative Standard: Imperfect by Design
As AI technology raises the baseline for what’s possible, visual authenticity has become the ultimate differentiator. After years of algorithmic sameness and polished perfection, 80% of creators surveyed said “2026 is the year we regain creative control” – not by rejecting AI, but by using it on their own terms.

AI remains a central part of creators’ workflows, with 77% describing AI as an “essential partner.” This moment is about using the tools at our disposal, while ensuring individual taste and personality shine through.

From sensory textures to cinematic storytelling, creators are diving headfirst into the synthetic era. With searches for DIY and collage-inspired elements up by 90%, users are simultaneously embracing design that signals genuine human presence while also embracing what AI has to offer.

“As more and more creators turn to AI to help them express themselves visually, we believe 2026 marks the year of Imperfect by Design, a time when blending AI seamlessly with human imagination and creativity has never mattered more. Canva was built for this shift, to empower anyone to use AI on their terms and bring their ideas to life in a way that feels personal, authentic, and unmistakably human,” said Cat van der Werff, Canva’s Executive Creative Director.

10 Trends Brands & Creators Need to Know
Canva’s global insights reveal 10 design trends set to shape creativity in 2026, reflecting how AI, culture, and community are reshaping visual expression worldwide.

  • Reality Warp: Creators are intentionally blurring the line between real and surreal. Searches for “liminal” and “uncanny” jumped 220% year over year, with nearly a quarter of creators predicting this will be the defining look of 2026.
  • Prompt Playground: Experimentation meets early-internet nostalgia as people design for emotional impact first. UI fragments, retro-tech references, and “vibe coding” are reshaping visual language, with searches for “lo-fi aesthetic” spiking 527%.
  • Explorecore: In response to digital overwhelm, Explorecore champions clarity and calm. Searches for Zine- and Substack-inspired layouts are up 85% year over year as creators seek designs that slow the pace and invite deeper exploration.
  • Texture Check: Driven by a boom in CGI and hyper-real materials, Texture Check makes surfaces the star. From glassy to waxy to touchably tactile, realistic textures are surging on Canva, where related searches have grown 30%.
  • Notes App Chic: The rise of celebrated imperfection is pushing creators toward scrapbook-style visuals, messy compositions, and behind-the-scenes authenticity. DIY and collage-inspired elements are up 90%, reflecting a cultural shift toward progress over polish.
  • Opt-Out Era: A counterweight to digital burnout, this trend pares visuals back to their essentials. Clean layouts, serif fonts, and simple branding are replacing maximalist palettes and mascots. Searches for “clean layout,” “serif,” and “simple branding” climbed 54%.
  • Drama Club: Creators are turning up the emotional volume, channeling cinematic storytelling across social content, art, and video. Interest in “mockumentary,” “dramatic spotlight,” and similar motifs is up 27%, fueling a resurgence in high-drama aesthetics.
  • GrannyWave: In India, nostalgia is driving a vibrant revival of cultural motifs, from handloom patterns to festival hues and Bollywood glamour. Searches for “Desi” and “Hindi typography” grew 26% and 17%, highlighting a return to heritage-rich, maximalist storytelling.
  • Zinegeist: In Mexico, the DIY zine movement is back with extra volume. Collaged layouts, anti-gloss textures, and bold, oversized type are taking hold as creators reject overly digital aesthetics. Related searches—like “brutalist design” and “type poster”—rose 77% year over year.
  • Block Party: Spain’s creative community is blending vintage tones, folklore, and everyday pastimes into warm, nostalgic visuals reimagined through a modern lens. Searches for styles like “Estética Tradicional” and “Folklore Urbano” hit 1.5 million impressions.

Getting Personal with Design DNA
Canva users can now access their own unique ‘Design DNA’ report. The AI-powered Design DNA feature analyzes each user’s 2025 design habits and generates a bespoke recap of their creative achievements. A personalized creative identity card is shared to indicate whether they’re a Font Stylist, a Prompt Picasso, a Chatter Box, or a Newbie. Canva generated over 111 million unique Design DNA assets last year.

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