Video: Aalto EE.

Creative Ventures - Empowering Nordic-Baltic creatives through collaboration and entrepreneurship together with Saastamoinen Foundation

Creative Ventures has been a Nordic-Baltic keynote and workshop series that brought together entrepreneurs, artists, and creative field professionals to foster co-learning and innovation. It has provided a platform for cross-disciplinary learning through Nordic Hybrid keynotes, workshops, and networking opportunities.

Hilary Carty, CEO, Clore Leadership. Photo: Aalto EE.

Creative Ventures -initiative strengthened creative professionals’ entrepreneurship skills in the Nordics and Baltics.

The Creative Ventures programme, supported by Aalto EE and the Saastamoinen Foundation, has brought together hundreds of creative professionals from the Nordic and Baltic countries. The keynote and workshop series, which took place in 2025–2026, provided participants with tools to turn creative work into sustainable and scalable businesses without losing their artistic core.

This initiative builds on the findings of Aalto EE and Aalto University’s Future Artpreneurship project (2021–2022), which highlighted the need for further education in the creative sector.

Creative Ventures equips participants with the business acumen, skills, and resources they need to thrive as creative entrepreneurs. Through keynotes, workshops, and Nordic-Baltic networking opportunities, the series supports actors in the creative industries in understanding the challenges of entrepreneurship and building sustainable careers.

Hilary Carty, CEO, Clore Leadership:
”If the working environment looks and feels significantly different; if the jobs we are doing now are becoming obsolete and those of tomorrow have yet to be invented, it is essential to review the priorities for sustaining creative excellence in entrepreneurship.”

Panelists Kjetil Trædal Thorsen, Ingrid Bjørnov, ja Fredrik Fottland.Photo: Aalto EE.

In the opening keynote lecture of the series, Assistant Professor Astrid Huopalainen emphasized that creativity and entrepreneurship are not opposites, but mutually reinforcing forces. She highlighted three key growth areas for the Nordic creative industries; new business models that boldly combine ideas and materials, the strengthening of the experience economy, where Nordic aesthetics and sustainability become competitive advantages, and BIZ + ARTS innovation, where artistic thinking meets business and technology. Huopalainen also emphasized that visibility based on identity and storytelling is vital in the global attention economy.

The Copenhagen keynote speaker, PORTIA founder Ana Kristiansson, challenged creative professionals to utilize technology – especially artificial intelligence – in a way that strengthens humanity, purpose and responsibility. His practical ACTION framework and Authentic Design Spiral method helped participants systematically move ideas towards innovations that stem from ones own values.

In Stockholm, Professor Emma Stenström examined the creative industries as a complex ecosystem where weak ties, border crossing, and curiosity drive innovation. She reminded us, that the true economic value of the industry has long been underestimated, and that future growth comes from system-level collaboration, not from individual successes.

A panel discussion in Oslo highlighted the idea that uncertainty is not a threat to the creative industry, but a strategic resource. Architect Kjetil Trædal Thorsen, artist Ingrid Bjørnov and media entrepreneur Fredrik Fottland described how career turning points and chance can fuel bold growth.

Keynote speakers Hilary Carty (Clore Leadership) and Kaisa Rönkkö (Sibelius Academy) highlighted the importance of human values ​​and well-being in the future of creative work, the need for Nordic-Baltic cooperation and a common “Nordic wave” and the role of art, both as an economic and democratic resource. Rönkkö emphasized that human-driven creativity is the region’s real competitive advantage in a time when technology scales faster than ethics.

Overall, the Creative Ventures series offered participants practical tools for business, financing and design, as well as support for identity work and storytelling, concrete examples of Nordic artpreneurship, professional networks that continue after the events, and the opportunity to develop new collaboration concepts across borders.

The Creative Ventures series showed that the Nordic and Baltic countries can become a globally significant force in the creative economy if artistic expertise, entrepreneurship, technology and regional cooperation are systematically combined.

Read more about the programme on the Aalto EE website, or the Creative Ventures compilation.