Learn, contribute, adopt, solve, pilot, or partner. Whether you are a student, an executive, a ministry, a school, a newsroom, or an ecosystem partner — there is a clear way in. Every pathway reaches the same inbox: contact@practicalainepal.com — just include the subject line shown on the card.
For students, professionals, leaders, educators, and the curious. Briefings, workshops, AI literacy programs, and short bilingual explainers — the entry point for anyone new to Practical AI.
For students, developers, teachers, journalists, and community members. Volunteer model evaluation, school chapters, regional sessions, content review, Nepali-language testing.
For schools, colleges, enterprises, public-sector teams, NGOs. AI readiness conversation, governance review, opportunity and risk mapping, 90-day practical roadmap.
For institutions with a concrete operational problem. Bring it to the Practical AI Clinic. Diagnosis, workflow mapping, and a recommendation on the right approach — which is often not a model.
Pilot scoping, model selection, evaluation plan, human review design, success criteria. A bounded test, lessons learned, and a path to implementation if the results justify it.
For ecosystem partners — funders, universities, media, regional networks, civil society. Joint programs, sponsored initiatives, field activities, chapter support, research collaboration.
A short message is enough. Mention who you are, what you're trying to do, and the timeline if you have one. We reply within three working days, in English or Nepali.
The fastest way to track what we're publishing, who we're working with, and what's happening at the policy-to-practice edge of AI in Nepal. No sponsorships, no affiliate links, no algorithmic optimisation.
One idea, stated plainly.
One Nepal implication.
One practical checklist.
One upcoming activity, briefing, or training intake.
Initial ministerial briefings are free. Multi-session engagements with implementation work, training, and reporting are scoped and quoted institutionally.
Yes. Briefings are confidential by default. We do not name institutions, officers, or vendors in public writing without written agreement.
Yes, where it makes sense. We will not sign anything that prevents us from publishing principled, non-identifying analysis on AI policy and practice in Nepal.
No. We take partnership funding for clearly scoped programmes, but no sponsorship, no advertising, and no affiliate revenue for the writing.
Both. Core material is bilingual. Discussion is in whichever language the room actually thinks in — usually a mix.
Yes — and we want to do more of it. Write to us; province-level and rural engagements are a priority for the next cohort cycle.