
Ahmed Saad has worn many hats: founder, ecosystem builder, educator—and program manager at Oxford's Saïd Business School, where he helps idea-stage ventures become investment-ready startups. But before all that? He had a closet full of unsold Egyptian cotton t-shirts and a crash course in startup failure.
In this episode, Ahmed shares his journey from launching a fashion brand in Egypt to shaping one of the UK’s most influential university entrepreneurship programs. We dive into what makes a great founder, how to build support systems around early-stage innovation, and what it really takes to turn research and raw ideas into real companies.
With experience across startups, accelerators, policy, and academia, Ahmed offers a 360° view on entrepreneurship that’s as honest as it is energizing.
Here’s what’s covered:
How Ahmed’s first venture failed—but sparked a career in entrepreneurship
What working across government, coworking spaces, and academia taught him about startup needs
Why supporting early-stage founders requires empathy and structure
The goals and impact of the Oxford Venture Builder program
Lessons from helping students, scientists, and engineers become entrepreneurs
What makes a university startup ecosystem thrive (or fall short)
How to connect research with real-world value
Building an inclusive path for deep tech and mission-driven ventures
Learn more about the Oxford Said Entrepreneurship Centre (here) and the Oxford Venture Builder Programme (here)