Mexico-More than 5,000 executives, innovation leaders, and business decision-makers from across Latin America will gather in Mexico City on June 9–10 for the 11th AI, Technology & Business Congress America Digital México 2026 — the region’s largest annual forum dedicated to the intersection of artificial intelligence and enterprise strategy.
Held at the World Trade Center Mexico City, the two-day event arrives at a pivotal moment for the region. Companies across Latin America are moving beyond AI experimentation and into full-scale deployment, confronting questions around automation, digital infrastructure, data governance, and competitive positioning that will define the next decade of business growth.
This year’s edition centers on what organizers are calling the “sixth technological revolution” — the convergence of generative AI, autonomous agents, cloud infrastructure, and enterprise automation. The agenda spans cybersecurity and digital resilience, data center investment, technology nearshoring, and leadership in an AI-driven economy.
The speaker lineup reflects that scope. Mois Navon, Ethics Advisor at Anthropic and former Chief Engineer at Mobileye (Intel), is among the headliners, alongside Patrick Mork, former CMO of Google Play, and Diego Flores, Head of the Electronic and Digital Industry Sector at Mexico’s Secretariat of Economy. C-suite executives from some of Latin America’s most recognizable companies will also take the stage, including Juan José Piñeiro, Chief Digital Officer of El Palacio de Hierro; Edgar Francisco Romero Santiago, CIO of L’Oréal Groupe México; and Ivette Rentería Hurtado, Global Director of IT & OT Audit at Grupo Bimbo.
On the technology side, the event brings together companies actively leading digital transformation across the region: Google Cloud, Salesforce, Dell Technologies, Snowflake, Equinix, Dynatrace, Fastly, Infor, and L’Oréal.
Mexico is increasingly central to the AI investment wave reshaping Latin America. The country’s expanding digital ecosystem, nearshoring momentum, and growing data center capacity have made it a hub for technology infrastructure spending — themes that will run through much of the congress.
Beyond the conference stage, the event will host structured networking sessions and business meetings designed to connect multinationals, financial institutions, startups, and technology providers across the region.
Now in its eleventh year, America Digital México has become one of the primary venues where business leaders in Latin America benchmark emerging technology trends and shape enterprise strategy.