Real-World Learning That Actually Connects
We don't teach blockchain insurance through slides and lectures. Our students work through actual challenges that companies in Taiwan's insurance sector face right now—because understanding tech means getting your hands dirty with it.
Learning Through Problems, Not Presentations
Here's what sets us apart. Instead of showing you how blockchain works in theory, we drop you into scenarios where you need to figure it out. Think of it as the difference between reading about swimming and actually jumping in the pool.
Our students spend time analyzing real claim processing workflows, identifying where things get stuck, and then building solutions. Some of these projects have actually been picked up by local insurers after students finished them.
- Case studies built from actual Taiwan insurance operations
 - Direct access to professionals who've deployed blockchain solutions
 - Group projects that mirror cross-functional team dynamics
 - Feedback cycles designed to build your troubleshooting instincts
 
	How We Structure the Experience
Six months of hands-on work broken into phases that build on each other. Each segment connects to what comes next, so nothing feels random or disconnected.
Foundation Through Discovery
You start by tearing apart how current insurance processes work. Not the glossy version—the messy reality of forms, approvals, and bottlenecks. Then we introduce blockchain concepts as tools to solve what you've just seen.
Building in Iterations
Small projects with quick feedback loops. You design a smart contract for auto claims, test it against edge cases, break it, fix it. Each week adds complexity based on what the group struggled with the previous week.
Collaborative Problem Solving
Most of the work happens in teams because that's how the industry operates. You'll present solutions, get challenged by classmates, and learn to defend your architectural decisions. Some of the best learning comes from defending choices that don't hold up.
	Linnea Sundqvist
Linnea spent eight years implementing blockchain systems for insurance companies across Southeast Asia before joining us in 2023. She doesn't sugarcoat the challenges—her classes focus on what actually works versus what sounds impressive in whitepapers.
Her background includes deploying claim verification systems for three major insurers in Taiwan, which means the scenarios she brings to class come from projects she's personally debugged at 2am.
"I'm less interested in teaching you to code and more focused on teaching you to think like someone who needs to make these systems actually function in a regulated environment."