Crédit photo: Lottie animation by Centre Robotics (LottieFiles Free, used with credit). · source
I stared at the press release for longer than I'd like to admit. TechCrunch Disrupt 2026 is running a buy-one-get-one-half-off deal on passes. That's it. That's the news.
You might be wondering why I'm even writing about this. Honestly, I asked myself the same thing. But there's something here, I think, about the state of robotics conferences and how we're all trying to figure out what these events are actually for anymore.
The deal itself is straightforward. Buy a pass to TechCrunch Disrupt 2026, get a second one at 50% off. Same ticket type. The window closes May 8 at 11:59 p.m. PT. Savings of up to $410, according to their materials.
I initially thought this was just standard conference marketing (and it is, to be clear). But after sitting with it, I started wondering about what these promotions signal about where conferences fit in the robotics ecosystem right now.
Here's the thing about tech conferences in 2026. The pandemic permanently changed how we think about gathering. Remote demos got better. Zoom calls with founders became normalized. The obvious question became: why fly somewhere and pay thousands of dollars when you can see the same demo on YouTube?
Conferences have had to answer that question. And the answer, increasingly, is relationships. It's the hallway conversation. It's the dinner where someone introduces you to their investor friend. It's the serendipity of bumping into a founder whose company you've been meaning to check out.
That's why the "bring a partner or colleague" framing caught my attention. They're not selling access to talks (you can probably find those online eventually). They're selling the ability to work a room together. To divide and conquer. To have someone watch your bag while you grab coffee with a source.
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When the biggest robotics news of the week is a conference discount, maybe we should ask what's actually happening in the industry.
I should be transparent about my priors here. I've been to a lot of these things. Some were transformative for my career. Others were expensive exercises in standing around feeling awkward. The difference usually came down to whether I had someone to navigate with.
When I was running my startup (feels like a lifetime ago), my cofounder and I had a system at conferences. She'd hit the investor meetups while I worked the press area. We'd text each other leads in real time. It was genuinely useful. Going alone to those same events? Much harder.
So tbh, the BOGO strategy makes sense from that angle. You're not just buying two tickets. You're buying a functional team.
But here's where I get stuck. I don't actually know if Disrupt is the right conference for robotics people specifically. It's a general tech event. Startups across every category. The robotics track exists, but it's competing with AI, fintech, climate, and whatever else is hot that year.
For humanoids and embodied AI specifically (my beat), I've found more value at specialized events. RoboBusiness. ICRA. Even some of the smaller academic workshops where the real technical conversations happen. At a generalist conference, you spend a lot of time explaining what embodied AI even means before you can have a substantive conversation.
That said, generalist events have their own value. You meet people from adjacent industries. A fintech person might have insights about payment systems for robot-delivered goods. A healthcare startup might be thinking about the same manipulation problems you are. Cross-pollination matters.
I'm not sure this holds up as a strong argument, but it's where my thinking is.
The pricing question is interesting too. They're advertising savings of "up to $410," which suggests the full price is somewhere in the $800-plus range per ticket. That's... a lot of money. Especially for early-stage founders or independent researchers.
I've talked to startup people who budget their entire year around one or two major conferences. They save up, they prepare their pitch, they treat it like a campaign. For them, 50% off a second ticket could genuinely change the math on whether they can bring their technical cofounder or go solo.
For larger companies, this is rounding error. They'll send whoever they want regardless.
So who is this promotion actually for? My guess (and it's just a guess, I don't have data on their ticket demographics) is that it's targeting the mid-tier. Small teams with some budget but not unlimited. People who might be on the fence about whether to attend at all.
There's also a timing element I keep thinking about. The deal runs for five days, ending May 8. That's a pretty tight window. It creates urgency, obviously. But it also means the decision has to happen fast.
I wonder how many good decisions get made in five-day windows. Some, probably. But also probably some hasty ones. Someone commits to attending, then realizes they don't have anything ready to show. Or the colleague they were going to bring has a conflict they didn't check first.
This isn't a criticism exactly. It's just how conference marketing works. I'm just noting that the incentive structure pushes toward quick decisions, and quick decisions aren't always good ones.
Let me try to be useful here. If you're in robotics and considering Disrupt, here's my honest take:
Go if you're trying to raise money from generalist investors who might not attend robotics-specific events. Go if you want press coverage from outlets that cover broad tech. Go if you have a product that appeals beyond robotics nerds.
Maybe skip it if you're deep in technical R&D and want to talk to other researchers. Skip it if your product requires a lot of context to understand. Skip it if you're burned out on conferences and need to actually build.
And if you do go, yeah, bringing someone probably does make it more valuable. That part of the pitch seems right to me.
I realize I've written a lot of words about a ticket promotion. That's probably more than it deserves. But conferences are one of those things that people in this industry spend a lot of money on without always thinking critically about what they're getting.
The robotics conference landscape is fragmented. There's no single event that everyone attends. That has pros and cons. It means more options, but also more FOMO. More decisions about where to allocate limited time and budget.
I don't have a clean conclusion here. Disrupt is running a deal. It might be worth it for some people. It's definitely not worth it for others. The "bring a colleague" angle is smart marketing that also happens to reflect something true about how conferences actually work.
If you're going, I hope you make good connections. If you're skipping it, I hope you use that time and money well.
And if you have strong opinions about which robotics conferences are actually worth attending, honestly, I'd love to hear them. I'm always trying to figure this out too.