Seoul AI Hub and Microsoft MVPs are bringing AI to everyone through hands-on training, boosting citizens’ skills to create practical AI agents without coding.
Seoul AI Hub, an AI-specialized support organization under the Seoul Metropolitan Government, is dedicated to fostering the city’s AI industry ecosystem through talent development, startup incubation, and public education. In partnership with Microsoft MVPs, the hub is making AI accessible to all through the AI Frontiers Series — blending expert talks with hands-on workshops. “AI is no longer just for experts; it’s a tool for everyone,” says Chan-jin Park, Director of Seoul AI Hub.
The collaboration between Seoul AI Hub and Microsoft MVPs demonstrates the transformative power of community-led expertise. MVPs such as Jaeseok Lee, Heo seok, Haesun Park, and Minseok Song brought their technical leadership to the forefront — integrating advanced AI concepts with practical skills that citizens could immediately use. From explaining multi-agent architectures to building custom Copilot solutions, their sessions showed how complex AI tools can be democratized for non-developers.
Beyond teaching, these MVPs are active contributors to the global AI ecosystem. Minseok Song maintains the Co-op Translator open-source project, integrating AI-based translation workflows into real-world scenarios. Jaeseok Lee leads Korea’s Power Platform User Group, connecting business users and developers to collaborate on Copilot Studio innovations. This kind of community-driven leadership extends the impact of Microsoft technologies far beyond corporate settings.
These events also reflect how the MVP community is growing more diverse in expertise and audience reach. Participants came from varied backgrounds — students, entrepreneurs, office workers, and hobbyists — all united by a desire to understand and use AI meaningfully.
For many attendees, this was their first encounter with building AI agents, and the supportive environment encouraged experimentation and collaboration. MVPs not only shared technical knowledge but also their own journeys: how they discovered Microsoft AI, grew into community leaders, and applied their skills to solve local and global challenges. Such stories inspire the next generation of community builders and potential MVPs.
AI Frontiers Series Summer Sessions
Recent events at the Seoul AI Hub where MVP participated included:
- July 22 featured a deep-dive seminar on “Open AI Technologies for Survival in the AI Frontier Era,” covering multi-agent strategies, LLM and multimodal trends, and real-world open-source AI applications.
- Aug 12 brought the AI Agent Bootcamp for Non-Developers, where 80 registered citizens learned to create Copilot agents without code. Participants explored integrating AI agents into Microsoft Teams and M365, building document-driven assistants, and deploying multi-channel solutions.
“Copilot Studio allows anyone to build their own ChatGPT-like agent. The key is not just creating one agent, but learning how to design multiple agents that work together to solve real problems,” said Jaeseok Lee, Microsoft Copilot Studio MVP.
These back-to-back sessions show what’s possible when technical expertise, open-source spirit, and a commitment to public education come together. The impact extends beyond the events themselves — sparking curiosity, building confidence, and equipping citizens to harness AI in ways that are relevant to their lives and work
The AI Frontiers Series proves that when experts and communities connect, technology becomes more inclusive and impactful. By lowering the barrier to AI adoption, Seoul AI Hub and Microsoft MVPs are equipping citizens with skills for the future. To explore upcoming sessions or get involved, visit the Seoul AI Hub website and join the movement to make AI a tool for everyone.