National Incubation Center Islamabad held its Cohort 5 Orientation Ceremony marking the start of what the organization is calling NIC 3.0, a sharper and more selective phase of its startup program that places execution above ideation and sets global expansion as the benchmark for success. The day began with contract signings before moving into a full orientation that brought together founders, industry leaders, and institutional partners.
Project Director Sayyed Ahmad Masud opened proceedings by framing the philosophy behind NIC 3.0, making clear that the program is moving away from supporting early concepts and toward building real companies with demonstrable traction. Program Manager Kamran Taufiq Khan reinforced that international direction, signaling that Cohort 5 is being positioned not just for domestic markets but for founders ready to compete at a global level.
Telenor Velocity reaffirmed its backing of the program, outlining its support across acceleration, pilot opportunities, funding access, and connectivity to a customer base exceeding 44 million users. That kind of institutional partnership gives Cohort 5 startups a meaningful advantage, particularly those in sectors where market access and distribution are as critical as the product itself.
The cohort draws from across artificial intelligence, financial technology, health technology, climate, and deep tech, with a stated preference for operators, builders, and domain experts who are either already scaling or positioned to do so. The orientation marks the beginning of a program cycle that National Incubation Center Islamabad, backed by Ministry of Information Technology and Telecommunication and Ignite, National Technology Fund, is treating as a defining moment in how Pakistan’s startup infrastructure matures.
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