Home Banking Prime Bank hosts BUET seminar on AI, careers, and women’s leadership

Prime Bank hosts BUET seminar on AI, careers, and women’s leadership

by Bangladesh in Focus

A lively seminar brought students and bank leaders together to talk about money, careers and the future of banking. It was hosted on the university campus as part of an outreach effort to link study and work, and the event focused on how banks can include more people and help them make smart choices with money. The deputy managing director of the bank gave a keynote about how new tools like artificial intelligence and data can change the way banks work and how young people can get ready for jobs that mix tech and ideas. A senior bank executive spoke about the need for more women leaders and said that strong values and fair decisions help build banks that last. Another senior banker explained why teaching money basics early makes a big difference, and he urged the audience to learn how to save, budget and use the bank system in safe ways. A university professor added that working closely with businesses will help students learn the skills employers want and will make study more useful for real jobs. Students, teachers and bank staff joined the talks and asked questions, showing a clear interest in learning how to use banking tools well and how to start careers in finance and technology. The event offered simple tips for anyone new to banking, like how to open an account, how to use mobile banking services and why tracking spending matters. Speakers also stressed the idea of fair access, where banks make sure services reach people from many places and backgrounds so more families can plan for the future. The program highlighted the role of school and campus programs in building money skills, and it showed how banks and universities can run short courses, workshops and hands-on lessons that help students practice real tasks. By talking about technology, ethics and basic money skills, the seminar gave students a clear view of the day-to-day work inside a bank and the tools they will need to lead change. Many students said they felt more ready to try internships, study data skills and seek leadership roles. Organizers hope such talks become common so more young people can join the modern workforce and help their communities grow. This friendly meeting was not just a talk but a call to learn and to plan, and it left a positive feeling that students, teachers and banks can work together to build a fairer, smarter future. The career club and bank volunteers plan follow-up workshops, short courses and mentoring so students can build projects and gain real experience, step by step, to enter jobs that need money sense, tech skills and ethical leadership. Local communities will also benefit greatly over time.

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