A Presentation by Mateo Chang at the 20th Anniversary Sunrise Dental Solutions Summit – Sept. 18-20, 2025
This 20th Anniversary Summit marks more than a remarkable milestone. It’s an inflection point—a rare, electric collision of two decades of Sunrise’s relentless drive with twenty years of hidden digital ninjery, brought to life in a single, unprecedented moment. In this keynote, Mateo Chang takes the stage to unveil what happens when legacy and technology finally meet—not by chance, but by design—and why this may forever alter how every dentist in this room imagines their next 20 years.
Fueled by real-world AI and decision systems already revolutionizing the world beyond dentistry, this isn’t a glimpse of the distant future. The shift has already begun. It’s here. And it’s calling on those bold enough not just to adapt, but to lead.
Learning Objectives
1. Learn how system-driven insight will transform clinical, operational, and financial decisions.
2. Understand what makes responsible, human-led AI different from quick-fix tools.
3. See how this community can lead the next era of dentistry through shared knowledge and action.
Speaker Biography
Mateo Chang is a system builder and strategist who has spent the past two decades working quietly in the shadows of digital operations, product development, and AI. Born in Brazil, raised in California, and shaped by a global career, Mateo is known for helping organizations navigate complexity and make sharper decisions—never by seeking the spotlight, but by building the foundations others rely on.
From logistics and healthcare to education and finance, Mateo has quietly transformed how industries operate—simplifying the complex and turning data into decisive action. He’s launched companies, scaled teams, and personally coached over 1,000 professionals into top MBA programs, always championing clarity, performance, and trust as his guiding values.
Now, as co-founder of an AI firm pioneering expert-agent systems, Mateo engineers’ solutions that let real people make bold, informed decisions. For him, the ultimate test of technology is simple: does it make us more human, not less?