OpenQase bridges the gap between the theory and practical business applications, helping you understand the value of quantum computingby showing it.
Quantum computing promises to transform industries, but understanding practical applications remains a challenge for business leaders. Even for those of us working in the quantum computing industry, it's not easy to answer questions like "when will quantum computing be ready", or "what is the business case for a quantum computer". This is a polite way of asking "what's in it for me", which is the most important question we need to answer.
The Challenge: business leaders need to understand what quantum computing can do for their organisation without getting lost in complex mathematics or physics.
OpenQase approaches this by curating a collection of real-world quantum computing business case studies. We show you what companies like Ford, Goldman Sachs, and Airbus are actually doing with quantum computing. This isn't a replacement for the yearly consulting reports and commercial business intelligence services. Those are an essential part of our ecosystem, but those are a little further down the engagement funnel, for people and organisations with considerable intent. At the other end is a whole lot mass media coverage that we will just call "noisy" and leave it at that. But there is a missing middle in terms of a self-learning resource, something of a "wikipedia for quantum computing business cases". Something like OpenQase.
Unlike academic resources or vendor marketing, OpenQase focuses on practical implementation insights organized around how you actually work. These learning paths are a result of real-world experience working in the quantum computing industry, and began as real-life projects and case studies developed with our various teams. We are making this information public so you don't have to go through collecting it all like we did. And we're making it open source so you can contribute to the project too, increasing our collective understanding of (and interaction with) the published case studies and supporting resources.
By Role: CEOs get strategic insights, CTOs get implementation guidance, engineers get technical details. Content tailored to your specific responsibilities and decision-making needs.
By Industry: Financial services, healthcare, energy, manufacturing. See quantum applications that matter to your specific sector with relevant business context and outcomes.
By Solution Type: Optimization, machine learning, security. Understand quantum algorithms through their business applications rather than mathematical complexity.
OpenQase has been referred to as "the Wikipedia for quantum computing business applications". Big shoes to fill. But as a community and open source project it sets a worthy goal, and one we pursue with the following points in mind.
Making quantum computing concepts accessible to diverse business stakeholders through clear, practical examples.
Providing organizations with the knowledge needed to evaluate quantum computing's potential value.
Offering clear learning paths for professionals seeking to develop quantum computing expertise.
Creating an accessible community for curating and sharing implementation experiences, best practices, and outcomes.
OpenQase was created after a conversation between quantum industry colleagues David Ryan and Anastasia Marchenkova at the Q2B Silicon Valley conference. While the pair come from different product and scientific leadership roles, they shared a common frustration as to the challenge of keeping up with the steady release of business case studies and associated pilot programs and use cases. It was clear that as the ecosystem evolves from Science to Technology to Engineering to Product, so must the resources and repositories of knowledge. Not as business intelligence service restrated to commercial vendors, but as a resource for the community, a "wikipedia for quantum computing". Want to join the team? Get in touch.
Experienced Deep Tech product leader and former SaaS founder. First Head of Product at Quantum Brilliance, former open source advocate at Red Hat, and the author of "Pocket Guide to Quantum Algorithms".
Experienced quantum physicist and former founding team member at Bleximo. A prolific quantum computing educator, talented engineer with experience at the likes of Rigetti, and prolific early-stage investor.
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