A Mehfil of Minds, A Room Full of CIOs.
Rootle at CIO Horizon 2026
Three residential days at Ramada by Wyndham, Lucknow. Closed-door roundtables, unhurried conversations, and a chance to show India's top enterprise technology leaders what KPI-first Voice AI looks like in practice.
India's Closed-Door CIO Conclave,
Now in Its Second Edition
CIO Horizon is not a conference. It is an invitation-only gathering built for unhurried, high-trust dialogue among India's most senior technology leaders, away from the noise of daily operations.
Inspired by Lucknow's legacy of tehzeeb and deliberation, CIO Horizon 2026 brought together India's top CIOs, CTOs, and senior technology decision-makers for three residential days of executive roundtables, immersive discussions, and closed-door peer exchange on AI strategy, digital resilience, and responsible innovation.
Unlike large multi-track summits, the conclave format kept the room small and the conversations long. Delegates from enterprises including Maruti Suzuki, Sun Pharma, Bajaj Allianz, Tata Power, Adani Renewables, Times Group, and 30-plus other leading organisations spent three days in genuine dialogue rather than booth-hopping. For a production-ready voice AI platform like Rootle, that depth of conversation is worth more than volume of footfall.
Rootle operated from Booth D5 across all three days, walking CIOs and CTOs through live enterprise voice AI demonstrations, KPI-first measurement frameworks, and what a real Voice AI go-live looks like on existing telephony and CRM infrastructure.
Voice AI in the Room Where
Enterprise AI Strategy Gets Decided
The delegates at CIO Horizon were not there to be pitched to. They were there to think through what AI-led transformation actually looks like across their enterprises, and Booth D5 gave that thinking a live, working example.
Across three days, the Rootle team ran live enterprise voice AI demonstrations from Booth D5, showing CIOs and CTOs from banking, manufacturing, pharma, energy, and media exactly how a KPI-first voice agent handles support queries, lead qualification, outbound follow-up, and after-hours resolution, in Hindi and English, on existing telephony infrastructure.
The conclave format meant conversations ran longer and went deeper than a typical expo floor interaction. CIOs pushed past the demo to ask about integration timelines, data residency, and how Task Completion Rate would hold up at their actual call volumes. Those are the questions of buyers who have already moved past evaluation and into planning.
What does go-live actually look like on our existing telephony and CRM stack, and how many weeks does it take?
How does Task Completion Rate hold up once we scale to our real enterprise call volumes?
Is the platform DPDP and TRAI compliant by design, or is that a bolt-on we have to manage ourselves?
Can the same voice agent hold consistent accuracy and tone across Hindi, Tamil, Gujarati, and Marathi?