Each year, the GEOINT Symposium brings together the people who make geospatial intelligence possible — the analysts, engineers, mission commanders, innovators and policy leaders who collectively ensure that decision-makers have the understanding of our world they need when they need it. This year in Aurora, Colorado, more than 4,000 of them will gather at what has become the essential event for our enterprise. And I want to be direct about something: The timing has never felt more consequential.
The GEOINT community is at an inflection point.
The convergence of AI maturity, accelerating commercial space capabilities and an increasingly complex threat environment is forcing our community to move faster, think differently and connect more deliberately than at any prior moment in GEOINT’s history. The questions animating the halls of GEOINT 2026 — how do we get from GeoAI prototype to operational system? How do we deliver data at mission speed, not program speed? How do we scale intelligence across the enterprise without sacrificing rigor? — are not academic exercises. They are operational imperatives.
That’s why this year’s programming is structured around three tracks that reflect where the real tension in our community lives right now. GeoAI is spotlighting what’s actually working in AI and machine learning applied to geospatial data — not the PowerPoint promise, but the applied reality. GEOINT Data at Speed is tackling the acquisition-to-insight pipeline problem, because collecting more data means nothing if it doesn’t reach decision-makers when decisions are being made. And Scaling AI is examining the hard work of moving from successful proof of concept to enterprise-wide systems that are resilient, interoperable and trusted.
The symposium is where a program manager from NGA can sit next to a startup founder from the commercial space sector and realize they’re trying to solve the same problem from opposite ends. That adjacency has value that is genuinely hard to replicate.
I am also proud of how this community has embraced openness in the symposium itself. For the first time this year, we opened a member-driven call for speakers, giving USGIF members the opportunity to help shape the exhibit hall agenda with their own keynotes, panels and fireside chats. The response was overwhelming, and the quality of proposals reflected just how much expertise exists within this community waiting for a platform.
One dimension of the symposium that doesn’t always get the attention it deserves: academia. This year, more than 50 colleges and universities are represented in Aurora. These institutions are not here as observers. The researchers among them are driving the foundational innovation that commercial and government programs will build on for years to come. The faculty are actively shaping our tradecraft by developing the curriculum, standards and conceptual frameworks that define what it means to be a GEOINT professional. And the students? They are our future workforce, and meeting them at this event matters enormously. When a young analyst-in-training stands on the floor of the exhibit hall and sees the full scope of this enterprise, something shifts. We shouldn’t underestimate that.
But I want to offer one broader thought for this event.
The pace of technological change in our field is genuinely thrilling. AI is not a future consideration for GEOINT; it is reshaping how analysts work, how sensors are tasked and how intelligence is produced, right now. The community gathering in Aurora this week needs to move past the stage where we celebrate innovation in the abstract and get serious about the conditions that allow innovation to reach the mission. That means addressing data access, workforce development, testing and evaluation rigor, and government-industry trust together, at forums like this one.
The world doesn’t wait for us to get comfortable with change. And the GEOINT community, to its great credit, rarely does either.
I look forward to seeing our community — its best minds, its sharpest critics and its most committed practitioners — at GEOINT 2026. The conversation we need to have is already underway. Aurora is where we sharpen it.
Ronda Schrenk is the CEO of the United States Geospatial Intelligence Foundation.
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