EPISODE · Mar 14, 2024 · 46 MIN
Denzil Eden: Using AI To Transform Work
from Scouting for Growth · host Sabine VdL
On this episode of the Scouting For Growth podcast, Sabine VdL talks to Denzil Eden, founder & CEO of Smarty, an AI-powered productivity assistant. With degrees in computer science & AI from MIT & an MBA from Harvard, Denzil has been at the frontier of harnessing AI's potential to transform work. She has held roles in engineering & product management and is now the founder & CEO of Smarty. The pair discusses her founder journey as a solo technical female, how to provide advice for startups navigating economic uncertainty, insights on how she sees AI continuing to shape the future of work over the next decade, & practical tips for founders & professionals to help them start implementing today to enhance productivity. KEY TAKEAWAYS I started coding at 8 years old & fell in love with building. That passion stayed with me & I enrolled at MIT, where my passion thrived. I got a degree in computer science & did a Master's in human-computer interactions, building an app like Slack for classrooms. I thought that being a founder wasn’t for me, that I wanted more stability & I’m not sure where that mindset came from. I explored a lot of different careers & eventually went to business school to round out my education, while there, the idea for Smarty came to me. This is the time to develop your AI literacy, to play around with AI tools, to understand how they think, work & how they can make your life better, how they can augment the work that you’re doing. We’re in such an early period of what technologies & tools are going to come out with AI, but the faster you start immersing yourself in that world, the sooner you’ll be able to understand how to prompt/talk to/leverage an AI tool. There’s a lot that goes into responsible & ethical AI. We should attribute the source of the data for these AI tools, the original artists should get credit, and there should be a system to track the original creator of a piece of work. On the other hand, many artists stand on the shoulders of giants who came before them, inspired by what came before & trying to create something new from it. I think AI tools can help speed up the process of experimenting with their own work. I’ve learned so much on my founder's path & specifically about being a woman in AI, because AI is so heavily based on the data it’s been fed. It’s really important to provide AI tools with diverse sources of data. What I’m seeing right now in the AI space is that there are no female speakers at events. Not just gender, but the sources of information need to be diverse in terms of race, culture, and socio-economic class; diversity is fundamental to how AI works. BEST MOMENTS ‘I was overwhelmed in most areas of my life & I realised that the majority of the things I was doing & had on my plate could be easily automated with existing technology, so I started building Smarty for myself.’ ‘I use the same pitch I started with in 2018, but the appetite for the pitch is so different today. It shows you that timing is everything. Don’t be dissuaded, have internal drive over external validation.’ ‘I think AI is going to be a transformational tool in every industry, every job from tech to farming to music. It’s such a magical time & I’m very excited to be part of that movement.’ ‘You don’t have to understand the ‘black box’ of an AI tool & how it works, you just have to learn how to use it & in 5-10 years’ time you’ll be the expert.’ ABOUT THE GUEST Denzil Eden is the founder & CEO of Smarty, an AI-powered productivity assistant that helps professionals plan their days & automate mundane tasks. A trailblazer as a solo female technical founder, Denzil earned degrees in computer science & AI from MIT before getting her MBA from Harvard. Denzil has an extensive background in technology and entrepreneurship. She started coding at age eight & has worked as a software engineer, product manager, & now founder and CEO. Denzil has been at the forefront of harnessing AI to transform everyday work life for over 5 years through Smarty. Backed by Pear VC and other investors, Smarty has helped thousands achieve peak productivity by creating structured routines, automating administrative tasks, & maximizing time efficiency. When she's not using technology to make people's lives easier, you can find Denzil playing piano, writing sci-fi stories, or searching for the perfect cup of tea. ABOUT THE HOST Sabine VanderLinden is a corporate strategist turned entrepreneur and the CEO of Alchemy Crew Ventures. She leads venture-client labs that help Fortune 500 companies adopt and scale cutting-edge technologies from global tech ventures. A builder of accelerators, investor, and co-editor of the bestseller The INSURTECH Book, Sabine is known for asking the uncomfortable questions—about AI governance, risk, and trust. On Scouting for Growth, she decodes how real growth happens—where capital, collaboration, and courage meet. If this episode sparked your thinking, follow Sabine VanderLinden on LinkedIn, Twitter, and Instagram for more insights. And if you’re interested in sponsoring the podcast, reach out to the team at [email protected]
What this episode covers
What if AI isn’t here to replace you—but to finally give you your time back? In this episode of Scouting for Growth, Sabine VanderLinden sits down with Denzil Eden, founder and CEO of Smarty, an AI-powered productivity assistant built for the realities of modern work. With degrees in Computer Science and AI from MIT and an MBA from Harvard, Denzil brings rare depth at the intersection of technology, product, and human behaviour—and the lived experience of being a solo female technical founder in AI. This is not a conversation about hype. It’s about agency. Denzil shares her founder journey—from learning to code at age eight, to building early collaboration tools, to realising that many of the pressures professionals feel today are not inevitable. They’re structural. And they’re solvable. The spark behind Smarty was deeply personal: feeling overwhelmed, stretched thin, and buried under tasks that should have been automated already. So Denzil did what great builders do—she built the solution she needed herself. What emerges is a powerful reframing of AI: Not as a black box to fear. Not as a silver bullet. But as a practical co-pilot—one that augments human judgment, reduces cognitive load, and frees people to focus on higher-value work. Key themes explored in this episode include: Why AI literacy is now a career skill, not a technical niche How early experimentation beats perfect understanding Why learning how to talk to AI matters more than knowing how it works How founders can navigate uncertainty by building internal conviction over external validation Why diversity in data, voices, and lived experience is foundational—not optional—for responsible AI Denzil also tackles the ethical tension head-on. From data attribution and creator credit to bias baked into historical datasets, she argues that responsible AI is not a constraint—it’s a design choice. One that will define which products earn trust over the next decade. A particularly sharp insight: AI reflects the world it is trained on. If we want better outcomes, we need more diverse inputs—across gender, culture, background, and perspective. That’s not ideology. It’s engineering. For founders, Denzil offers pragmatic advice: Start now. Play. Experiment. Build muscle memory. You don’t need to understand the entire system—you need to learn how to use it well. Five years from now, that fluency will compound. This episode is for: Founders building in uncertain markets Leaders rethinking productivity and burnout Professionals who feel stretched but see possibility Anyone who suspects AI’s biggest gift might be time As Sabine puts it, this is one of those moments where timing meets courage. The technology is ready. The question is whether we are willing to engage with it intentionally. Because the future of work won’t belong to those who fear AI— but to those who learn how to work with it.
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Denzil Eden: Using AI To Transform Work
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