At K-Style Expo Q1 2026 on Wednesday, March 25, founders had just a few minutes to explain why their startups mattered. Investors listened, questioned, and pushed for clarity. The event was not simply a showcase. It was a live test of how Korean startups present themselves to the global market.
Hosted by beSUCCESS, the event brought together keynote sessions, investor introductions, founder-led pitches, and networking. More importantly, it created a space where early-stage companies could measure their ideas against real investor expectations.
Startup Ideas Took Center Stage at K-Style Expo Q1 2026

James Jung, CEO of beSUCCESS, opened the event by highlighting the company’s mission to connect Korean startups with the global business ecosystem. The participants were encouraged to collaborate, exchange ideas, and build meaningful cross-border connections, prioritizing startup innovation over traditional pitching.
The Keynote That Set the Tone
The opening keynote was delivered by Goya Choe, founder of Goya Studio in Dubai and a branding and market-expansion strategy consultant. She urged the audience to distinguish between information overload and actual market conditions.
She pointed to Dubai’s high liquidity, 98% port efficiency through autonomous logistics, and legal protections under the DIFC common law framework as reasons it has become a hub for international capital.
Choe also introduced the “Safe Landing Roadmap,” a three-step approach to expansion: start small, build trust with local data, and then scale strategically.
“Data is a language that transcends geopolitical boundaries. Start small, but start with a strong foundation,” she emphasized.
Her Sweet Palettes project offered one example of how Korean businesses can connect Korea and the Middle East by introducing Korean products to Dubai while building long-term local relationships.
The Founder Behind Every Pitch
One of the most striking aspects of K-Style Expo Q1 2026 was not only the range of ideas but also the people behind them. Eight startups from different fields took the stage.
The lineup included ventures in language learning, beauty, travel, AI operations, and product transparency.
EdTech & Language
- Yuno (HAN•GL). Narrative-based Hangul learning app which brings language learning back to life through an engaging, modern mobile interface.
- John (FIXFLUENT). Transforming popular TV shows into immersive language-learning tools.
Enterprise & AI Content
- Atique (VIDOPIX). Brand content scaling leveraged by ByteDance’s operational experience.
- Zakaria (UnixonAI). Enterprise AI running directly within the corporate systems, giving companies full control over their data.
Global Beauty & Consumer
- Jinkyung Park (FOURSUMMER). High-performance, eco-friendly mineral sun care.
- Woojin Song (BEUATIA). Premium global platform engineered specifically for the beauty industry.
Niche & Complex Markets
- Ilham (Bare Halal). Solving cosmetic ingredient transparency for the global Muslim community.
- John Kang (Ahmo Travel). Personalized, tailored, complex travel logistics, executed at scale.
This diversity is no coincidence. It reflects an increasingly evident trend. The Korean cultural wave is attracting not only global consumers but also founders who see the Korean ecosystem as fertile ground for building solutions. From edtech and beauty tech to AI enterprises and travel, each pitch brings a perspective shaped by cross-cultural experiences.
Three Minutes to Prove the Idea
Each founder had three minutes to present, followed by a three-minute live Q&A with investors. On paper, the format looked simple. In practice, it tested how clearly each founder could explain the business, defend the model, and respond under pressure.
Several moments stood out.
Yuno, the founder of HAN•GL, generated over $50,000 in revenue in less than a month without any advertising spend. The organic gain spoke for itself, and investors quickly began delving deeper into user loyalty and retention.
John, founder of FIXFLUENT, faced a direct question from Jola about legal risk. If the company relied on other companies’ IP, what would happen if platforms like Netflix pushed back? John answered that the browser extension does not distribute content, but adds a layer on top of it. However, he explained that licensing will eventually be required at a later stage—an honest but strategic answer.
Jinkyung, founder of FOURSUMMER, highlighted a crowdfunding campaign that exceeded its initial target by 1,000%. When Adrien Wang asked how her brand could compete in the US and Australian markets, Jinkyung emphasized the benefits of its lighter mineral formulation, something consumers could immediately feel after just one use.
Across the session, investors were not only judging the products. They were also testing how founders handled uncertainty, weaknesses, and gaps in their stories.
Investor Feedback Disclosed the Real Standard
If the pitch session showcased the startups, the investor session showed the standards used to measure their performance. Here, the investor panel represents the market the founders are targeting.
The panel comes from multiple countries, and each brings a different perspective. That range mattered because the founders were not being judged by one market alone. They were being assessed through multiple lenses, from local expansion to sector fit to cross-border scalability.
- BNI Ventures, Indonesia. A corporate VC from Bank Negara Indonesia that focuses on the Indonesian market and is also open to startups looking to expand into their ecosystem.
- Sazze Partners, Silicon Valley. An American VC with a specific mandate: investing only in Korean founders, spanning the bio, deep tech, and consumer sectors.
- One Tree Hill Ventures, SEA. In two years, they have partnered with approximately 240 Korean companies expanding into Southeast Asia.
- SHOPLINE. A Singapore-based CPG e-commerce fund, investing $10,000–$250,000. It runs a Korean accelerator program via a partnership with NURSHIP.
- K-Beauty Nigeria, Angel. Jola Atoki is an investor focused on helping Korean beauty brands enter the West African market, particularly Nigeria.
What made this session truly valuable was the investors’ honest feedback.
Adrien Wang of One Tree Hill Ventures pointed to a problem he felt repeatedly. After three minutes, some founders still had not made their uniqueness clear. He emphasized that clarity in the first 30 seconds matters for both investors and salespeople.
Grace Kim of Sazze Partners added another important point. Investors want to know not just what founders are building, but where they are heading and how funding can accelerate that path. That made the session more than a networking opportunity. It worked as live market research. Founders could see, in real time, what global investors wanted to hear and what still felt underdeveloped.
What K-Style Expo Q1 2026 Revealed
Taken together, all the startups presenting at K-Style Expo Q1 2026 showed several pressure points in today’s market.
For example, Bare Halal is building a layer of ingredient transparency never before seen globally. Moreover, UnixonAI is providing complete control over company data in the AI era. VIDOPIX is transforming the way brands validate content before publishing.
These aren’t just products. They’re startup innovations that fill the gaps in global standards in their respective industries. And the greatest value of this event comes from the direct interaction with the investors themselves.
“It was a great experience engaging with a highly energetic and ambitious group of founders, with a strong diversity of ideas and clear potential across ventures. I would definitely recommend future editions of the event.”
Shakeel Ahamed, Wise Prince.
“This was a really insightful event. There are many founders building useful tools and applications, and having a platform to engage with them and explore collaboration is truly valuable. I particularly enjoyed the Q&A sessions. I think more time should be allocated to that in future events, or we take the entire Q&A at the end of everyone’s pitches. I would definitely recommend future events as a good way to stay in the ecosystem, connect with upcoming founders, and find ways to partner and grow together. Thank you for having me.”
Jola J. Atoki (K-Beauty Nigeria, Angel)
“It was a really fun and smooth experience, and I genuinely enjoyed seeing the variety of founders and ideas. The best part was getting to interact with founders directly and understand how they think beyond just the pitch. I’d definitely recommend future events because it feels meaningful, not just another pitching session.”
Athaya Kadzima, BNI Venture
Conclusion
The presence of eight startups from diverse backgrounds at K-Style Expo Q1 2026 reflected a broader shift in Korea’s innovation ecosystem. The event showed that startup ambition alone is not enough. Founders also need clarity, differentiation, and a business case that can withstand pressure.
That is what made the event meaningful. It was not only a place to present ideas. It was a place to test whether those ideas could survive real-world scrutiny.
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