Confirmed Speaker / Keynotes

From Models to Mission: Building Better Systems Faster with MBSE, DevSecOps and AI
Robin Yeman, Technical Fellow at Leidos
Building complex, safety-critical cyber-physical systems has never been harder or more urgent. Organizations are under constant pressure to deliver faster, integrate emerging technologies like AI, and adapt to changing mission needs, all while maintaining rigorous safety, security, and compliance standards. Too often, MBSE, Agile, DevSecOps, and AI are treated as separate initiatives rather than parts of a coherent system development strategy.
This presentation introduces Industrial DevOps as a unifying approach for building better systems faster by intentionally using every tool in the toolbox models, code, pipelines, governance, and AI together. Attendees will explore how MBSE provides the backbone for system-level thinking, traceability, and decision-making, while Agile and DevSecOps practices are adapted for large-scale, regulated environments rather than copied wholesale from software-only contexts.
The talk will discuss the practical integration of AI and LLMs into system development workflows, including backlog refinement, risk analysis, architecture trade studies, compliance tracking, and threat modeling along with the governance required to apply AI safely and ethically in safety-critical domains. Real-world patterns will illustrate how AI-assisted workflows can accelerate learning and execution without eroding trust, accountability, or engineering rigor.
Participants will leave with a clear understanding of how to combine MBSE, Agile, DevSecOps, and AI into a continuous, system-level lifecycle one that balances speed with precision, innovation with assurance, and autonomy with responsibility. This presentation challenges teams to stop choosing between “fast” and “safe” and start designing development ecosystems that deliberately deliver both.

The Architect's Ego: How MBSE is bottlenecking product development
Enrique Krajmalnik, General Manager – ALM at PTC
Enrique Krajmalnik is General Manager for ALM at PTC, bringing many years of international leadership experience in software and engineering organizations. In his role, he is responsible for strategic product development at the intersection of systems engineering, software, and lifecycle management. Through close collaboration with industrial companies worldwide, he has gained first-hand insight into the real-world challenges of introducing and scaling MBSE. In his talk, he addresses a thought-provoking and highly relevant topic: the human and organizational factors that determine whether MBSE becomes an accelerator — or a bottleneck — in product development.

Beyond Digital Blueprints: Effective Model-Based Systems Engineering
Joseph Green, Chief Systems Engineer at Medtronic
The pace of technological advancement and customer expectation is accelerating exponentially, and traditional document-based approaches are no longer sufficient to meet the complexities and demands of modern solutions. More Systems Engineering time and resources are spent to achieve only incremental results – barely keeping up with demand and functional partners.
There is a flaw in how Systems Engineering is practiced, and only a transformation in approach can break the cycle and unleash Systems Engineers to create the value their organizations need. Model-Based Systems Engineering has been sold as the solution to these problems for decades, but organizational results have been mixed. Why are some teams able to cross the chasm while others fall back to legacy approaches? If MBSE is the future, when will the future arrive? This presentation will delve into the compelling case for adopting a model-based approach laying out what is required from an effective approach and the value such an approach can provide. An exploration of integrating MBSE into a Digital Engineering ecosystem will highlight how Continuous Integration (CI) can initiate a virtuous cycle of speed and quality, expose the valuable information contained in MBSE models, and move from a focus on artifacts to a focus on engineering and execution.
“The future is already here – it’s just not evenly distributed” – William Gibson

Applied MBSE in the Devil‘s Triangle of collaboration, integration and segregation
Arjen Spaans, Systems Engineering Workstream Lead at Airbus Defence & Space
Christoph Neuboeck, Eurodrone MBSE Model Manager at Airbus Defence & Space
MBSE is widely promoted as a key enabler for faster development, improved quality, and better decision-making. In industrial reality, particularly in defence projects, its success is shaped by a persistent tension between collaboration, integration, and segregation. This “devil’s triangle” defines everyday MBSE practice and fundamentally challenges the notion of a single source of truth.
We address the resulting misalignment between key stakeholders: chief engineers seeking concrete deliverables, MBSE experts striving for methodological perfection, and system architects focusing on solving specific use cases pragmatically. In addition, we highlight the stakeholders that are mostly largely missing when MBSE methods and tools were conceived, without whose needs MBSE cannot scale or even survive in regulated, multi-national and multi-partner environments.
Opening Words

Dr. Ralph Hammer
Director of Staff Department for Security Research and Technology Transfer at Austrian Federal Ministry of Finance
Dr Ralph Hammer, born 6 September 1976 in Graz, Austria, is Head of the Austrian delegation to the European Security Research Programme “Civil Security for Society” in Horizon Europe and Director of the Staff Department for Security Research and Technology Transfer, in charge of the Austrian security research programme KIRAS, the Austrian defence research programme FORTE and the Austrian cybersecurity research programme Kybernet-Pass (K-PASS) of the Austrian Federal Ministry of Finance (BMF). After his military service and a stint as a civil servant trainee at various Austrian courts he joined the Federal services in 2007.
Ralph Hammer studied law at the Karl-Franzens University Graz with a specialization in international law and obtained the degree of “Doctor iuris” (PhD) for his thesis “Definition and the Fight against the New International Terrorism as a Challenge for Public International Law” in 2005. He is also a graduate “with Honors” of the 42nd Diploma programme of the Diplomatic Academy of Vienna.
Breakout Sessions

John Glanton | David Timm
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DevOps in MBSE: Implementing a Digital Engineering Strategy
In the fast-paced acceleration world of medical device development to stay ahead of the competition and decrease the time to market it is imperative to have an innovative digital design strategy. This strategy allows for distributing system design and requirements to various business and technical stakeholders that enables rapid iteration of design using digital twins and model-based systems engineering (MBSE) best practices. A core component of this strategy is to use LieberLieber’s LemonTree Automation suite to translate the design between systems and lower-level product development. This talk presents a strategy using LemonTree Automation to map MBSE design with lower-level product requirements that are stored in Polarion requirements management system.
The primary role of using LemonTree is to being able to natively view differences between different versions of the MBSE model. LemonTree Automation helps automate the native LemonTree application by offering the speed and flexibility needed to be able to branch and translate system design into Polarion. This provides easy access and central location for the device engineers to pair their requirements with the translated system design and the ability to collaborate with other key stakeholders. A new benefit of using LemonTree Automation is that it can be used with the recently developed LemonTree Viewer. The Viewer offers functionality that features an intuitive holistic view of the overall product design that stakeholders can access natively in LemonTree. LieberLieber’s LemonTree Automation serves as the digital backbone that supports the integration of the software infrastructure that serves as the next generation digital engineering platform.
In transforming the product lifecycle from a document-oriented approach to digital engineering requires a platform that can be used to architect and translate the design to overcome major product development roadblocks. LemonTree Automation helps facilitate a reuse strategy that enables early defect detection and vanquishes the obstacles of rogue stakeholder activity, manual design rework, and misplaced requirements. This talk examines how LemonTree Automation integrates with the current software infrastructure to realize a new and effective digital design strategy.

Dr. Michael Jastram
Model-Based Engineering for Product Velocity: Turning Models into Competitive Advantage
Model-Based Systems Engineering has become a powerful way to manage complexity. Yet many organizations still struggle to translate models into faster decisions, shorter learning cycles, and measurable product outcomes. This interactive breakout introduces Product Velocity, an approach that connects Business, Engineering, Delivery, and System Stewardship into a coherent development flow. Rather than focusing on models as artifacts, the session explores how models can actively accelerate coordination, feedback, and decision-making across the system lifecycle. After a short introduction and a real case study, participants will apply the first step of the Product Velocity method to their own work. Using a Product Velocity workbook, attendees will identify a concrete congestion in their development system and map where it appears within the overall engineering flow.
Participants will leave with a partially completed workbook they can take back to their teams to continue the diagnostic and explore how MBSE can become a structural accelerator rather than an isolated engineering practice.

Dr. Martin Becker

AI-Assisted MBSE: From Static Models to Intelligent Engineering Companions
Model-Based Systems Engineering (MBSE) has become a cornerstone for mastering complexity in modern, software-intensive systems. However, the creation, maintenance, and effective use of system models remain knowledge-intensive tasks that heavily rely on scarce domain experts. Recent advances in Artificial Intelligence, particularly Large Language Models (LLMs), open up new opportunities to augment MBSE practices by making engineering knowledge more accessible, reusable, and actionable.
This breakout session explores how AI can be integrated into MBSE workflows to support system architects and engineers throughout the engineering lifecycle. We discuss approaches for transforming existing engineering artifacts such as system models, documentation, and variability information into machine-understandable knowledge structures that enable AI-assisted reasoning. Building on this, we present the concept of AI-based Engineering Companions that support tasks such as architecture decision-making, stakeholder communication, consistency analysis, and the management of variant-rich systems.
Participants will gain insights into emerging patterns for combining MBSE with AI technologies, including prompt-driven model interaction and retrieval-augmented engineering assistance. The session concludes with lessons learned from current research and industrial pilot applications, and outlines future directions towards intelligent, knowledge-driven MBSE environments.
MBSE Summit Report
Key findings from the MBSE Summit
Since 2022, LieberLieber (with scientific support from Johannes Kepler University Linz) has been hosting the annual two-day MBSE Summit in Traunkirchen/Traunsee (Upper Austria). The event brings together up to 100 industry experts from research, development and practice. The programme consists of keynotes from top-class MBSE experts and is rounded off by the work of all participants in several breakout sessions on current topics. The exclusive venue of the MBSE Summit contributes to an even more intense experience and promotes a focused and cooperative atmosphere. In addition, since the second event (2023), participants have been contributing to sharing the knowledge and new insights gained here with a broader community through the joint publication ‘The future of System Engineering – Exploring MBSE trends in research and industry’.
Organiser

Dr. KONRAD WIELAND
CEO LieberLieber
Prof. Dr. MANUEL WIMMER
Head of the Department of Business Informatics – Software Engineering , JKU
Agenda
| Monday, 8.6 | |
|---|---|
| 16:00 - 17:00 | Welcome & Boarding the "MBSE Cruise" |
| 17:00 - 18:30 | Boat Trip on Lake Traunsee |
| 19:00 - open end | Social Dinner at Hotel Post |
| Tuesday, 9.6 | |
|---|---|
| 08:30 - 09:00 | Doors open |
| 09:00 - 09:15 | Welcome & Opening Words |
| 09:15 - 10:00 | Keynote 1 |
| 10:00 - 10:45 | Keynote 2 |
| 10:45 - 11:15 | Coffee Break |
| 11:15 - 12:00 | Keynote 3 |
| 12:00 - 13:00 | Lunch Break |
| 13:30 - 14:15 | Keynote 4 |
| 14:15 - 15:00 | Keynote 5 |
| 15:00 - 15:30 | Coffee Break |
| 15:30 - 16:00 | Impulse Presentations |
| 16:00 - 17:00 | Breakout Sessions |
| 17:00 - 17:20 | Summary Breakout Sessions |
| 17:20 - 17:30 | Closing |
| 17:30 - 19:00 | After-Work Gathering |
Location
Verein Internationale Akademie Traunkirchen
Klosterplatz 2
4801 Traunkirchen
Austria
Arrival
Public Transport
You can take the train (e.g. R4412, R3418) to the railway station „Traunkirchen Ort“ and walk 500m to the academy from there – note the train departure times.
Important: Do not go to the station “Traunkirchen Bahnhof” – it is 2.2km away from the destination.
There are also several regional bus lines on site that run between the various towns on Lake Traunsee.
Car
There is a free parking lot in Traunkirchen parking P2 Lunn Park. From there you walk 300m to the academy.
If you arrive by car and stay at the hotel “Post am See” or Seehotel “Das Traunsee” in Traunkirchen, please contact the respective hotel directly regarding parking.
Cab
If you are staying overnight outside of Traunkirchen in a town at Traunsee and do not want to or cannot travel either by public transport or with your own car, there is also the option of cab.
Possibilities: Cab Aicher, Taxi Premm
Overnight stay
With the codeword “MBSE Summit 2026” you can register directly at the hotel Post via post@traunseehotels.at (until 30.04.2026) or at Hotel “s Mitterndorf” via home@mitterndorf.info . We have a strictly limited contingent at the Hotel Post am See, Traunkirchen. This hotel is right next to the venue and the joint dinner will take place there as well.
Registration via Eventbrite
The costs of the event are covered by LieberLieber and Johannes Kepler University Linz. No participant tickets
or slots for presentations will be sold.
The registration fee is only 200,- Euro and will be charged directly at the registration.
The number of participants is strictly limited.
(Please organize your own travel and accommodation.)
What Participants say about the MBSE Summit
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