# Welcome to the Jungle x Albert School: Business Process Automation Hackathon (June 2–4)

**Authors:** Albert's Deep Dive
**Categories:** Business Deep Dives
**Tags:** Welcome to the Jungle, Hackathon, Nocode, IA, Concours inter-écoles
**Last Updated:** 2025-11-05T15:45:33.224Z
**Reading Time:** 1 min read

---

## Summary

From June 2 to 4 on the Paris campus, teams from Albert School and partner schools will compete to automate Welcome to the Jungle’s business processes using code, no-code, and AI.

---

A hackathon is scheduled on the Paris campus from June 2 to 4. The goal: automate Welcome to the Jungle’s business processes — with code, no-code, and AI on the agenda.

Participating schools: emlyon, EFREI, Epitech, Grenoble École de Management, EDC Paris, Eugenia, and others. All Albert School students may take part, while only B3 and Master’s cohorts are invited from partner schools.

Advice for B1 and B2: now’s the time to prove you can outshine Master’s students on a tech + business mix! Form a team of 6 to 8 people. Many prizes are up for grabs.

## Key Takeaways

1. Runs **June 2-4** at the **Paris campus**, focused on **business process automation** using **code, no-code, and AI**.
2. **All Albert School** students can participate; **partner schools** (emlyon, EFREI, Epitech, Grenoble École de Management, EDC Paris, Eugenia, etc.) are limited to **B3 and Master's**.
3. Form **teams of 6-8** early and combine **tech + business** profiles to compete effectively.
4. **Prizes** are on the line—build solutions with clear **workflow impact** and a strong, demo-ready story.
5. **B1/B2** students are encouraged to step up and show they can outshine **Master's** cohorts.

## Frequently Asked Questions

### How do I register for the Welcome to the Jungle x Albert School business process automation hackathon?

Look for the official registration link in Albert School communications or on the event page and sign up early. Partner-school students should confirm B3/Master's eligibility and follow their program's sign-up process.

### Who is eligible to participate (Albert School, emlyon, EFREI, Epitech, etc.)?

All Albert School students can participate. From partner schools (emlyon, EFREI, Epitech, Grenoble École de Management, EDC Paris, Eugenia, and others), only B3 and Master's cohorts are invited—confirm with your school for final approval.

### What is the required team size and can teams mix students from different schools?

Teams must have 6 to 8 members. Cross-school teams are often allowed at multi-school hackathons, but check the official rules if you plan to mix participants.

### What are the judging criteria for a business process automation hackathon?

Expect evaluation on business impact, feasibility, automation depth (code, no-code, AI), user experience, and clarity of the demo. Final scoring rubrics will be announced by the organizers.

### Which code, no-code, and AI tools are allowed or recommended?

Common stacks include Python/JavaScript with APIs, robotic process automation (RPA), and data pipelines; no-code tools like Zapier/Make, Airtable/Notion, and app builders (e.g., Retool) can speed delivery. For AI, LLMs with prompt engineering, vector search, and model integration are typical—use tools you can legally access and list dependencies in your README.

### How should I prepare and what should I bring for the June 2-4 hackathon in Paris?

Bring a laptop, chargers, ID/badge, and any datasets or API keys you're authorized to use. Before June 2, align on roles (PM, dev, no-code, data, design), set up accounts for chosen tools, and sketch a lightweight project canvas to move fast on day one.

### What prizes can teams win and how are winners selected?

Multiple prizes are up for grabs; categories and amounts will be shared by the organizers. Teams that demonstrate measurable time/cost savings, a solid automation plan, and a polished demo typically perform well.

### Who owns the intellectual property (IP) of projects built during the hackathon?

IP terms vary by event; some hackathons let teams retain ownership, while others require open-source licensing or grant usage rights to the host. Review the official rules or ask the organizing team before you start.


---

*Article from [Albert's Deep Dive](https://deepdive.albertschool.com) - Albert School's Journal*
