The private dining series brings together design leaders to explore the future of sustainable innovation.
At the private dining in Singapore, the evening opened with a set of thought-provoking questions designed to spark discussion. Among them: “How can organisations better influence suppliers to accelerate meaningful emissions reductions?” “How can businesses today authentically embody the vision of environmental stewardship?” “In what additional areas can AI-driven innovation revolutionise sustainability across industries?”
These questions set the tone from the start, and the result was hours of engaging debate between some of India and Southeast Asia’s most influential design leaders and innovators.
These dialogues played out across four cities—Singapore, Bangalore, Mumbai, and Pune—as part of Conversations for a Better World, an exclusive dining series hosted by MillerKnoll, a dynamic collective of leading design brands that comes together to make a positive impact for people and planet.
Running from 29th July to 4th August 2025, the dinner series was part of A Better World Tour, an initiative sparked by MillerKnoll’s Better World Report, the collective’s annual impact report.
Events with a difference
No PowerPoint decks. No stages or awkward networking. Instead, guests found themselves seated at intimate tables, engaged in the kind of real talk that only happens when brilliant minds come together and get honest.
Sean McDowell, Senior Vice President of Sustainability and Innovation at MillerKnoll, created just the right atmosphere for this to happen. He leveraged his experience leading the collective’s sustainability transformation efforts to steer each group to think creatively and come up with innovative yet practical ideas that can work in the region.
Along with McDowell, Praveen Muppidi, Regional Sales Director for South Asia and Southeast Asia, and his team from around the region contributed insights and findings from their own locations.
Changing the conversation
Each evening, McDowell opted for candid, unscripted reflections over formal speeches, offering authentic insights into where MillerKnoll is headed and how it’s working towards its Better World commitments. Regional representatives then facilitated the dialogues that followed, inviting those attending to share diverse perspectives and expertise with their tables.
The discussions gravitated towards MillerKnoll’s core pillars of sustainability. These are focused on three goals: net-zero carbon, fully sustainable materials, and circularity across every product in the MillerKnoll collective.
These principles translated into three themes at the dinner series. The themes were Carbon Diet, which challenged participants to identify small but significant changes that could be implemented immediately. Plus AI & Sustainability, which explored whether artificial intelligence represents the next material revolution in design. And lastly, Materiality & Meaning, which examined how the design industry can fundamentally rethink material ethics for a more sustainable future.
More than networking
What emerged from each of the dinners was something far more valuable than your average industry meet-up. The small groups and thoughtful questions led to deep conversations between designers, clients, and industry experts who clearly care about sustainability and who see the value of collaborative problem-solving.
The discussions made one thing clear: sustainability isn't just good for the environment anymore. It's also driving business decisions because it solves real problems for customers and companies alike.
“These exchanges represent more than networking. They're about building the relationships and shared understanding necessary to address our industry's most pressing challenges,” said McDowell at the Singapore event. “MillerKnoll is proud to provide a platform for these critical conversations.”
The dialogues are already having an impact beyond the dinners themselves. They have led to new perspectives across the three pillars of MillerKnoll's sustainability framework—from carbon reduction strategies to material sourcing innovations to circular design methods. Attendees left with new ideas for resolving sustainability challenges, which they are now actively researching and implementing.