About

Murray Galbraith has spent twenty-five years as a designer. For the first two decades, that meant events, brands, and experiences. For the last stretch, it has meant building AI tools for the people nobody else designed for.

In 2024, at age 40, Murray was diagnosed with profound ADHD. The diagnosis explained decades of feeling like the world was built for a different kind of brain. It also sent him looking for tools that could actually help — AI that worked with the way he thought, not against it.

They didn't exist. So he taught himself to code — using AI — and started building them.

Before that

Between 2012 and 2019, Murray designed and delivered large-scale events across Australia. He co-founded Myriad Festival, raising $4.5M and chartering a Qantas 747 from San Francisco to bring Silicon Valley to Brisbane. He worked with Pause Fest and Southstart, curating stages and pitch programmes that featured speakers from NASA, Microsoft, Google, and Adobe.

Before that, he was a streetwear designer, an action sports photographer, a podcast host, and the creator of a Kickstarter project called Pretty Rad For A Dad that profiled fathers from every walk of life.

The pattern has always been the same: discover something about himself, realise it's actually about everyone, and build the infrastructure for the “we.”

Now

Murray is the founder of Heumans — cognitive tools for the age of AI. He hosts the podcast I Hope I'm Wrong, about AI for people who are tired of being spoken to like they need protecting from the future.

He is a board member of Aboriginal Art Co, based on the Gold Coast, Australia, and a father of two.