Further to the call for a Brain Economy Systemic Funding Initiative, co-led by NeuroCentury (see: https://neurocentury.com/lib/dpdw7y/Towards-a-Brain--Economy-Systemic-Funding-Initiative-m15gxkhc.pdf), a workshop on “Brain Lens Investing: From Concept to Action” was held in Oxford on the margins of the Skoll World Forum 23-24 April. The event was organised by Grand Challenges Canada, Global Brain Economy Initiative, McKinsey Health Institute, and SecondMuse Capital. The workshop discussed ways of optimising interventions across the different domains of neuroscience, neurology, mental health and brain skill development. It called for public, private and philanthropic funders to deploy capital with a broader mindset, aiming to catalyse the brain-positive transition. The discussions focused on how brain lens investing can move from an emerging concept to a more operational framework for action, addressing brain capital and systemic investing alongside practical financing mechanisms, innovation perspectives, and partnership pathways for scaling investment in brain health and brain skills. Participants agreed that the Brain lens investing approach, while relying on different methodologies, structures, and capabilities, it can achieve a positive-sum effect through strategic blending