
What makes this more interesting is Beyond Tahir Academy. Unlike many platforms that mostly explain what AI is or how tools work, this academy presents itself around implementation. It offers courses by niche, including AI for doctors, AI for lawyers, AI for students, prompt engineering, content creation, AI agents and no-code development. The academy’s public profile can also be reviewed at Beyond Tahir Academy profile page. The idea is not only to teach AI as a subject, but to teach AI as a skill that solves field-specific problems.
That is the kind of training Pakistan needs. A doctor does not need a long lecture on neural networks. He needs to know how AI can help with patient communication, clinic management, medical research and documentation. A lawyer does not need another generic AI webinar. She needs to understand how AI can support legal drafting, case research and client workflows. A student does not need fear. He needs direction.
This is where government attention becomes important. Pakistan’s AI policy has the right ambition, but ambition without execution becomes paperwork. If the country wants to train one million AI-ready people, it should not rely only on routine courses and formal events. It should identify real implementers, practical academies, private-sector trainers and platforms already teaching people how to use AI in daily work.
Beyond Tahir Academy may be one such model. This is not about praising one person blindly. It is about asking a serious national question: are we training people to understand AI, or are we training them to solve problems with AI?
Because the future will not reward the country with the most AI seminars. It will reward the country with the most AI problem solvers. Pakistan has talent. Pakistan has youth. Pakistan has policy. Now Pakistan needs implementation. And if people like Muhammad Tahir Ashraf are already building that bridge, perhaps the government should not wait too long before walking across it.

