Nanocomposites of colloidal semiconductor nanocrystals integrated into conjugated polymers are the key to soft-material hybrid optoelectronics, combining advantages of both plastics and particles. Synergic combination of the favorable properties in the hybrids of colloidal nanocrystals and conjugated polymers offers enhanced performance and new functionalities in light-generation and light-harvesting applications, where controlling and mastering the excitonic interactions at the nanoscale are essential. In this Perspective, we highlight and critically consider the excitonic interactions in the organic−inorganic nanocomposites to achieve highly efficient exciton transfer through rational design of the nanocomposites. The use of strong excitonic interactions in optoelectronic devices can trigger efficiency breakthroughs in hybrid optoelectronics. B oth colloidal semiconductor nanocrystals (NCs) and π-conjugated semiconductor polymers (CPs) are attractive materials for a broad range of applications including bioimaging, 1,2 sensing, 3,4 electronics, 5,6 and photonics. 7,8 Using these emerging materials for energy-efficient lighting, display and photovoltaic technologies have gained escalating interest in the past 2 decades. 9−12 To this end, combining favorable optical properties of the colloidal semiconductor NCs and versatile physical properties of the conjugated polymers in hybrid platforms offers enabling opportunities for highperformance devices along with new functionalities. For this purpose, in the organic−inorganic composite systems, controlling the photophysical properties becomes crucial. These properties principally comprise excitons and excitonic processes, which include exciton formation, diffusion, transfer, and dissociation as well as radiative and nonradiative recombination of the excitons. These excitonic processes are schematically depicted in Figure 1.An exciton, which is a Coulombically bound electron−hole pair, is the primary form of the excited-state energy in the CPs and the NCs. An exciton can be created via either optical or electrical excitation (Figure 1a). Optical excitation occurs through absorption of a photon, while electrical excitation requires simultaneous injection of an electron and a hole. Within the lifetime of an exciton, it may radiatively or nonradiatively recombine (Figure 1b). Radiative recombination results in emission of a photon, whereas nonradiative recombination does not produce light but heat. Exciton diffusion (Figure 1c) is another process that is widely observed in the close-packed solid films of the CPs and the colloidal NCs. In the case of CPs, exciton diffusion/migration can happen either via exciton hopping within the delocalized excited-state landscape of CP 13 or via Forster resonance energy transfer (FRET) between different chromophoric units of the CP.14,15 In the colloidal NCs, exciton diffusion dominantly takes place through long-range nonradiative energy transfer because excitons are confined to the NCs. 16,17 The exciton diffusion length in ...