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Positioning itself as both a roadmap and a rallying cry, the Climate Tech Atlas is a free, authoritative guide to where the most significant decarbonization breakthroughs are likely to emerge. Launched this month by the Stanford Doerr School of Sustainability, McKinsey & Company and other partners, the platform identifies more than 60 "Innovation Imperatives" and 39 "Moonshots" across six sectors, from buildings and manufacturing to food systems and carbon removal.The platform's timing is deliberate. Historical precedent suggests breakthroughs often flourish during periods of uncertainty startups founded during the 2008 financial crisis showed better long-term survival rates than those launched in calmer waters. By directing attention toward solutions that move the needle at scale, the atlas aims to help students, innovators, investors, policymakers and philanthropists cut through the noise and focus on what actually matters.TREND BITEThe Climate Tech Atlas reframes climate innovation from existential burden to trillion-dollar growth frontier. It's a shift that gives businesses permission to tell a bolder story: "We're not tinkering on the margins; we're building the future infrastructure of human prosperity."
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Marketing and Advertising
Catch up on select AI news and developments from the past week or so. Stay in the know. Read the full article at MarketingProfs
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Marketing and Advertising
Mars Petcare's Temptations brand is teaming up with People magazine to introduce a Sexiest Cat Dad category in the annual Sexiest Man Alive Readers' Choice Poll. The initiative follows research showing that 63% of Americans think cat-owning men face unfair stereotypes, while two-thirds of Gen Z believe Cat Dads make better partners.The campaign builds on Temptations' earlier collaboration with cultural figure Kordell Beckham. Readers can vote for their favorite Cat Dad in People's poll, with results revealed in the October 31st print issue and additional coverage in the November 7th Sexiest Man Alive edition.TREND BITEMasculinity markers have been shifting for years, with Millennials and Gen Z increasingly valuing emotional intelligence, nurturing behavior and vulnerability over stoic independence. Men who care for cats animals historically associated with femininity represent this cultural pivot toward softer masculinity.As younger generations push for broader definitions of what it means to be masculine, brands across categories have an opportunity to reframe traditionally "feminine" associations as universally appealing traits. What outdated stereotypes does your brand inadvertently reinforce, and how could challenging them unlock new market segments?
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Marketing and Advertising
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