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2025-03-18 12:25:00| Fast Company

Now that the last pint of green beer has been poured, its time to move on to the next reason to celebrate March: college basketball. The National Collegiate Athletic Associations (NCAA) annual single-elimination tournament, more commonly known as March Madness, kicked things off over the weekend with Selection Sunday. Heres what you need to know heading into the First Four games and how to tune in. A very brief history of March Madness On the mens side, the tournament dates back to 1939. Eight teams competed for the Division 1 Championship title, with Oregon taking home the inaugural trophy. The women got in on the action in 1982. Since then, the Tennessee Lady Volunteers have competed in every edition of the tournament. What happened during Selection Sunday? These days, the playing field has expanded to 68 teams on both sides of the tournament. Thirty-one of the teams are picked because they automatically qualify after winning their own Division 1 conference. The other 37 are picked by the NCAA Selection Committee, who takes factors such as the teams overall season record into consideration. After the teams are chosen, that same committee grants each one a seed or ranking. This helps ensure the playing schedule is fair and balanced. Its hard not to be an armchair critic when the teams and seeds are announced. Almost every year has some controversy, and 2025 is no exception. Mens fans were shocked to see the University of North Carolina included in the tournament after its 2213 record in the 202425 season. Bubba Cunningham, the UNC athletic director who also sits on the Selection Committee, assured CBS that he recused himself from the process. All the policies and procedures were followed, and Keith [Gill, the commissioner of the Sun Belt Conference] can address exactly how North Carolina was discussed because I was not in the room for any of that, he explained, as cited by CNN. Meanwhile, womens fans were surprised to see the UCLA Bruins take the No. 1 seed from South Carolina. This is the first time since 2021 that the Gamecocks were not given the honors. Head Coach Dawn Stanley would like to have more insight into the decision-making process. Obviously, its disappointing. It really is. Id like to get some feedback on how they came to that conclusion because we put together, we manufactured a schedule that if done right it should produce an overall number one seed, she said, according to CBS Sports. How can I watch or stream the First Four March Madness games? Now that the beginning of the brackets are ready to go, lets watch some hoops. The action-packed tournament starts out with the lowest seeded teams facing off in whats known as the First Four. For the first mens game, St. Francis will take on Alabama State on Tuesday at 6:40 p.m. ET. Here’s the full First Four men’s schedule: Tuesday, March 18: Alabama State vs. Saint Francis: 6:40 p.m. (truTV) San Diego State vs. North Carolina: 9:10 p.m. (truTV) Wednesday, March 19: American University vs. Mount St. Mary’s: 6:40 p.m. (truTV) Texas vs. Xavier: 9:10 p.m. (truTV) For the first womens game, Iowa State and Princeton will battle it out on Wednesday at 7 p.m. ET. Here’s the full First Four women’s schedule: Wednesday, March 19: Iowa State vs. Princeton: 7 p.m. (ESPNU) UC San Diego vs. Southern U: 9 p.m. (ESPNU) Thursday, March 20: High Point vs. William & Mary: 9 p.m. (ESPNU)  Columbia vs. Washington: 7 p.m. (ESPN2) Every moment of the NCAA mens and womens tournament will be broadcast live. Because there are numerous games, it takes multiple channels to broadcast them all. This year the First Four men’s games will be on the TruTV channel. This lesser-known cable channel is included in most traditional cable subscriptions. The women’s First Four games will be on ESPNU and ESPN2. Cord-cutters should be able to find these channels on the following streaming services, but double check your local offerings before signing up: Hulu + Live TV YouTube TV Sling TV What about the rest of the tournament? The rest of the mens games will be spread out on CBS, TBS, and TNT, and their streaming platforms, such as Paramount+. The womens tournament will call ESPN’s networks and ABC home. For a printable mens bracket and full schedule click here. For a printable womens bracket and full schedule click here.


Category: E-Commerce

 

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2025-03-18 11:00:00| Fast Company

Its easy to say that the name of the advertising game has always been attention. But the level of skill, belief, strategic rigor, creative confidence, and sheer will required to win this game has never been higher or more complex.Effectively engaging with culture in this pursuit has never been more important or desired by brands and marketers than it is right now, thanks to an ever-fragmented media landscape. There is almost nothing better at attracting our attention and, importantly, keeping it. Why? Because we care. We talk to our friends and family about it. We engage in online and IRL communities about it. The brands and agencies on this years list are finding more unique and impactful ways to genuinely embed their work into culture, or make our experience with it better, more interesting, helpful, or entertaining. Thats whats really earning our attention.But there is a difference between engaging with culture and chasing it. This years honorees have kept their work from feeling late to the game or as if its capitalizing on stale trends. Every brand is seemingly into collaborations, but Liquid Death comes at its unpredictable iterations from a comedy angle. Airbnb managed to create a product extension through its own cultural intermingling, and now its Icons platform allows guests to book stays in IRL pop-cultural locales. Yetis product quality is its baseline, but it wears its heart on its sleeve with films that can defy marketing logic yet make perfect brand emotional sense. Norwegian agency NewsLab flipped our expectations for a tourism ad on its head and uses sarcasm to hilariously sell Oslo to the world.The work and companies honored this year have shown that there is no single magic bullet when it comes to utilizing culture, but you do have to know where to aim.1. Liquid DeathFor giving the brand collab new lifeIn a scene straight from the 90s, two girls fawn over a heartthrob in a teen magazine. But instead of looking like Freddie Prinze Jr., the object of their affection is covered in Gene Simmons-style black-and white face paint. Suddenly, he materializes in the room holding a coffin-shaped, heavy-metal makeup kit from E.l.f. Cosmetics and water brand Liquid Death. Launched in March 2024, the ad hit 12 billion impressions in two weeks, and the limited-edition Corpse Paint sold out in less than 45 minutes. Founded by marketing veteran Mike Cessario, who copied the language of energy drinks while bringing his heavy-metal-themed water brand to life and has internalized the absurdities of commercial culture, the company spent 2024 using its collabs and other campaigns to spoof our cultures entire relationship with advertising while still producing great creative. With ice cream brand Van Leeuwen, Liquid Death debuted a hot-fudge-sundae-flavored sparkling water last August that sold out in seven hours, cementing the questionable beverage as Amazons most successful limited-time grocery product. Alongside Depends, it launched the $75 Pit Diapera spiked pleather diaper made for moshing and avoiding dive-bar bathrooms. The product was a plug for Depends adult incontinence products, naturally. Being a strong collab partner has been good business. The company hit a record $333 million in sales in 2024, with a growth rate nine times the overall bottled water category. With its $1.4 billion valuation, the company is eyeing an IPO, retaining Goldman Sachs last summer to explore the possibility.Read more about Liquid Death, honored as No. 43 on Fast Companys list of the Worlds 50 Most Innovative Companies of 2025.2. Superconnector StudiosFor pioneering a way to make brand work genuinely entertainingIf you want to know what the future of brands infiltrating entertainment will look like, keep an eye on Superconnector Studios. Nearly two years since its 2023 launch, the company is is uniquely reshaping the relationship between brands and Hollywood. Last year, Superconnector worked with LVMH to create the luxury goods companys new entertainment arm, 22 Montaigne, to explore content possibilities and Hollywood partnerships for its 70 brands. Now, it has 30 active film and television projects with A-list entertainment partners, such as Oscar-winning producer Stacey Sher, Imagine Entertainment, and Box to Box Films, across multiple LVMH brands, including Tiffany & Co., Hennessy, Dior, Moët & Chandon, Belmond, Marc Jacobs, Bulgari, and Sephora.Beyond LVMH, the company has been working with AB InBevs Draftline Entertainment division, Box to Box Films (the studio behind Drive to Survive), Netflix, and Stella Artois on an upcoming sports documentary series focused on Wimbledon. The company has formalized its sports connections by launching Superconnector Sports, a division in partnership with 32-year Nike veteran and Nikes longest-serving global CMO, and two-time Olympic athlete, Dirk-Jan DJ van Hameren.One person excited about the new sports division is Omaha Productions founder and NFL Hall of Famer Peyton Manning, whos worked with Superconnector on a partnership between Bud Light and the next season of Omahas Netflix show Quarterback. The team over at Superconnector has been great partners, says Manning. Weve teamed up on several projects, and theyve delivered on every single one. Im excited to keep working together to help tell great sports stories.3. AirbnbFor turning iconic locations like the Roman Colosseum into epic marketing and a place to sleepTwo years ago, Airbnb learned an important lesson when it rented out an IRL Barbie Dreamhouse, garnering twice as many impressions as the companys IPO announcement: People get excited about iconic, unique locations tied to pop culture and history. That insight led to Airbnb launching a permanent feature called Icons. Combining experiential and brand partnership opportunitiessuch as giving people the opportunity to rent the house from Pixars Up or the X-Men mansionit started in May with 11 experiences, with more added throughout the year.Each Icon opportunity has a countdown for when the listing goes live, and guests can request to book through the app. Guests are then picked from a drawing, and those picked get a digital golden ticket. Most Icons are free, and those that charge are priced under $100 per guest. All told, the company made 4,000 tickets available in 2024.More than a new product, Icons has fueled visitor growth for Airbnb. From May to September, there were nearly 57 million viewers of Icons on Airbnbs site and more than 1 billion social impressions. It was also a major factor in the company registering 1.7 million new customer profiles between the Icons launch in May and the end of the year.4. NewsLabFor completely and hilariously changing the vibe of what a tourism ad can beWhen it comes to tourism slogans, odds are that I wouldnt come here, to be honest would rank pretty low among marketers, but its the line at the center of the tourism campaign for the Norwegian creative studio NewsLab.Launched in June 2024, the commercial follows Halfdan, an indifferent native Oslovian as he shows a camera crew around the city, questioning whether it is even a city, and lamenting the areas walkability and beach access. He also finds fault in the citys public amenities as he sullenly gazes out at beautiful landscapes. The ad quickly went viral for its dry humor and reverse psychology, which flipped the script on the often overproduced, and frankly, corny approach thats typical for American tourism spots.The result was more than 20 million views, global news coverage, and a complete vibe shift in what a tourism ad can be. And now we all know a bit more about Oslo than it being the hometown of Edvard Munch and A-ha.5. Johannes LeonardoFor teaming with Anthony Edwards to put the swagger and fun back into basketball sneaker adsAd agency Johannes Leonardos 2024 campaign for Adidas made one thing clear: the sportswear brand has a bona fide star on its hands with Minnesota Timberwolves player Anthony Edwards. Not only does he have the skills to be a future face of the NBA, hes got a sense of humor, is a natural on camera, and talks just the right amount of trash.The campaign was strategically released only on Instagram in order to truly tap into the online communities of hoops fandom culture.The first spot had Edwards and his pal digging in a bag of other stars debut kicksJa Morant, Luka Donèiæ, and LeBronand declaring the superiority of his own new shoe.In another spot, Edwards is shooting hoops while his pal reads out receipts of people criticizing him. Edwards reacts to real comments from legend Carmelo Anthony and rapper Camron. Most brands shy away from controversy. But its exactly what Johannes Leonardo was going for. Stir the pot. Get people talking. What makes this campaign great is the brand and Edwardss willingness to name names. Having Edwards respond to critics a day after being eliminated from the NBA playoffs was a bold move. But Johannes Leonardo and Adidas used the opportunity to remind everyone, as Ant says, that this is just the beginning. The work helped propel The AE 1 to be Foot Lockers bestseller in 2024, generating 443 million impressions, and five sellout dropswithout a dollar spent on traditional advertising media like TV ads.6. McCann WorldgroupFor teaming up with Xbox to turn soccer gaming skills into an IRL jobFootball Manager is widely considered the most realistic game simulating what its like to manage a soccer team. So when it came to the launch of Football Manager 24, McCann had an incredibly ambitious idea for its Xbox client. If the game really was the closest thing to the real deal, why not make it that much closer? So McCann used the launch campaign to help the small English club Bromley FC recruit its next tactician from an untapped talent pool: gamers.The campaign invited gamers to apply for the job of a support performance tactician for the South London club. Eventually, 23-year-old Nathan Owolabi won the job, and his experience was chronicled in a three-part doc series called Everyday Tactician, which aired on TNT Sports in the U.K. Now, that wouldve been cool enough. But Owolabi used the data skills he honed while playing the game to help Bromley achieve its best season ever, getting promoted to League Two for the first time in its 132-year history. This is an incredible result. Global soccer is dominated by rich clubs that can afford to hire top coaches and analysts, so this campaign gave Bromley a massive boost. And for Microsoft, McCanns work helped Football Manager 24 become the most-played edition in the history of the game franchise.7. Wieden+KennedyFor helping to launch Caitlin Clarks WNBA eraWieden+Kennedy continued to prove this past year that it knows how to help huge brands show up in big ways, in big moments. The agency in 2024 continued to flip the script on how McDonalds shows up in culture by actually celebrating something that it didnt create. For years, many famous manga books, anime films, and shows have featured references to WcDonalds, a fictional chain with upside-down golden arches. W+K decided to collaborate with big names in anime and manga to re-create WcDonalds IRL across more than 30 different markets with manga-inspired packaging, a special sauce, and anime episodes. A near perfect execution of a brand celebrating and collaborating over co-opting pop culture. The agency also helped McDonalds ride an unexpected wave of newfound Grimace popularity. When Grimace threw the first pitch at a Mets game in June, it kicked off a seven-game win streak for the team, and a beautifuland brandedrelationship was born. As the team kept winning, W+K kept hyping the connectionacross social media and IRL by turning the Empire State Building purple, and sending Grimace on the 7 train ahead of a playoff game. The Mets didnt win the World Series, but the Grimace work got 9.6 billion impressions across social and earned media.For longtime client Nike, W+K effectively tapped into the incredible waves of hype surrounding Caitlin Clarks final season of NCAA basketball. The You Break It, You Own It and This Was Never a Long Shot work around Caitlin Clarks record-breaking college season generated more than 21 million impressions and views across Twitter, TikTok, and Instagram.8. SauconyFor replacing screen time with running timeWhat does a running shoe brand have to do with the ongoing discussion around the impacts of screen time? This was a question Saucony answered with the Marathumb Challenge. It created the worlds first branded experience that measured the distance you scroll on your phone, and then compared it to the distance you move in real time. The goal was to gamify the idea of replacing at least some of your screen time with a run. Within the platform, users could track their daily and weekly progress, check out past wins, and motivate others by sharing completed challenges on their social media channels. Each week, if consumers moved their feet more than they scrolled through their feed, they were driven directly to the Saucony site and rewarded with exclusive swag.The risk of such a project is that it will come across less as a utility for a healthier life balance and more like a corporate scolding. But Saucony threaded the needle perfectly. Participants in the Marathumb Challenge collectively ran more than 739,431 miles, and the app boasted an impressive 75% retention rate, completely eclipsing the average of 35%. The entire effort garnered over 1 billion earned impressions, including more than $11 million in advertising value.9. New York LibertyFor making its mascot the MVP of the marketing teamShe rocks the pregame tunnel, is one of the most popular members of the WNBA champion New York Liberty, and is widely considered one of the most marketable sports stars in the Big Apple. With apologies to Sabrina Ionescu, the real star has been a 10-foot pachyderm named Ellie. The Liberty increased the number of sponsors by more than 60% year over year this season, which just happens to coincide with the teams mascot Ellie the Elephant becoming a key part of the teams partnership marketing efforts for the first time.Since being introduced in 2021, Ellie has established herself as a key part of the WNBA franchises brad and business model. The Liberty have cultivated her as the ultimate sports celebrityone that never ages, sells a lot of merch, never demands a trade, and never misses a shot. Her performances go far beyond the home-court crowd, with more than 150,000 Instagram followers and 178,000 on TikTok. Ellie is a distinct star in a sea of mascots, thanks to her celebrity styling and fashion sense. What other mascot wears Nikes and carries a Telfar bag? Vogue chronicled her getting ready for game two of the WNBA finals. That distinction has allowed the Liberty to not only unlock new sponsors but give them more ways to engage with fans. Ellie has been in the starting lineup for marketing campaigns for Xbox, Bumble, and Hero Cosmetics.10. YetiFor crafting branded content that is also a stand-alone piece of artThe  accessories and gear brand has long produced short films that tell compelling stories tied to the outdoors, but last year it managed to evolve that genre in an inspiring way. It takes a careful eye to spot the brand opportunity in a 34-minute portrait of Jimmy Buffett and his group of friends in Key West, Florida, back in the late 1960s and 70s.But with All That Is Sacred, directed by Scott Ballew, Yeti saw a spiritual connection between the people who use its gear in the outdoors and the shared fishing obsession of writers like Tom McGuane, Jim Harrison, Guy de la Valdéne, and Richard Brautigan.The combination of interviews with those of the group still living, shot over the past few years, and footage from a little-seen 1973 doc called Tarpon, by de la Valdéne and Christian Odasso, is a magical portrait of a specific time and place. Its also a clear evolution of Yetis ambitions with film as well as a signal that brands can push themselves artistically with the right amount of creative courage. Yeti produced the film and launched it for free on YouTube last July across its digital channels. When McGaune was asked what he thought of the film being produced and promoted by a brand, he said, Given that its such a lovely piece of work, I hope it isnt dismissed as a commercial. No chance.11. FCBFor racing the past versus the present with F1 and Michelob UltraThe key to any great brand partnership is to create work that people actually want to watch or experience. In April, FCB worked with Michelob Ultra and F1s Williams Racing to create an incredibly unique sports TV special called Lap of Legends, the first-ever real-versus-virtual F1 race. Current F1 driver Logan Sargeant raced against the virtual avatars of Williams Racing legends like Mario Andretti, Alain Prost, and Jacques Villeneuve.The one-hour film used AR, AI machine learning and telemetry, as well as research from more than 720 races, 1,260 hours of footage, and 144,000 miles of racing to mimic the speed, style, technique, and strategy of the drivers and their cars. It was seen across 28 countries, scoring 4.5 billion impressions and 19 million views across all platforms. For FCBs Michelob Ultra client, it boosted month-over-month growth in organic search by 1,650%, and 23% growth in month-over-month social reach.Meanwhile, for Dramamine the agency created The Last Barf Bag, a delightful short film about the airplane sickness bag through the perspectives of enthusiast collectors, offering a fun, kooky approach to an incredibly tough product category.12. The Martin AgencyFor orchestrating distinct celebrity collabs, even for a pitchman as ubiquitous as SnoopIt all started in late 2023, but continued well into last year. The social post heard round the world, when Snoop Dogg announced he was giving up smoke, lit the internet on fire. For one of the planets most notorious weed smokers to even hint at giving it up was actually enough to get covered on the news. The agencys work for Solo Stove smokeless fire pits eventually attracted 19.5 billion media impressions, more than 10,000 media placements across 68 countries, generating $100 million in earned media while boosting unaided brand awareness by 2.5 times. The brand saw a 500% spike in organic search, a 70% increase in revenue, a 20% higher average order value, a 22% reduction in customer acquisition costs, and its best four weeks of firepit sales. This was an epic pop-culture troll that managed to do two things: First, it found a unique way to utilize Snoop as a brand spokesperson, even though he is arguably the most overexposed celebrity in advertising. And second, it did it in a way that actually boosted results for the brand immediately, and in the long term.That wasnt the Martin Agencys only pop-culture play last year. The agency worked with Wyclef Jean for its client TIAA on a sponsored anthem on financial literacy for Black Americans. While it doesnt immediately sound like fodder for a pop hit, the song was available on Amazon Music, and generated $100K in donations to First Generation Investors within a week, lifted TIAAs brand awareness by 63%, and website visits by more than four times.13. Nutter ButterFor making unhinged a long-term social brand strategyA cookie appears dripping over a playground thats on fire, like a Salvador Dalí clock. A young woman asks, Nutter Butter, are you guys okay? and two Nutter Butter cookies with composite faces move up and down in tandem with a rainbow Yes dancing above them. This is the mystical universe of absurdist oddities and inside jokes that Mondelez International-owned Nutter Butter has crafted for itself across social since 2023, but really took off this past year. To the uninitiated, a visit to Nutter Butter TikTok may feel like The Annoying Orange made by a rogue marketer on acid. But at a time when many marketers are covered in fear-induced flop sweats over the potential to make a mistake or offend, the cookie brands calculated shift to the unhinged shows that a distinct vision and commitment to it can yield impressive results. The 10 videos posted to Nutter Butters TikTok page in September had more than 87 million views, and the brand more than doubled its follower count in 2024. The numbers also added up beyond social. According to Stackline, an AI-enabled retail intelligence and activation platform, Nutter Butter sales on Amazon alone grew as much as 190% in 2024.14. TBWA\WorldwideFor harnessing AI tools to solve the needs of brandsLast June, the global ad agency announced its CollectiveAI platform, a suite of tools that leverage its insights and lessons from more than 11,000 creative minds in over 40 countries. Its not the only agency to develop in-house AI tools, but it is one of the most comprehensive and active over this past year. Featured in the suite is a tool that scales cultural research done through almost a decade of daily uploads. Brands can analyze certain cultural trends with a particular audience or product category, then generate ideas that can capitalize on that information. Another tool focuses on social media, trained on detailed case studies and data to provde pointed, expert solutions in research, strategy, and planning. It all sounds nice in theory, but TBWA has also been putting these tools into practice. For Moderna, the agency used these tools to build a Virtual Pharmacist to combat vaccine misinformation. For McDonalds, it built a Fan Truth Bot trained on more than 15,000 guest experiences in 29 countries. The bot identifies themes, suggests variations on existing fan truths, and generates new ones, helping the agency see fans in more creative ways and discover new ideas faster. Speaking of creative new ideas, the agency also created scented billboards in the Netherlands that didnt feature any outward branding except McDonalds red and the distinct aroma of the chains famous french fries.15. Uncommon Creative StudioFor grabbing New Yorkers attentionby putting rats under their feetAmid a fight for consumer attention, brand work can often veer into stunt products that dont fit in with a companys ethos or celebrity for celebritys sake. But Uncommons past year has seen it smartly deploy both tactics.Shortly after the London-based company opened its New York City office, it found a cunning way to capture locals attention and demonstrate its work. In February 2024, it put model and self-proclaimed rodent lover Jenny Assaf in its Ratboota custom pair of black leather knee-high boots, each with a taxidermied rat in the platform. Garnering more than 100 million views online in less than 48 hours, the boots went up for auction, with proceeds benefiting Mainly Rats Rescue, a nonprofit that finds homes for rehabilitated rats.Uncommon was equally creative in its work for clients. To celebrate mobile game developer Supercells first global launch in five years, Uncommon created a star-studded short film for the new game Squad Busters. Chris Hemsworth, Christina Ricci, Ken Jeong, Will Arnett, and Aulii Cravalho play game characters who follow one innocent man around his day, trying to convince him to join the game. At five minutes long, it risked resembling an overcooked SNL sketch. Instead, its a hilarious introduction to the games universe, while getting Nickelbacks How You Remind Me stuck in your head. It also helped Squad Busters become the fastest-ever mobile game to reach 40 million preregistrations.The companys work helped it grow its revenue 40% year over year in 2024.Explore the full 2025 list of Fast Companys Most Innovative Companies, 609 organizations that are reshaping industries and culture. Weve selected the companies making the biggest impact across 58 categories, including advertising, applied AI, biotech, retail, sustainability, and more.


Category: E-Commerce

 

2025-03-18 11:00:00| Fast Company

Good agriculture has always been about caring for the landbut today, that responsibility is more critical than ever. Innovative agriculture companies must now dedicate significant energy to ensuring future generations of farmers can continue to grow healthy, bountiful crops and feed the planet. The most innovative companies in agriculture for 2025 include forward-thinking businesses and nonprofits with at least one eye firmly on this future.Zero Foodprint takes the top slot, for funding regenerative farming through a model so simple, it becomes radical: Restaurants, grocers, and food companies are asked to contribute 1% of consumer purchases to directly fund farm conversions.On the farm equipment front, Four Growers released a fruit-picking robot for vertical farms thats 10 times faster than human labor, automatically packs produce, and provides accurate yield forecasts to boot. Applied Carbon introduced a compact, seemingly steampunk-inspired incinerator that transforms harvest debris into carbon-rich biochar in a single pass, spreading it back onto fields to boost crop yields.In the AI arena, Arables sophisticated analytics platform and award-winning sensor have attracted partnerships with tech giants like Google to help farmers cut water use and improve the health of some 65 crops in 50 countries. ClimateAi uses advanced computer-learning modelsakin to those in self-driving carsto give farmers and major food manufacturers hyper-detailed forecasts, guiding decisions on when and where to plant specific crops.For biotech, Moolec Science achieved not one but three USDA approvals for the first crops that grow meat proteins, producing pork-infused soybeans, beef-enriched peas, and more. Pairwise made history with the worlds first CRISPR-edited fooda milder mustard greenand the first seedless blackberry.Addressing agricultures labor challenges, Seso offers software now used by one-third of Americas 100 largest agricultural employers to streamline the H-2A visa process for migrant farmworkersa workforce the industry relies on heavily, at a time when its become a cultural flashpoint.Meanwhile, beverage giant Diageo expanded regenerative farming in Ireland for Guinnesss barley, Scotland for whisky grains, and Mexico for the agave used to produce its tequilas. And organic-farming pioneer the Rodale Institute has trained educational prowess on promoting regenerative farming in places where it can make a significant impactlike Ventura County, California, where in the past year it partnered with Patagonia to transition farmers to more sustainable methods.1. Zero FoodprintFor funding collective regenerationLaunched in 2020 by chef Anthony Myint and his wife Karen Leibowitz as platform to help restaurants go carbon neutral, Zero Foodprint today is advancing perhaps the most promising pathway to making regenerative farming the standard in America.Restaurants were initially encouraged to offset a portion of their emissions by donating 1% of sales to carbon farming. When the idea took off, ZFP ran with itleading to a James Beard Award and Basque Culinary World Prize-winning nonprofit thats partnered with Chez Panisse, Noma, Subway, and 100 other restaurants, enlisted prominent winemakers, and funded $19 million in regenerative farming projects, sequestering more than 100,000 tons of CO2e. This year, ZFP added its first grocery partner (New Seasons Market); recruited Bobs Red Mill, Vital Farms, Tillamook County Creamery, and Stumptown Coffee as new backers; and made its boldest pitch yet, via a TED Talk, for scaling the collective regeneration model. Next up is utilities: It has helped draft a Washington State bill to earmark 1% of restaurant bills and $1 from trash bills statewide for regenerative ag projects. If scaled nationwide, this opt-out model could turn food and utility consumers into a vast revenue base.Unlike typical sustainability program funders and carbon credit firms that just move money around, ZFP collects funds directly and deploys them on projects it manages like a general contractor, ensuring their legitimacy. Myints TED Talk argued that the solution to sustainable farming is already before us, just overlooked. America has spent billions championing organic farming, but consumers dont back agricultural change when they buy end products; fewer than 1% of todays farms are certified organic. ZFP argues that because surveys show that consumers are eager to fund sustainable solutions, shifting the burden and scaling the 1% program through collective action is the answer.Read more about Zero Foodprint, honored as No. 42 on Fast Companys list of the Worlds 50 Most Innovative Companies of 2025.2. Climate AiFor predicting the future for nine key commodity cropsIn the summer of 2024, ClimateAi unveiled forecasts that it promised could predict the weather for anywhere from one hour to six months in advance. Founded by Himanshu Guptaan energy policy expert who advised Vice President Al Gore and helped draft the Paris Agreementthe six-year-old startup helps farmers to be ready to respond to weather changes as rapidly as theyre occurring nowadays. Its offers satellite imagery, temperature and rainfall readings, and a breakthrough use of physics-driven AIthe same technology used by self-driving cars. Together, this mix creates extremely accurate detailed forecasts and also tells farmers when to plant which crops where, even predicting their likely yields.ClimateAis software is equally sought by large companies. It claims more than 20 major food and drink brands are clients, from Japanese beverage giant Suntory to potato supplier McCain Foods to pistachio producer Wonderful Company and its wine subsidiary, Justin Vineyards. McCain recruited ClimateAi in 2023, once the spud grower began worrying in earnest if it will have a viable potato business in 10 years. ClimateAi now assesses crop risks for McCains various growing regions, then hands off high-level recommendations for the best practices to maintain current yields. Adjustments like these take time, sometimes decades, and Gupta has warned that companies hoping to make changes to stay climate-resilient are running against time.3. PairwiseFor growing the worlds first CRISPR foodPairwise combines two concepts few humans would dare to fuse: food and CRISPR, the gene-editing technology known for designer babies and attempts to resurrect the woolly mammoth. The startup has built a system to select more desirable and nutritious crop traits. It then partners with major shakers in agriculture, everyone from Corteva to the USDA, in hopes of introducing them on grocery aisles.This past year, Pairwise and Bayer began working to scale leafy greens that are officially North Americas first CRISPR foodmustard greens whose wasabi-like pungency has been dialed down, making for a palatable new leafy greens option that packs twice the nutrition of romaine. Then in June, it rolled out the worlds first seedless blackberry, making use of something dubbed the Fulcrum Platform. This proprietary genetis technology was able to eliminate the hard pits surrounding a blackberrys seeds, as well as the thorns that bedevil growers. Pairwise claims these seedless berries offer better flavor, are more consistent berry to berry, and have great market potential, similar to that of seedless grapes and watermelons. It contends that the breakthrough here equips it to do the same trick with new fruits, leading to possible produce section goldmines like pitless cherries.4. Rodale InstituteFor leveraging its decades of knowledge in organic and regenerative farming to bring more farmers and consumers aboardThe Rodale Institute is where the modern organic movement was born. For the past seven decades, it has been leading educational efforts to disseminate specific farming techniques. Rodales skill at inventing creative ways to win over stubborn farmers is now coming in handy as it furthers the burgeoning new cause of regenerative agriculture.This past year, its team of scientists and academics have worked on initiatives with 24 partners across America, putting some 41,000 conventional acres in transition to regenerative. It is on the ground with Patagonia in California, working to convert farms to regenerative in Ventura County, one of the worlds worst places for pesticide use and an area now plagued by respiratory problems, poor air quality, and other health issues. It also collaborated with tree startup Propagate to help more farmers see the prospects of agroforestry as less daunting. It even spent part of last year boosting organic hazelnut farming in Pennsylvaniahazelnuts currently grow almost exclusively in the Willamette Valley of Oregon. These projects come alongside others in recent years that Rodale says have involved helping major food companies from General Mills to Cargill and Bell & Evans adapt their supply chains to regenerative organic practices.5. DiageoFor using Guinness, Johnnie Walker, Casamigos, and other spirits to lift the planets ownAs a brand that controls a disproportionate swath of the worlds grain supply because it is behind many of its biggest alcohol brands, Diageo has taken it upon itself to scale regenerative farming in three key growing regions: Ireland for Guinnesss barley, Scotland for whisky grains, and Mexico for agave used to produce its tequilas.The Guinness program is in its third year, but it has swelled to where it now involves 44 growers focused on enhancing soil health, reducing fertilizer use, and improving water quality. Data from the past year shows cover crops today encompass 1,400 hectares in a prime barley-growing area of southeast Ireland, leading to greater biodiversity, more pollinators and birdlife, improved soil fertility, and water retention.Last October, Diageo announced that these regenerative practices would expand across Ireland into farms that grow barley and wheat for Johnnie Walker, Talisker, and the Singleton whiskies, and it would also begin looking at the agave that impacts its top tequila brands like Don Julio, Casamigos, DeLeón, and Astral. Success in Mexico would require working closely with local agave producers, the company added, since it would need their decades of experience to understand how the plant could hold carbon for a six- to seven-year growth cycle.6. ArableFor replenishing water in NebraskaArable joins the umpteen other startups that in recent years have launched sophisticated analytics platforms to track weather risk and crop health. What makes Arable stand out is that its platform is showing impressive results, particularly for water reduction, that are drawing industry accolades. Now active in tracking 65 different crops in more than 50 countries, the company claims to process 28 billion datapoints every month. This, Arable says, allows it to custom-tailor farming down to the individual field or hyperlocal weather level.Among 2024s highlights was a project with Bayer that addressed water scarcity in key basins in Mexico by giving farmers an award-winning new sensor, the Mark 3, to track and then tweak their own irrigation practices. Arable reports that the project is on pace to cut water use by more than half a billion gallonsan amount almost equal to the daily consumption of 2 million U.S. households. Through a collaboration with the nonprofit TomorrowNow, the same device equipped smallholder farmers in Africa with next-generation climate data, and Arable says the Mark 3 also played a key role in a project with Shell to estimate potential carbon credits in Brazil.A collaboration closer to home, this one with Google, put Arable in action on 25,000 acres in Nebraska to help farmers fight a bad drought while also clocking significant reductions in electricity and diesel usage. A trendsetting local farmer, Roric Paulman, whose farm has hosted modern agricultural initiatives like one in 2019 from IBMs Watson, later called it the most revolutionary step Ive seen irrigation take, explaining that Arable helped to reduce his water usage by 22% across 27 fields.7. SesoFor helping farm workers workAmerica has quintupled annual H-2A visas for migrant farmworkers since the mid-2010sfrom 50,000 to over 250,000yet finding labor has only gotten harder for the agriculture industry. Despite the H-2As lack of a numerical cap, each year visa application hang-ups cost the industry billions in rotted crops by delaying workers arrival. With a new administration prioritizing deportations, employers face mounting pressure to find foreign-born workers (70% of the workforce) and also secure them safe, legally protected jobs.Seso argues that it solves both problems. Started by founders with families who operate farms, Seso acts as hiring agency with recruitment offices in Latin America, then it shifts into the role of immigration consultant and document preparer for the visa application process.Seso started in 2019 by cold-calling the smallest farms in America, offering to do their visas for free, says CEO Michael Guirguis, but its now on a tea. It closed on $26 million of Series B funding in April led by Bonds Mary Meeker and doubled revenue in 2024, allowing it to grow into the countrys second-largest farmworker visa agency and claim a third of Americas 100 largest ag employers as clients. Services have grown, too, to include automating payroll and insurance in back offices, lobbying Washington to address the federal immigration backlog, and sharpening relationships with stakeholder governments in Mexico and Central America. It also has a new product planned that will help farmworkersan estimated half of whom are unbankedset up checking and savings accounts, complete with a Spanish-speaking support center Seso has built from scratch.8. Four GrowersFor saving the (vertical) farmLast year was not vertical farmings best. Several top players bit the dust or wen bankrupt (Bowery Farming, AeroFarms, Smallhold) after disclosing that they were struggling to scale. However, a new robot agtech startup called Four Growers has emerged that could perhaps turn a leaf for the industry: Its flagship GR-100 harvests produce grown in vertical farms. But the pitch isnt that its another cool robot that picks fruit up to 10 times faster than humans; rather, its machinery that more fundamentally reimagines vertical farming operations. It adapts to the farm, can pack the fruit it picks, and has sophisticated-enough AI built in to deliver accurate yield forecasts to growers.Four Growers designed similar robotics for large farms on spec, like Nature Fresh, an organic tomato and berry brand available at Whole Foods, as recently as 2022. The GR-100 has picked up five large farm clients in the past year and a half. It now has a version ready for wider retail launch that is currently being demoed. The bot is equipped with four stereo cameras to help navigate complex greenhouse environments and also predict when unripe fruits will be ready. It harvests in a way that essentially packs by default, picking 24 crates worth of tomatoes at a time, and sorting them by weight with a weighted elevator system as it moves. Right now, the bots can also harvest cucumbers and peppers, but supposedly the whole salad is in the works.9. Applied CarbonFor taking biochar production directly into the fieldWhile other agtech companies are building elaborate futuristic machines that are still working to prove their value in sucking carbon from the air, a startup called Applied Carbon is using a small incinerator to leverage a centuries-old agricultural practice that scientists believe could sequester 2 gigatons of carbon a year while also boosting crop yields.Its pyrolyzer might sound like it was hauled straight from a Victorian inventors workshop, but the device is cutting-edge: In a single pass, a procession of interlinked tractors collect debris from the harvest and transform it into carbon-rich biochar that gets spread back onto the field, enriching the soil and reducing the need for fertilizers. Biochars ability to improve soil health traces back to ancient Amazonian practices, when it helped to create that regions fertile black soil. It has the capacity to store carbon for centuries, but scaling it is a real challenge, particularly moving agricultural waste to a biochar facility and the resulting biochar back to the farm. Applied Carbon solves the transportation problem by bringing the generator to the farm. Its current model can handle corn, rice, peanut, and cotton. The waste is chopped up, fed into a reactor that blasts the material at 1,000 degrees, then mixed into the field after being doused in water to cool it off. A syngas is also produced that cleverly powers the equipment itself.In July 2024, Applied Carbon announced that it had raised $22 million in funding to deploy its machines across Texas, Oklahoma, Arkansas, and Louisiana. Companies including Microsoft are already signed up to purchase the carbon offsets generated by the process.10. Moolec ScienceFor inserting animal genes into plants, for better nutritionMoolec Science is helping plants to taste like meat by rewriting the instructions they follow to build their own proteinsyielding, so far, a pork-infused soy called PiggySooy and a pea that was spliced together with bovine DNA. Both products are USDA-approved, and suffice it to say, they push the boundaries of what people picture when they hear the words molecular farming.Detractors, of course, will argue that these mutant plants are GMO central and demand to know whether such reengineered crops that blur the line between plant and animal serve any real-world utility. Moolec says the answer is a much firmer yes than most people realizethat not only do they have the potential to improve the nutritional benefits, color, and sensory experience of plant-based proteins, they can produce literal animal proteins that are cheaper, Earth-friendlier, and more humane, and even boring old vegetable oils that are more nutrient-packed and functional.The company secured three landmark USDA approvals in the past year, including the worlds first for a pea enriched with cow iron, the pig soybean, and a safflower with the highest omega-6 fatty acid concentration on the planetmaking it resemble a fish in this regard more than a thistly plant. Moolec reported earning $6 million in revenue for 2024, roughly a sixfold leap for the year, driven primarily by early sales of Piggy Sooy. The fish oil safflower is headed to market imminently, it says.Explore the full 2025 list of Fast Companys Most Innovative Companies, 609 organizations that are reshaping industries and culture. Weve selected the companies making the biggest impact across 58 categories, including advertising, applied AI, biotech, retail, sustainability, and more.


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