Each week, the Tomorrowist team publishes a video podcast and a deep-dive article on a single important trend facing businesses. But business leaders need a holistic view of the changing business landscape. Here are a few stories from around the web focused on other Tomorrowist-worthy trends that readers shouldn’t miss.
Adobe Expands Its Generative AI Offerings with New Firefly App (Forbes)
What to Know: Adobe has launched the public beta of its Firefly Video Model—the industry’s first commercially safe AI video generation tool. Designed for IP-friendly video content, the model currently supports 1080p and allows professionals to edit video from text prompts, images, and 3D sketches to enhance production efficiency. Featuring flexible pricing options—including plans as low as $9.99 per month—Firefly’s new offering is designed to streamline content production across media, advertising, and entertainment sectors.
Why It Matters: By offering a safe, commercially viable, and IP-friendly solution—meaning the generated content can be used without infringing on intellectual property rights—Adobe is poised to transform creative workflows and significantly lower production barriers. With 4K support coming soon, this breakthrough could upend the traditional stock video industry, compelling established providers to radically reinvent their business models in an era of rapid, AI-powered content creation.
The Unicorn Boom Is Over, and Startups Are Getting Desperate (Bloomberg)
What to Know: Before artificial intelligence dominated the conversation, Silicon Valley buzzed with a diverse range of “unicorn startups”—companies with billion-dollar valuations. But now, a record 1,200 venture-backed unicorns remain private as they struggle with down rounds and unfavorable funding terms, earning them the label “zombie unicorns.”
Why It Matters: The dramatic rise and fall of “unicorn startups” signals a major correction in the startup ecosystem as tougher funding conditions force companies to rethink their growth strategies. The mere existence of so many “zombie unicorns”—startups that once soared to billion-dollar valuations but now struggle to secure investment—could severely undermine investor confidence and stall innovation in the coming years.
How a Children’s Toy Company Launched a TV Juggernaut (Time)
What to Know: “Paw Patrol,” a global children’s entertainment juggernaut created by Canadian toy company Spin Master, seamlessly combined TV storytelling with toy merchandising from the start. The show’s success, which has topped preschool ratings worldwide and generated over $15 billion in retail sales, marks a pivotal shift in how entertainment and merchandising converge, setting a new model for franchise development.
Why It Matters: While this integrated approach has driven unprecedented global sales, it raises questions about the commercialization of children’'s media and its impact on creative play, prompting companies specializing in children’'s media to closely monitor Spin Master to glean broader cultural and economic implications. Similarly, as streaming disrupts traditional funding, studios increasingly rely on licensing deals, further blurring the line between entertainment and marketing.
The Drug Industry Is Having Its Own DeepSeek Moment (The Wall Street Journal)
What to Know: Chinese biotech companies are having their own “DeepSeek moment” in the drug industry. Therapeutics announced that a drug it licensed from Chinese biotech company Akeso outperformed Merck’'s Keytruda—the previous No. 1 selling drug worldwide, produced by the American company Merck—in a lung -cancer trial. Since then, Chinese firms have captured nearly 30% of major pharmaceutical licensing deals, driven by faster, cheaper development due to returning top scientists, streamlined trials, and regulatory reforms.
Why It Matters: This shift marks a profound realignment in global drug development, challenging the traditional U.S.-dominated biotech model. As major pharmaceutical companies increasingly license cost-effective drugs from China, U.S. biotechs and their investors face unprecedented competitive pressures.
An organization run by AI is not a futuristic concept. Such technology is already a part of many workplaces and will continue to shape the labor market and HR. Here's how employers and employees can successfully manage generative AI and other AI-powered systems.