Leadership

Daily Buzz: An “Impossible” Path to Leadership

The story of Impossible Foods starts with a scientist who decided to embrace leadership for a greater cause. Also: a layperson’s guide to TikTok.

It’s been hard to ignore the rise of meat analogues of late, which have evolved from sleepy corners of the grocery store to buzzed-about parts of the fast-food menu.

(Just yesterday, KFC announced it was getting in on the game with Beyond Meat.)

But beyond surprisingly exacting veggie burgers, companies like Impossible Foods have created unexpected entrepreneurs—whose passion for their corporate missions has led them into leadership roles they didn’t expect to see themselves in.

One of those people is Pat Brown, a biochemistry professor who in another life created a nonprofit that reinvented academic publishing for the internet age. According to a new profile in Inc., he didn’t see himself becoming a founder and leader once again, but the passion for his mission led him to create Impossible Foods, where he serves as CEO.

“I couldn’t have imagined myself doing this,” Brown told the magazine. “But the most powerful, subversive tool on earth is the free market. If you can take a problem and figure out a solution that involves making consumers happier, you’re unstoppable.”

Brown’s story highlights the way that some leaders don’t seek a spot in the executive suite—but because of passion for a broader mission, it finds them.

And now you can find the fruit of Brown’s passion at your closest Burger King.

TikTok Won’t Stop

It feels like it’s been a while since we had a social network that went over every old person’s head, doesn’t it? Well, the rise of TikTok has definitely changed that.

Fortunately, there are folks out there willing to explain TikTok to people who aren’t in marketer-preferred demographics. Beyond our own Tim Ebner, who wrote about it in May, there’s this guide from VP Demand Creation Services’ Wes Sovis, who lays out that whether you should care about something like this comes down to your audience.

“[K]eep in mind that if your target audience is over 24 years old, you’re likely better off investing more time and resources into Facebook, Instagram, and Twitter; at least for the time being, anyway,” he writes.

Other Links of Note

Checklists for days. The Event Manager Blog has more than a dozen separate event-planning checklists that might come in handy for your annual meeting.

Chromebooks for the enterprise? The Google-owned platform is gaining some business cred thanks to Dell, which retrofitted two of its business-minded Windows machines for Chrome OS.

This CMSWire headline really says it all:When it Comes to Customer Data, Don’t Be a Creep.”

An Impossible Burger surrounded by veggies. (Alexander Farnsworth/iStock/Getty Images Plus)

Ernie Smith

By Ernie Smith

Ernie Smith is a former senior editor for Associations Now. MORE

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