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10 Best Marketing Agency Partner Programs To Boost Revenue https://ift.tt/30ZnEGv Are you looking for additional revenue streams for your marketing agency? Are you also interested in growing your own business while helping clients improve marketing, real-time WP protection, or ecommerce revenue? Or, are you looking to sell synergistic products and recommended marketing services using your customer list? Perfect, we’ve selected ten partnering programs for agencies to help you boost revenue and get educated in featured tools and services for optimal reselling and affiliate opportunities:
Before we get to agency partnership programs, it’s worth mentioning that some software companies, SaaS businesses, marketing platforms, and other agencies are not disclosing the earning information due to the agency approving processes. Some will evaluate your locations, number of employees, and overall agency ROI and earning potentials prior to disclosing the reseller gains. However, we will present these ten companies that feature partnership programs, why you should or shouldn’t partner with them, and, if disclosed – earning streams. 1. GetResponseThis is us, a complete marketing automation platform looking forward to having you as a partner. We help customers generate leads, engage with customers, sell knowledge, services, or products by featuring tools for: To partner with us, we offer two programs fitted for small and large agencies looking to increase revenue: This free-to-join partnership program includes promotional materials (e.g., banners, videos, sales copy) and cookie and promo code tracking. Reasons to choose the GetResponse’s Referral program:
Reasons not to choose the GetResponse’s Referral program:
It’s improbable to stumble upon businesses that don’t require digital marketing features. Still, just in case, we wanted to cover desirable customers to help you better understand and prepare for affiliate or reselling programs. This program features a 35% discount on sub-accounts, unlimited contacts on the master account, dedicated account management support, and the best industry solutions to run campaigns and to resell. Reasons to choose the GetResponse’s RESELL program:
Reasons not to choose the GetResponse’s RESELL program:
To test features and learn about GetResponse, you can sign up for the Free-Forever plan here. 2. WP EngineWP Engine hosts WordPress security features that include real-time threat detections, daily backup and uptime, and cloud-based platforms flexibility management. WP Agency partner program is dedicated to WordPress users that require data protection, including medical departments, ecommerce, small and large agencies, IT service providers, etc. There are three levels featured in Agency partnership programs.
Reason to choose WP Engine program for WordPress users:
Reason not to choose WP Engine program for WordPress users:
3. JustunoJustuno is a conversion and analytics platform that feature tools for retailers to help them grow ecommerce business. By using AI technology, it analyzes billions of data to create visitors’ profiles from any lead from your website. Reasons to join exclusive agency and service partnership program with Justuno:
Reasons not to join exclusive agency and service partnership program with Justuno:
4. ActiveCampaignActiveCampaign is an automation platform for emails, CRM, and marketing. ActiveCampaign is looking for automation experts, agencies, and consultants to partner with to help them manage customer accounts and help them grow their businesses. With ActiveCampaign, you can:
Reasons to partner with ActiveCampaign:
Reasons not to partner with ActiveCampaign:
5. AriticAritic is a business ecosystem software dedicated to improving customer experience. Aritics features a PinPoint agency partners program to improve visibility for your own agency and customers and generate ROI with exclusive agency benefits. Reasons to partner with Aritic:
Reasons not to partner with Aritic:
6. AdRollAdRoll is a marketing platform for ecommerce that combines email, social media, and web to help you deal with abandoned carts, retarget brand awareness, and customer loyalty. AdRoll is featuring agency partnership programs dedicated for those that can help clients build stronger relationships with customers to grow their revenue. Reasons to partner with AdRoll:
Reasons not to partner with AdRoll:
7. BirdeyeBirdeye is a messaging service that helps you get reviews and referrals, collect leads, run surveys and ticketing for a better customer experience and brand awareness. Birdeye features SaaS solutions for resellers/ agencies looking to partner with them. Reasons to partner with Birdeye:
Reasons not to partner with Birdeye:
8. KlaviyoKlaviyo is a marketing software dedicated to ecommerce. Its email and SMS features help you automate campaigns and reach customers through in-house data collecting tools. Kaviyos agency partnership programs call for marketing firms, email strategists, ecommerce experts, designers, and developers looking to create a new revenue stream for their business. Reasons to partner with Klaviyo:
Reasons not to partner with Klaviyo:
9. DripDrip is an SMS and email marketing platform dedicated to ecommerce businesses. Drip is calling for Goal-hungry, Big-thinking Agencies to join their program and learn how to analyze shoppers’ behaviors to target and automate campaigns for better customer experience. Reasons to partner with Drip:
Reasons not to partner with Drip:
10. Ingenex Digital MarketingIngenex Digital Marketing platform is a dedicated inbound marketing service partnering with HubSpot and Google to provide brand development and services for clients who need a little push with funding marketing. Reasons to partner with Ingenex Digital Marketing:
Reasons not to partner with Ingenex Digital Marketing:
Quick checklist, takeaways, and conclusion
Partnering with a business can be more than just another revenue source. It is growth potential for your agency, an opportunity to work with different companies and eventually grow your own team. To ensure all this, make sure you consider our Quick checklist, takeaways, and conclusion list first. Happy partnering. Printing via GetResponse Blog https://ift.tt/2Xap2TD November 24, 2021 at 07:37AM
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Formnext 2021, Day Four: 3D Printing in the Golden Hour https://ift.tt/3oTBGBv Day four is fantastic. Lots of people have left and stands remain almost devoid of annoying individuals. The Americans have gone to eat gravy, so its much quieter, as well. It’s the perfect time to examine the big stands, look at new parts, and inspect machines. I think of it kind of as the Trade Show Golden Hour. This is also the perfect time to catch up, reflect, ask people about what they’ve seen, and make sure that you didn’t miss that one new thing. Everyone is in a good mood, you can joke around with them, and it’s just a cozy afternoon still surrounded by machines. It’s perfect and I meet so many people again and I wish it will never end. And over there, for the cost of $200,000 for four days at $5,550 an hour is a completely empty stand. And this stand has has been cleared out at mid-day with five hours to go because everyone wanted to catch a flight. I understand that. A.) its Friday and, B.) you may want to go home—but, still, this is a rather costly thing, to leave early. It’s a great way to check employee engagement, by the way—see who is still there and who has gone home. Materials TrendsThere was a lot more attention paid to polypropylene (PP) and the material kept coming up much more often than in previous years. In large scale printing, desktop fused deposition modeling (FDM), and powder bed fusion (PBF). I kept hearing about PP over and over again. Arkema’s Rilsan PA 11 was the most mentioned and popular branded material. Again and again, I heard examples referring to it—the HEXR helmet and the castor beans. People love mentioning this material and the branding and recognition is excellent now. Companies are also asking about it by name because of its environmental credentials. Filled materials are also still all the rage, especially polyamides. New polyamide grades are also entering into the market. Most requested materials came from people looking at biocompatible and safer photopolymers. Granulate extrusion is discussed more, but precious few actually use it in manufacturing. However, given the cost differences, for some parts this could be a fast-advancing trend. Large-format 3D printing people seem utterly clueless about materials. There are dozens of people selling the same Ti64 powders without any differentiation or explanation as to why you’d choose them. I understand that sphericality is good (to a certain extent), but why you? Nobody takes bound metal extrusion seriously as a production technology. I really love it as a super low-cost method to make some parts. I see 3D printing as a portfolio of technologies where you’ll use powder bed for some parts, DED for others, binder jet for some, and bound metal extrusion for others. I know this doesn’t fit tidily into the visions of materials companies, but there is no one-size-fits-all technology and, by using them together, you can significantly reduce costs. Maintenance, repair, and overhaul (MRO)—including maintenance generally, spare parts, and the redesigning out-of-production items—was something that I saw a lot of companies come for and mention. I met several businesses who were attending the fair to specifically buy equipment to produce low-volume, metal spare parts. Bike helmets represent a key application, but aren’t there a lot more helmets we can be looking at? We should look much more broadly at sports equipment and safety gear. Lattice structures are everywhere—even though they are inconvenient because they can be penetrated by pebbles and the like and we can’t predict their behavior. Glass now seems much more attainable due to the new firm Nobula and the growing startup Glassomer. Both could usher in many new devices in the future. Best New MaterialThe best new material was the Liquid Crystal Polymer filament made by NematX. Really excited by the potential this material has in RF shielding applications and parts such as antennae and radars. WorryPeople seem to worry about Desktop Metal’s ability to sustain its share price. There is concern that a collapse of DM could have retail investors sour on 3D printing forever or for a long time. OptimismMeanwhile, money seems to be cheap and free-flowing and people speak very easily about raising $5, $10 or $20 million. Loans are in the offing and people see an endless supply of capital on the horizon. This is unrealistic, but I am telling people to raise now because we’re unlikely to remain as popular as we are now forever. Most Significant Development: SiliconeI love Spectroplast. Adore it, love it, love what it brings. WACKER’s ACEO could have done half of their applications years ago, but didn’t, leaving open a broad horizon of 3D printing applications in silicone for the this Swiss company. The parts look great, the properties look great and there are a lot of super exciting business development going on in medical, industrial and other areas. Elkem was also at the show offering extruded silicone. This means that there are now several ways to get silicone parts. I’m incredibly excited about the possibilities in medical, mass customization, gaskets, filtration, connectors and more. This is a huge volume opportunity that we have been unable to fulfill and Spectroplast is leading the charge. New Development: Small ThingsI was very impressed by the startup Atlant and their nanoprinting technique. But, I was also amazed by the many applications of UpNano‘s 2PP technology. We’re used to 3D Micro Print, mSLA and other techniques, but there are millions of devices and significant new advantages that can be gotten through nanoprinting. I really think that this scale has not gotten the attention it deserves. Best Development at FormnextThe best development at Formnext was 4DBiomaterials. This British startup is developing a biocompatible, reabsorbable photopolymer with 800 MPa in tensile strength (no, not a typo). The material can be tweaked to be soft and flexible or stiff and could perhaps replace some bone or soft tissue. You could perhaps change the degradation as well so it could degrade in one month or five. The potential of this novel class of material is significant and it could lead to safer procedures, better orthopedic hardware, a replacement of PEEK and other polymer implants or new classes of devices and implants. Really significant development. Printing via 3DPrint.com | The Voice of 3D Printing / Additive Manufacturing https://3dprint.com November 24, 2021 at 07:33AM
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TRUMPF Acquires SISMA Metal 3D Printing Venture https://ift.tt/3nKNEhp TRUMPF is a sizable and interesting player in the metal 3D printing world. One of the world’s biggest machine tool makers, the company has moved in and out of additive manufacturing (AM). It was an early developer of directed energy deposition (DED) systems in 2000 before making a more committed effort to 3D printing in 2014 through a joint venture, TRUMPF SISMA S.R.L., with Italian partner SISMA S.p.A., with TRUMPF owning 55 percent of the shares. Now, the German conglomerate is purchasing the entire entity. TRUMPF will continue SISMA’s line of laser metal fusion (LMF) machines, allowing it to direct its technology as the industrial, dental and medical markets. Meanwhile, SISMA will continue focusing on the jewelry and fashion industry, for which it will distribute LMF systems on behalf of TRUMPF. TRUMPF SISMA is based in Schio, in Northern Italy, where about 60 employees have been developing LMF technology. The news is interesting in light of TRUMPF’s sale of One Click Metal, a TRUMPF spin-out dedicated to metal laser powder bed fusion (PBF) machines for $100,000. This suggests that the $3.5-billionGerman machine tool maker is sticking to industrial applications, rather than entry-level machines that might be more useful for research purposes. Meanwhile, CNC machine manufacturer INDEX Group has acquired One Click Metal. Indeed, it seems confusing that TRUMPF would give up stake in what could be an important segment of metal 3D printing only to acquire the SISMA project. Executive Editor Joris Peels pondered the larger strategy of the family-owned firm in a previous post:
The financial transaction is expected to be completed by the end of the year. What’s next for TRUMPF? It’s difficult to tell, but it’s hard not to think it has something up its sleeves. Printing via 3DPrint.com | The Voice of 3D Printing / Additive Manufacturing https://3dprint.com November 24, 2021 at 07:03AM
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Top Christmas Cards 2021 https://ift.tt/3FKh9WU It goes without saying, that here at People of Print we’re all for keeping the art of card-sending alive. This year, support independent artists, small businesses, and printmakers and spread the Christmas cheer with our low-down of the best crimbo cards. Melissa Donne StudioWe love this botanical-themed digitally printed card by Melissa Donne. The ideal way of sending season’s greetings to your green-fingered pals. Jot Paper CoThere are two types of people in this world; those who know Die Hard is a Christmas film, and those who are wrong. Send this typographic Risograph card by Jot Paper Co to those who are in the know. Takako CopelandThis card by Takako Copeland is hand printed using a traditional letterpress machine. At the start of a new year in Japan they fly kites, as looking at the sky at the start of the year is believed to keep you healthy for the year ahead. The perfect card to wish health and happiness for 2022. LJB StudioOozing luxury with its hot foil detail, white and gold palette, and sophisticated and simplistic design, this card by LJB Studio would bring a smile upon any design-lovers face. Luiza HolubTis the season of toasty toes! This card is a professional digital print of an original still life linocut by Luiza Holub. Send warm wishes this Christmas time. Known As StudioNothing says Christmas more than a snowy village landscape. Pop this Risograph printed postcard in the post to your winter-obsessed pals. Thundercliffe PressSend glad tidings to loved ones near or far with this letterpress printed card by Thundercliffe Press (and because we all secretly love to belt out a carol). Sarah WilsonPrinted on 100% recyclable, sustainably sourced paper, which has a beautiful gold shimmer finish with a luxurious feel, this illustrated card by Sarah Wilson is the ideal way to spread the magic of Christmas this year. Emmanuelle OrrBecause we all love an idyllic winter scene. This card is based on a limited edition screen print by Emmanuelle Orr and is left blank inside for your own personalised Christmas message. Abby SumnerThese colourful Risograph printed cards by Abby Sumner are guaranteed to bring joy this festive season. Send to your colour-loving and eco-conscious chums. Susann StefanizenBored of the classic Christmas wishes? Then celebrate the chillier season and wish a happy wintertime to your winter-loving pals with this super cute illustrated postcard. Babak GanjeiOf course, as People of Print, we love to send cards. So keep card-giving alive with this typographic one from Babak Ganjei. Lorna RobeyWish a Meowy Christmas to your cat-loving pals with this illustrated card by Lorna Robey. A kitty festooned with fairy lights beats a traditional tree any day in our opinion. People I’ve LovedIs it really Christmas again? Send some silly and stupid tidings this year with this box set of cards from People I’ve Loved. There’s a card for your lover, pal, and scrooge in this pack. Printed PeanutInspired by real kitsch snowglobes, this tropical beach scene will allow the receiver to daydream about warmer climates and Christmas getaways. It also comes with a zingy neon envelope to cheer up the postman! Tiger and FoxSend Christmas cheer with this alternative Christmas card-come-decoration. A festive cut and keep garland, supplied with string ready to hang. A fun decoration that can be kept for future Christmases. MC PressureBecause Christmas is, after all, technically Jesus’ birthday. Celebrate Christmastime or Jesus’ Birthday (either works) with this letterpress printed card. Booba PrintsThis adorable, super kitsch, and retro style handprinted linocut card by Booba Prints will bring joy to any loved one this festive season. Alexandra RamirezSurprise your friends and family this year with one of these super cute illustrated cards designed by Alexandra Ramirez. Each card is one sided and is printed on 200gsm card paper and supplied with an envelope. KDC StudioAnd a partridge in a pear tree (impossible to read without singing)! Celebrate with the song that is synonymous with Christmas and send these unique and handmade linocut cards by KDC Studio .
Printing via People of Print https://ift.tt/2DhgcW7 November 24, 2021 at 03:44AM
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3DPOD Episode 84: 3D Printing Race Cars with Pat Warner, Alpine F1 Team https://ift.tt/30Yeh9T Upon the heels of a third-place win for Alpine F1’s Fernando Alonso at the Formula One Qatar Grand Prix, we’ve published this podcast episode with Pat Warner, Advanced Digital Manufacturing Manager for the Alpine F1 Team. Pat is a true 3D printing pioneer. He started as a machinist and was lucky that his local village of Enstone in England had an F1 team in it. Pat got to play with one of the first 3D printers in the U.K. and use it for wind tunnel models and features on cars. He developed materials, developed new methodologies, and worked to the technically demanding tune of the pied piper that is Formula 1. Pat tells us a lot about why F1 teams use additive and what they use it for. He talks to us about the circus that is Formula 1 and how 3D printing helps teams win. Pat’s simply lovely and we really enjoyed this episode. We hope that you do as well. Podcast (podcast-audio): Play in new window | Download Subscribe: Printing via 3DPrint.com | The Voice of 3D Printing / Additive Manufacturing https://3dprint.com November 23, 2021 at 09:06AM
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Coatings Giant PPG 3D Prints Lockheed Aircraft Parts with New, Proprietary Tech https://ift.tt/3qZEiAo As 3DPrint.com’s Matt Kremenetsky recently pointed out, centuries-old conglomerates are pushing into the 3D printing space, where smaller firms could give them an Industry 4.0 life raft as global economics and manufacturing enter a new era. The latest is PPG (NYSE: PPG), which has not only developed a proprietary 3D printing process but sold its first 3D printed parts to none other than Lockheed Martin for use on its C-130J Super Hercules military aircraft. Co-developed with Oak Ridge National Laboratory in 2018, the process is called ambient reactive extrusion (ARE). The name derives from the fact that fluid thermoset materials are deposited onto a print bed and cure in the ambient air. According to the company, “PPG’s ARE AM has demonstrated print speeds of at least 10 times faster thanis possible with current thermoplastic AM processes.” Not only that, but PPG claims that ARE is capable of producing “multimaterial, covalently bonded, isotropic, end-use parts at scale and speeds for aerospace, military and commercial applications.”
Demonstrating these capabilities, PPG 3D printed ramp seals made from the company’s production qualified aerospace sealant for Lockheed Martin to install on its C-130J Super Hercules aircraft. This four-engine turboprop military transport aircraft is the latest in Lockheed’s Hercules series, used primarily for transporting soldiers to areas like Afghanistan and Libya, but orders for the plan have come from everywhere from Mongolia and Israel to Saudi Arabia and Mexico. Interestingly, the former CEO of Lockheed, Marillyn Hewson, chaired a Task Force on National Security and U.S. Manufacturing Competitiveness for the Reagan Institute, which issued a report that looks a lot like a Republican “New Deal”. Quote request Are you looking to buy a 3D printer or 3D scanner? We're here to help. Get free expert advice and quotes from trusted suppliers in your area. Powered by Aniwaa
The largest coatings company in the world, PPG is a paints, coatings, and specialty materials giant with a history spanning 138 years, $13.8 billion in revenues, and 47,3000 employees across over 70 countries. As such, thermosets are its specialty and the company boasts that “thermoset materials typically outperform thermoplastics in durability and chemical resistance.” The company is already producing large scale parts using a machine featuring a 10 ft x 5 ft bed at its Application Support Center (ASC) in Los Angeles. Partnering with Cosine Additive, the company plans to expand its large-scale 3D printing capabilities. What this suggests is that Cosine will be building the machines and incorporating ARE printheads into their own architecture. Cosine came onto the scene in 2015, before it began working with Essentium to develop a large-format machine that could overcome z-axis weakness in thermoplastic extrusion 3D printing through the use of a plasma heat source and specialty filaments. Cosine was to provide the machine gantry and Essenitum the print head. While it looks as though Essentium may have moved onto its own architecture design, Cosine has found an even more powerful partner (if you discount BASF’s investment in Essentium). Given PPG’s sheer weight in the world, it would be difficult not to imagine the chemicals giant not heaving that weight around and coming to dominate our small industry. This is particularly true because of the stated benefits of ARE, including isotropic physical properties—which have been the Achilles heel of material extrusion and many other additive manufacturing processes—as well as material selection. Given that PPG already provides coatings, certified to a number of specific sectors and applications, to a wide range of customers globally, it will be able to get its technology into the market more quickly than might be possible otherwise. Printing via 3DPrint.com | The Voice of 3D Printing / Additive Manufacturing https://3dprint.com November 23, 2021 at 08:36AM
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ABCorp Adds Desktop Metal 3D Printing to its Boston Center of Excellence https://ift.tt/3HKbZfh American Banknote Corporation (ABCorp), one of the oldest manufacturing services providers in the United States, is announcing another expansion to its Center of Excellence in Boston. Back in May, ABCorp added automated inspection from Solution IX and industrial dyeing from Girbau to the lineup in its 125,000-square-foot facility, which already included a whole host of HP Multi Jet Fusion printers, as well as AMT’s PostPro3D Smoothing System. Now, ABCorp will start offering its customers the ability to use the Shop System from Desktop Metal, one of the world’s fastest-growing 3D printing startups. ABCorp’s history can be traced back to 1795, when, under its original name, the American Banknote Company, it helped the First Bank of the United States create currency that was more difficult for counterfeiters to replicate. The collaboration between such a longstanding firm and a newcomer like Desktop Metal not only shows that it’s never too late for a business to adapt, but also the exact extent to which conventional business is starting to take seriously the emerging additive manufacturing (AM) industry, especially regarding the newer manifestations of metal AM.
The partnership being created here can be seen as part of a trend in New England, which is becoming a hotbed for AM. This was highlighted by a grant program in Connecticut announced by the state’s Governor Ned Lamont back in September, as well as a grant to Yale University to study the potential for metal AM around the same time. The Boston area, where Desktop Metal is based, is particularly busy with 3D printing activity, as Markforged, Inkbit, Voxel8 and others have located their headquarters there. It’s fascinating to see that, as what’s often referred to as “Industrial Revolution 4.0” evolves, it’s contributing to the revamping of the same areas where America’s first Industrial Revolution originally took off. As the industry continues to come into clearer focus over the next decade, we’ll see more and more overlap between older entities like ABCorp and startups like Desktop Metal. The particular advantage to this sort of partnership is that it doesn’t require a whole lot of investment from either party to work. It’s clearly far less of a risk for ABCorp to invest in a suite of Desktop Metal machines than it would be to create an entire factory, for instance, while Desktop Metal can similarly increase its presence in a particular region without having to open up a new headquarters or hub. The more AM proves to be able to provide the same quality as more conventional versions of manufacturing, the less trepidatious companies with lengthy presences in America will be that they’re putting their reputations on the line by delving into the industry. Printing via 3DPrint.com | The Voice of 3D Printing / Additive Manufacturing https://3dprint.com November 23, 2021 at 08:06AM
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Redefine Meat’s Plant-Based 3D Printed Meat Available in Europe https://ift.tt/3qYY52V In early 2021, animal-free meat startup Redefine Meat’s CEO and co-founder Eshchar Ben-Shitrit, said its products were ready for global launch. This week, the first stage of the Israeli brand’s large-scale pilot line is in full force as Redefine Meat launched its 3D printed whole cuts of New-Meat products in Europe. The commercially available alternative meats include beef and lamb flank cuts and culinary-grade ground beef, sausages, premium burgers, and lamb kebabs. Endorsed by leading chefs of Michelin-star restaurants, the plant-based meats are now available within initial high-end restaurants in the UK, Germany, and the Netherlands. In the UK, customers can taste the range of New-Meat products at Japanese-Peruvian cuisine Chotto Matte, Indian restaurant Brigadiers, Burger Bear, and any of 22 Marco Pierre White restaurants. Customers will also get to savor the alt-meats in the Netherlands by visiting the line of Ron Gastrobar restaurants or eastern Mediterranean cooking landmark NENI Amsterdam. With the European expansion, the company solidifies its roadmap to becoming the world’s largest 3D printed animal-free meat developer. This major milestone for the food industry marks the first time high-end restaurants will offer plant-based whole cuts as part of their menus, achieving a product quality comparable to high-quality animal meat. In addition, the broad range of New-Meat products gives chefs unparalleled culinary versatility to incorporate plant-based meat into their menus. Firmly set on driving demand from meat lovers, Redefine Meat says it offers product quality and variety. Moreover, Ben-Shitrit describes the brand’s flagship meat as “superior in taste and texture,” a trait that has surprised even some of the most recognized chefs in the world. Thanks to unique technological capabilities, Redefine Meat can replicate the texture, flavor, and eating experience of beef and other high-value meat products and replace every whole cut from the cow.
Actually, during the United Nations 26th Climate Change Conference, more commonly referred to as COP26, food chain emissions were not among the top issues discussed. At the summit opening, UK prime minister Boris Johnson called on world leaders to make “bold commitments on coal, cars, cash, and trees.” Still, he neglected to address the environmental consequences of livestock farming, which contributes to greenhouse gases in several ways. The rise of alt-meat companies like Redefine proves that the demand for animal-free meat has soared. These so-called “clean meats” made in labs or with 3D printing technologies can help replace slaughterhouses and feedlots, eventually reducing greenhouse emissions. Lab-grown and 3D printed meats could even make deep space exploration possible. Using a range of proprietary and patented technologies, including its Meat Matrix Additive Manufacturing, Redefine Meat makes products from plant-based ingredients. Working closely with global meat experts to understand the complexity of animal muscle structure, Redefine Meat claims to have “cracked the holy grail of the alternative meat industry.” By developing its whole meat cuts that mimic the complete muscle tissues of animal fat, it considers customers will taste an “extremely juicy, yet firm, meaty bite.” The New-Meat range boasts a selection of high-quality products already adopted by close to 150 restaurants in Israel. Moreover, the range is designed to address a significant gap in the market: a culinary base for a wide variety of dishes. As such, the product has been acclaimed by several high-end and Michelin-star chefs, including legendary British chef Marco Pierre White, world-renowned chef, and Dutch TV personality Ron Blaauw, Berlin’s celebrated head chef of the two-Michelin star FACIL Restaurant Joachim Gerner, and Israel’s famed chef Shahaf Shabtay.
Expanding the variety of plant-based products, Redefine Meat’s launch in Europe is part of the company’s mission to become the world’s largest “meat” business. Furthermore, with demand for the product rising in the US and Asia, Redefine expects to launch its alt-meats there in 2022. Printing via 3DPrint.com | The Voice of 3D Printing / Additive Manufacturing https://3dprint.com November 23, 2021 at 07:36AM ASTM’s ICAM 2021: 3D Printing Economics & Sustainability Considerations https://ift.tt/3oNSnhA I recently had the pleasure of attending the 2021 International Conference on Additive Manufacturing (ICAM), hosted by ASTM International’s Additive Manufacturing Center of Excellence (AMCOE) in... View the entire article via our website. Printing via 3DPrint.com | The Voice of 3D Printing / Additive Manufacturing https://3dprint.com November 23, 2021 at 07:06AM
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Formnext 2021, Day Three: 3D Printing and Haribo Golbären FTW https://ift.tt/3FHSLF4 It’s day three, I think. My bloodstream consists almost entirely of Haribo Golbären. I’ve been living exclusively off of things that come in disposable plastic packaging and disposable... View the entire article via our website. Printing via 3DPrint.com | The Voice of 3D Printing / Additive Manufacturing https://3dprint.com November 23, 2021 at 06:36AM |
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