News
#WICxESG2025: Claim your seat at the billion-dollar table

What if You were the one creating a Billion-Dollar Idea?
Every few years, we hear about a breakthrough that reshapes industries, creates new markets, and leaves the rest of us wondering: “How did they see it before anyone else did?”
Uber turned unused cars into a global transit system.
Airbnb turned spare bedrooms into a billion-dollar hospitality business. OpenAI turned code into conversations that billions now rely on daily.
These weren’t just products. They were ideas that changed the rules of the game.
But here’s the real question:
What if the next billion-dollar idea had your name on it?
Why This Matters Now
We’re living in an exponential era where three forces are colliding:
- AI is the new electricity. It’s no longer a tool; it’s the ecosystem driver reshaping every industry.
- ESG is the new license to operate. Boards, investors, and customers increasingly expect businesses to align with impact.
- Execution is the new currency. The ideas that win aren’t just innovative, they’re scalable and resilient.
This convergence is rewriting every playbook. Ideas alone aren’t enough. The winners will be those who can:
- Spot opportunities others can’t see
- Translate vision into value quickly
- Align profit with purpose
- Execute with clarity, speed, and confidence
Here’s the uncomfortable truth: billion-dollar opportunities don’t announce themselves.
They appear as small insights, experiments, or shifts, waiting for someone bold enough to connect the dots.
And that “someone” could be you.

Why You Need to Do Something About It
Because billion-dollar ideas don’t wait.
The AI-driven economy is already creating new winners and new laggards. Sitting still isn’t neutral; it’s a risk.
Whether you’re a founder, a leader, or an innovator inside a Fortune 500, the question isn’t if disruption is coming. It’s whether you’ll be driving it or reacting to it.
The future belongs to those who step into the arena now, not later.
Enter #WICxESG Summit 2025: Where the Next Billion-Dollar Ideas Are Born
On Thursday, October 23, 2025, at 9:00 AM PDT, trailblazers, technologists, and changemakers will come together for #WICxESG2025.
The AI Innovation & Leadership Summit is hosted by Women in Cloud.
#WICxESG Summit 2025 is designed for those who don’t just want to “learn about what’s next,” they want to build what’s next.
Our Invitation: Take a seat at the #WICxESG2025 AI & Leadership Summit
Pat Sullivan , EY Global Digital Engineering Lead, says: “AI, cloud, and cyber are no longer optional—they’re the foundation for trusted growth. Events like #WICxESG2025 give leaders the chance to turn bold ideas into real-world impact.”
When you step into #WICxESG2025 Summit, you’re stepping into a launchpad for your next big leap, professionally, entrepreneurially, and personally.
Here’s what you’ll gain:
- A Resilient Career Roadmap Learn how to future-proof your career by mastering the AI + ESG trifecta that boards and employers are already demanding.
- Hands-On Skills for Building MVPs Fast: Stop waiting for funding. Utilise no-code AI tools like Microsoft Copilot and ChatGPT to build and validate solutions in real-time.
- Global Mentorship by OPULIS Honorees: Explore business models and GTM routes to turn concepts into fundable, sellable offers—closing the execution gap that holds most innovators back.
- Leadership Confidence: Step into boardroom conversations around AI governance, ESG accountability, and growth strategy with authority and vision.
- A Community of Builders: Surround yourself with pioneers, technologists, and changemakers who are actively creating the next generation of purpose-driven businesses.
This isn’t about taking notes. It’s about taking action.
From keynotes to 1:1 coaching, from pilot to profit, this summit is a clarion call to lead the AI narrative with vision, grit, and bold action.
Billion-dollar ideas don’t belong to a chosen few. They belong to those who step into the arena, commit to building with purpose, and surround themselves with the right community.
The next one could be yours.
The only question is: will you claim your seat at the table?
Join us at #WICxESG2025: Where the Next Billion-Dollar Ideas Are Born.
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Ovarian cancer cases rising among younger adults, study finds

Ovarian cancer cases are rising among younger adults in England, with bowel cancer showing a similar pattern, a new study suggests.
Researchers said excess weight is a key contributor, but is unlikely on its own to explain the pattern.
The authors wrote: “These patterns suggest that while similar risk factors across ages are likely, some cancers may have age-specific exposures, susceptibilities, or differences in screening and detection practices.”
They added: “Although overweight and obesity are linked to 10 of the 11 cancers evaluated and account for a substantial proportion of cancer cases, both BMI-attributable and BMI-non-attributable incidence rates have increased, though the latter more slowly, suggesting other contributors.”
The study analysed cancer incidence, meaning new diagnoses, in England between 2001 and 2019 across more than 20 cancer types, comparing adults aged 20 to 49 with those aged 50 and over.
Among younger women, cases of 16 out of 22 cancers increased significantly over the period, while among younger men, 11 out of 21 cancers increased significantly.
In particular, there was a significant rise in 11 cancers with known behavioural risk factors among adults under 50. These were thyroid, multiple myeloma, liver, kidney, gallbladder, bowel, pancreatic, endometrial, mouth, breast and ovarian cancers.
Rates of all 11 also rose significantly among adults aged 50 and over, with the notable exceptions of bowel and ovarian cancer.
Five cancers, endometrial, kidney, pancreatic, multiple myeloma and thyroid cancer, increased significantly faster in younger than in older women, while multiple myeloma increased faster in younger than in older men.
The researchers looked at established risk factors including smoking, alcohol intake, diet, physical inactivity and body mass index, a measure used to assess whether someone is underweight, a healthy weight, overweight or obese.
With the exception of mouth cancer, all 11 cancers were associated with obesity. Six, liver, bowel, mouth, pancreatic, kidney and ovarian, were also linked to smoking.
Four, liver, bowel, mouth and breast, were associated with alcohol intake. Three, bowel, breast and endometrial, were linked to physical inactivity, and one, bowel, was associated with dietary factors.
But apart from excess weight, trends in those risk factors over the past one to two decades were stable or improving among younger adults.
That suggests other factors may also play a part, including reproductive history, early-life or prenatal exposures, and changes in diagnosis and detection.
The study noted that red meat consumption fell among younger adults, while fibre intake remained stable or slightly improved in both sexes between 2009 and 2019, although more than 90 per cent of younger adults were still not eating enough fibre in 2018.
Established behavioural risk factors accounted for a substantial share of cancer cases.
Excess weight was the risk factor associated with most cancers in 2019, ranging from 5 per cent for ovarian cancer to 37 per cent for endometrial cancer.
The researchers said the findings were based on observational data, meaning the study could identify patterns but could not prove cause and effect.
They also noted there were no consistent long-term national data for several risk factors, that the analysis was limited to England rather than the UK, and that cancer remains far more common overall in older adults despite the rise in cases among younger people.
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