High-Tech Heroes
Featured book
Why This Book Matters
The world is changing fast, and Gen Z is rising to meet the challenge. In High-Tech Heroes, innovation strategist Pete Dulcamara delivers a bold call to action: use emerging technologies like AI and robotics to tackle climate change, inequality, and outdated systems.
“High – Tech Heroes is the playbook Gen Z entrepreneurs didn’t know they needed but will be glad they found. It’s a bold, insightful guide for those of us building companis in real time , where purpose and profit are no longer mutually exclusive.”
– Cheryl Perkins, CEO & Founder of Innovationedge
Who Should Read High-Tech Heroes?
High-Tech Heroes: Why Gen Z is Our Last and Best Chance to Save the Planet, is written for the next generation of leaders, entrepreneurs, innovators, and change-makers, especially those in Gen Z who feel the urgency of today’s overlapping crises and are determined to act.
Read this book if you are mentoring or investing in a younger management that is ready to rethink leadership, harness AI, robotics, biodata, circular economies, and other emerging technologies to tackle climate change, economic inequality, systemic inefficiencies, and outdated models of success.
This book is also for Companies and leaders who want a practical, humanity-centric roadmap to build a more sustainable and equitable world, and who aspire to redefine what it means to be successful not by how much wealth you accumulate, but by how many lives you meaningfully improve. If you’re prepared to become the kind of leader or “billionaire” who changes a billion lives for the better, this book is for you.
What Readers are Saying
The Robin Egg
A parable about innovation and bringing new ideas to life
Every breakthrough starts with a discovery that others are quick to dismiss. The Robin Egg tells the story of a young girl who finds a robin’s egg and is told it will never hatch. Through patience, care, and belief, she proves otherwise.
A concise parable for innovators, this story captures a core truth of innovation: early ideas are fragile, certainty comes late, and progress depends on those willing to nurture what others overlook.
