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Last year鈥檚 Falling Walls Lab winner makes his pitch for why students and young professionals should sign up for the competition

- June 20, 2024

Participants wait for the chance to pitch at Dalhousie鈥檚 Falling Wals Lab competition in 2023. (Nick Pearce photos)
Participants wait for the chance to pitch at Dalhousie鈥檚 Falling Wals Lab competition in 2023. (Nick Pearce photos)

"It was an amazing feeling once it set in, although it took a while to do so,鈥 says Dr. Joe Bedard, the recent Dalhousie PhD in Chemistry grad about winning Lab Breakthrough of the Year at the global Falling Walls Lab competition in Berlin last November.

鈥淚 was genuinely stunned to find out I'd won 鈥 the look on my face was pretty priceless. I had a lot of belief in my pitch and its groundbreaking potential, but there were so many top-level pitches from some really impressive people doing amazing things. Winning hadn鈥檛 even crossed my mind.鈥


The journey to the competition at听, an annual event frequented by Nobel Laureates and global thought leaders, began with Dalhousie鈥檚 regional Falling Walls Lab 鈥 Atlantic Canada competition earlier that September. Dr. Bedard was one of 14 contenders to make their three-minute pitch for a research-based innovation to improve the world at the event. He came out at the top for his presentation on how plastics can be manufactured from nitrogen in the air, negating the need for petrochemicals.

He says he prizes his decision to get involved and makes a pitch to students and early career professionals currently on the fence about pursuing a spot in this year鈥檚 competition.

鈥淔irst off, as a baseline, it ended up being a really fun challenge. If you don鈥檛 think you鈥檙e the right person to do this, or you think you need to work on your presentation skills, this will force you to improve. You鈥檒l end up being better than you鈥檇 imagined you could be,鈥 he says. 鈥淚 got to meet incredible people, both at the Atlantic competition and the global competition. These connections can last forever, and they really opened up doors not just here in Canada, but globally. If that鈥檚 something that interests you, it鈥檚 well worth giving it a shot.鈥

If his words of wisdom are not enough motivation, there are the prizes. The winner of Dalhousie鈥檚 region competition on September 17 receives an expense paid trip to Berlin to the finals, full registration to the Falling Walls Science Summit, and a $1,000 cash prize. Second place wins $500 and the Peoples鈥 Choice Award winner receives $250.听

Learn from the pro


We picked Dr. Bedard鈥檚 brain about the experience, how it helped him focus his research, and for tips that could help this year鈥檚 contenders repeat his winning performance.


Dr. Joe Bedard makes his pitch at the Dal competition.

Paint a picture of what it鈥檚 like to be at the Falling Walls Science Summit?

The Falling Walls Science Summit is a conference unlike any other. My experience was incredible, irrespective of winning the Lab Breakthrough of the Year. I got to see groundbreaking results presented at the highest calibre by Nobel Laureates, and some who are surely going to earn that distinction in the future. Above all though, the sheer amount of optimism that radiates from the Science Summit really sets it apart.听

Did creating your presentation give you a new perspective on your science?

Absolutely. It wasn鈥檛 until I had to find the 鈥減itch鈥 that was buried in my labwork that I recognized the impact of what I was doing beyond simply academic curiosity. Part of that is the nature of my research, which started from a really fundamental place. I think that once I was forced to look at the downstream impact, I was actually a little surprised to realize there was a more direct line than I鈥檇 initially thought.听

Did the competition open doors for you or help you in charting your professional journey?

Definitely. There鈥檚 been a lot of interest in the work that I pitched at Falling Walls, and it was great exposure on a global scale, which isn鈥檛 easy to come by! I鈥檇 also say that it opened my eyes to a path I hadn鈥檛 really considered before: taking an entrepreneurial approach to my science. I think sometimes it鈥檚 important to recognize your science as a solution, and that the end user that you鈥檙e developing it for may need that solution urgently.

What are the top three things that people need to keep in mind when preparing?

Number one, don鈥檛 be afraid of going too 鈥渂ig鈥 with your pitch when you start. You鈥檒l have to bring it back down to earth, but it鈥檚 worth asking yourself what the absolute biggest possible impact your research can have, and work from there.听

Number two, perfect practice makes perfect. Get yourself comfortable pitching to large rooms, doing whatever you can to simulate that environment. It鈥檚 easy to freeze and forget your perfectly scripted pitch if you aren鈥檛 comfortable with an audience!

And lastly, the judges aren鈥檛 technical experts, and most of the audience won鈥檛 be either. That means the more you get into the nitty gritty, the more you鈥檒l lose them. Keep everything big picture.


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