Doing what you can
When Cecilie Knudsen tries to determine where her desire to do good comes from, her thoughts first turn to the many fantasy books she read in her childhood, where the good fight the bad. “No, I don’t know exactly where it comes from, but I think in general you should do what you can to make the world a better place, even if it sounds a bit cheesy or naïve,” she says.
The same approach applies to the task of communicating her research to the outside world: “I feel that not enough people care about the communication side of research, because the main act is the research itself. And it should be, but we also need to tell people why it’s exciting and why it’s important. Otherwise, it will be difficult to justify why we spend so much tax money on it.”
Personally, Cecilie Knudsen loves to talk about her work. And reaching the final in last year’s PhD Cup, where PhD students are given three minutes on TV to communicate a summary of three years’ research, clearly shows that she is good at it. However, she also admits to still suffering from stage fright, but stresses that practice makes perfect, and that she now feels confident going on stage.
For her, the PhD Cup was the culmination of her journey as a communicator—getting the opportunity to tell the world about her work on a completely different scale as a proud representative of DTU. “And it was the first time in my life that someone spray-painted my face with foundation,” she says with a laugh.
The future
Cecilie Knudsen attributes VenomAid’s success to the competent team behind it—a team that today, in addition to herself and Jonas A. Jürgensen, consists of Gina Ross, Pelle Degnegaard, and Selma Belfakir. As CEO, Jonas is responsible for the startup’s finances and he has an eye for the big picture and new opportunities, while Cecilie herself is good at identifying problems and coming up with plans A, B, and C to solve them: “In that way, I feel like we complement each other very well.”
Although Cecilie Knudsen is still deeply passionate about the project and has high expectations for the imminent product launch, she won’t rule out stepping aside to let others take VenomAid further, if that turns out to be best for the company.
“I love this project and think it’s so important and so exciting. I really want it to succeed. And then it’s mostly just a question of whether it can best succeed with or without me,” she says thoughtfully.
“I only truly found my place when I became part of this group. But I also think it’s important to keep moving forward, and I’m not 100% sure what’s next once VenomAid doesn’t need me anymore.”
Read more on Venomaid's website.