Making the Impossible Understandable: Messaging Deep Science That Actually Lands (AUDIO)
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À propos de cet audio
- Cancer adapts rapidly — therapies that rely on a single static target inevitably fail.
- Complexity in the solution doesn’t mean complexity in the message.
- Oncolytic viral therapies work by exploiting what cancer cells lack, not what they express.
- Effective messaging starts with what the audience needs to understand, not what the scientist wants to explain.
- Investors don’t need all the science — they need the logic of why it works.
- Metaphors are not simplifications; they are precision tools for understanding.
Chapter Markers: 0:00 Welcome to This Time, It Landed 0:48 Show intro and framing the messaging challenge 1:18 Introducing Aldo Pourchet and Omios Biologics 2:10 Why cancer therapy is inherently complex 3:12 Why current therapies rely on fragile assumptions 4:30 Toxicity, resistance, and the limits of single-mode treatments 6:05 Using analogies to explain cancer behavior 8:30 Why viruses naturally target cancer cells 11:00 What makes oncolytic viral therapies different 13:45 Engineering selectivity instead of attenuation 16:30 Matching therapy adaptability to cancer adaptability 18:10 The “changing shapes” metaphor that lands 21:00 Pre-framing investor objections 24:00 Why efficacy must come before safety in messaging 27:45 Translating science into investor-ready language 31:00 Where Omios is in its development journey 34:30 What still needs to be done to reach clinical impact
Keywords: This Time, It Landed podcast, Michael Liebowitz, Aldo Pourchet, Omios Biologics, cancer therapy innovation, oncolytic viruses, biotech messaging, life sciences communication, startup storytelling, venture capital biotech, scientific messaging, oncology innovation, complex product messaging
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