The 60-Second Challenge.

Entries for 60-Second Challenge are now closed.

The 60-Second Challenge is a much-loved part of TEDxBrisbane (you may have previously known it as the ‘One Minute Pitch Competition) — created to recognise that powerful ideas don’t only come from invited speakers. They are also sitting in the room with our audience.

Designed exclusively for confirmed TEDxBrisbane participants, the Challenge invites audience members to articulate an idea worth sharing in just sixty seconds.

And it exists because we believe the ideas in the room matter.

Watch some of our past finalists

Eligibility

The opportunity to enter the 60-Second Challenge is exclusively available to confirmed TEDxBrisbane participants.* Terms and Conditions apply.

How the Process Works

  1. Secure your ticket to become a TEDxBrisbane Participant or partner guest through the audience application process or by invitation.
  2. Submit your one-minute video.
    Provide a link to a single-take, 60-second video of you speaking directly to camera, clearly articulating an idea worth sharing.

    Your video must be:

    • One continuous take (no edits)
    • Free from cuts, music, overlays or visual effects
    • Clear and easy to see and hear

    This is not a video production exercise — we’re looking at your idea and your ability to communicate it in real time.

    👉 Full video submission requirements below.

  3. Finalists present live on event day.
    Selected finalists are invited to present their idea live from the TEDxBrisbane stage.

Video Submission Requirements

To enter the 60-Second Challenge, submit a link to a video of yourself presenting your idea in 60 seconds or less.

Video hosting requirements:

  • Host your video on YouTube or Vimeo
  • Set visibility to Unlisted (YouTube) or Hidden (Vimeo)
  • Private videos cannot be reviewed and will not be considered

Your video must:

  • Feature you speaking directly to camera
  • Be recorded as a single, continuous take (no edits)
  • Not include cuts, transitions, overlays, music, or visual effects
  • Be clear enough for the selection panel to see and hear you

This is not a video production competition. You will not be assessed on production quality — only on your idea and your ability to communicate it clearly in real time, as you would on the day.

Ensure your link is working and accessible at the time of submission and remains accessible throughout the review period. If we can’t view your video, we can’t assess your entry.

Incomplete, duplicate, or automated entries will not be considered.

Applications for the 2026
60-Second Challenge are now Closed.

Terms & Conditions

This competition is designed to identify the best ideas our TEDx Brisbane community has to offer. Submissions are assessed to select finalists through a curatorial review process focused on originality, relevance, clarity of ideas, clarity of communication, and compliance with TEDx Content Guidelines.

Eligibility
  • Entry is open to individuals who hold a valid ticket to TEDxBrisbane 2026 at the time of entry. This includes Participants and Partner Guests.
  • Partner Guests are eligible to enter as individuals only — not as representatives of any organisation or company.
  • No members of the TEDxBrisbane team, including on-the-day volunteers or Advocates, may enter.
  • If a submission is discovered to be from someone who did not hold a valid ticket at the time of entry, or who ceases to hold one up to and including event day, they will be automatically disqualified.
  • Complete the online application here during the advertised entry period.
  • Answer all required questions and submit a link to your video in accordance with the 60-Second Challenge video submission requirements.
  • Entries must be submitted by the individual entrant. Incomplete, duplicate, or automated entries will not be considered.
  • Multiple entries from the same person or email address are not permitted.
  • Applications close Monday 13 April 2026 at 11:59pm.
  • Submissions are assessed through a curatorial review process focused on originality, relevance, clarity of idea, clarity of communication, and compliance with TEDx Content Guidelines.
  • The number of finalists and their selection is at the sole discretion of the TEDxBrisbane team.
  • Curatorial decisions are final. Individual feedback or correspondence regarding outcomes is not guaranteed.
  • Only finalists will be notified by email. Finalists must respond within 48 hours or their presenting slot may be re-allocated to remaining entrants.
  • The challenge presentation must use wording agreed on by TEDxBrisbane’s Curators and be delivered in 60 seconds or less.
  • Finalists must refer to themselves only as a finalist in the TEDxBrisbane 60-Second Challenge. Referring to yourself as a TEDx Speaker, or your entry as a TEDx Talk, will result in automatic disqualification.
  • The finalist slot is not transferable, exchangeable, or redeemable for cash.
  • Transport, accommodation, and all ancillary costs are the responsibility of the finalist.
  • Subject to volunteer availability, finalists may receive guidance and suggestions regarding their delivery.
  • Finalists must not wear clothing or bring items on stage that constitute branding or promotion of any commercial, political, or religious agenda, or that promote inflammatory or divisive language or bad science.

Video entries must not:

  • Last longer than 60 seconds
  • Contain any commercial agenda — including selling from the stage or mentioning product or company names
  • Include political agendas or inflammatory language, including us-vs-them framing
  • Include any religious agendas
  • Contain bad science or unverified claims without credible, independently fact-checkable sources

By entering the 60-Second Challenge, entrants grant TEDxBrisbane a non-exclusive, perpetual, royalty-free licence to use, reproduce, edit, publish, and share:

  • Their submitted video entry
  • Any video, audio, or photographic recordings of their live presentation if selected as a finalist

This licence is for TEDxBrisbane and TEDx-related purposes only. Entrants retain all rights to their underlying idea and intellectual property held prior to submission.

By submitting an entry, participants warrant that:

  • They have full right and authority to submit the video and its content
  • The submission is their original work
  • They own or have obtained all necessary rights, licences, and permissions for any third-party material included

TEDxBrisbane reserves the right to remove or disqualify any entry that breaches these requirements.

TEDxBrisbane is committed to creating an inclusive and accessible experience for all participants. If you require adjustments or support to submit your entry or participate in the 60-Second Challenge — including captioning, Auslan interpretation, or other accessibility requirements — please contact us at hello@tedxbrisbane.com.au. We will work with you to understand your needs and, where reasonably possible, provide appropriate support.

TEDxBrisbane collects personal information from entrants for the purpose of administering the 60-Second Challenge, including assessing entries and contacting participants. We may also use your contact details to share updates about the event and related TEDxBrisbane activities.

  • You may opt out of non-essential communications at any time.
  • Personal information will be handled in accordance with TEDxBrisbane’s Privacy Policy.
  • To request access to or correction of your personal information, contact hello@tedxbrisbane.com.au.
  • TEDxBrisbane reserves the right to verify any entry or entrant at any time and disqualify those in breach of these Terms and Conditions.
  • TEDxBrisbane reserves the right to modify, suspend, or terminate the competition without notice.
  • TEDxBrisbane is not liable for any loss, damage, or personal injury in relation to this competition or participation in any prizes offered.
  • These Terms & Conditions bind this and any future entry by you into this competition and may be updated from time to time.
  • TEDxBrisbane’s decisions in all aspects of this competition are final. No correspondence will be entered into.
Headshot of Rolf Gomes smiling against a dark background.

Rolf Gomes

Mobile health pioneer

Dr Rolf Gomes is an electrical engineer turned cardiologist whose work focuses on rethinking how specialist healthcare is delivered to rural, remote and First Nations communities. He is the founder of Heart of Australia, a mobile healthcare program designed to bring specialist testing and care directly to communities that would otherwise go without.

Inspired by the health inequities he witnessed while training in rural Australia, Rolf combined his engineering expertise with clinical practice to design the first Heart Truck — a fully equipped clinic-on-wheels. What began as a single service has since grown into a multidisciplinary healthcare program operating across more than 40 communities.

Since Rolf’s TEDxBrisbane talk in 2017, Heart of Australia has expanded nationally, marking a major shift in how specialist care is delivered outside metropolitan centres. He continues to challenge the boundaries of rural medicine — one kilometre at a time.

Headshot of Santiago Velasquez smiling against a dark background.

Santiago Velasquez

Accessibility designer

Santiago Velasquez is an electrical engineer and inventor whose work focuses on designing systems that make the world more accessible. Drawing on his lived experience of vision impairment, he applies engineering thinking to challenges around mobility, navigation and independence.

Santiago founded the technology companies EyeSyght and Hailo, developing tools that address accessibility barriers across transport, education and employment. His work examines how everyday systems can be redesigned to work for more people, more reliably. In 2022, he was awarded a Churchill Fellowship to research best practice in accessible public transport internationally.

Born in Colombia and now based in Australia, Santiago brings a global perspective to questions of access and inclusion. His work challenges the idea that barriers are inevitable — and instead asks what becomes possible when accessibility is treated as a design choice, not an afterthought.

Headshot of Rob Joseph smiling against a dark background.

Rob Joseph

Design innovator

Rob Joseph is a medical engineer and entrepreneur whose work explores how safety systems can better reflect how people actually behave in the real world. With a lifelong connection to action sports, he began questioning why helmet design had changed so little despite growing understanding of risk, comfort and human decision-making.

Rob is the founder and CEO of Anti Ordinary, where his work focuses on rethinking brain protection through research, testing and design-led problem solving. Rather than prioritising technical complexity, he centres usability — examining how design influences whether protective equipment is trusted, adopted and worn consistently.

His work sits at the intersection of engineering, design and culture, where technical innovation meets everyday human behaviour. Rob is driven by a belief that meaningful breakthroughs don’t come from adding more — but from rethinking the fundamentals.

Headshot of Nicole Dyson smiling against a dark background.

Nicole Dyson

Educator

Nicole Dyson is an educator and entrepreneur working with schools and systems to design learning that helps young people build confidence, curiosity and agency. After nearly a decade teaching and leading in Australian public schools, she developed a deep understanding of how classroom experiences shape not just academic outcomes, but how students respond to challenge and uncertainty.

She is the founder of Future Anything, an organisation supporting the design of future-ready schools through curriculum programs, teacher development and partnerships with industry and government. Through this work, Nicole collaborates with educators to rethink how learning environments prepare young people for complexity, change and decision-making.

Nicole remains, first and foremost, a teacher. Her work focuses on designing learning that equips young people with the confidence and capability to navigate an unpredictable world.

Headshot of Molly McCluskey smiling against a dark background.

Molly McCluskey

Investigative journalist

Molly McCluskey is an investigative journalist and foreign correspondent whose work explores power, diplomacy and the spaces where global decisions are made. She is the founder of Diplomatica Global Media, a solutions-focused newsroom examining the intersection of international relations and the built environment.
 
Reporting from across Europe, the Middle East and Africa, Molly has covered diplomacy, economics, climate and institutions for leading international outlets. Her work is distinguished by a focus on how architecture, design and physical space influence political relationships and global cooperation.
 
A recipient of numerous international fellowships, her career bridges frontline reporting with long-form investigation, often in places where politics, power and place collide. Through journalism, consulting and media strategy, she is committed to making complex global issues accessible, human and actionable — using independent media as a catalyst for meaningful change.
Headshot of Lotti Tajouri smiling against a dark background.

Lotti Tajouri

Molecular biologist

Dr Lotti Tajouri is a molecular biologist whose work focuses on infectious disease, biosecurity and the unseen microbial worlds humans interact with every day. His research spans public health, forensic microbiology and infection prevention, with international collaborations addressing emerging biological risks.

Lotti is an Adjunct Associate Professor at Murdoch University and Associate Professor in Molecular Biology at Bond University Faculty of Health Sciences and Medicine, and is a long-standing member of the Dubai Police Scientist Council, contributing scientific expertise to global biosecurity initiatives. Across his work, he is interested in how everyday behaviours intersect with invisible biological systems — and how small, overlooked habits can carry disproportionate consequences.

By translating complex microbiology into accessible insight, Lotti challenges assumptions about cleanliness, risk and the environments we move through every day.

Headshot of Kate Fisher smiling against a dark background.

Kate Fisher

Health sociologist

Kate Fisher is a health sociologist and global blood donation advocate whose work explores altruism, health systems and the unseen networks that sustain life. She is the founder of Milkshakes for Marleigh, a movement addressing critical blood shortages by amplifying the voices of blood recipients, and making visible the impact of anonymous donors.

Kate’s work is grounded in lived experience, shaped by her daughter’s survival following repeated life-saving blood-derived treatments. Through research, storytelling and advocacy, she examines how generosity operates within modern healthcare systems — and what happens when it is taken for granted.

By making gratitude visible and stories shareable, Kate’s work invites a deeper understanding of the quiet acts of humanity that keep families together, often without recognition or reward.

Headshot of Jordi Luke smiling against a dark background.

Jordi Luke

Identity thinker

Jordi Luke is a public health strategist and community advocate whose work focuses on access, belonging, and care beyond rigid social categories. Their approach is shaped by senior leadership experience within the U.S. Department of Health & Human Services and frontline community work.

Jordi is the CEO and Co-Founder of Haus of Transcendent, an organisation working to prevent housing insecurity among LGBTQI+ immigrants and Transgender people, while operating as a community-based public health resource. They focus on removing structural barriers between people and the services designed to support them.

Born in Mexico and raised across Chile and Bolivia, Jordi brings a global perspective to questions of identity and inclusion. Through policy, culture, and maximalist fashion — including recognition as the inaugural Elton John AIDS Foundation Style Icon winner — Jordi challenges narrow gender frameworks and asks how communities can make room for more human ways of being.

Heather Anderson

Community media scholar, radio host, author

Associate Professor Heather Anderson is a community media scholar and journalist whose work examines how alternative media creates space for voices often excluded from mainstream narratives. She has been involved in community radio since the early 1990s, most notably at 4ZZZ in Meanjin/Brisbane, where she has worked across broadcasting, training, governance and archiving.
 
Heather’s research explores the role of community-owned media in advancing social justice, cultural expression and democratic participation. She is the author of People Powered Radio: Fifty Years of Australian Community Radio Station 4ZZZ, a definitive account of the station’s history and impact.
 
Through both scholarship and practice, Heather makes a compelling case for why media controlled by communities — not markets or governments — still matters.
Headshot of Fleur Madden smiling against a dark background.

Fleur Madden

Entrepreneur

Fleur Madden is an entrepreneur with more than two decades of experience building and growing businesses. She has founded four companies and exited three, developing a practical understanding of how businesses evolve and navigate moments of transition.

She is the founder and CEO of The Ginsburg Firm, a consultancy supporting female founders to scale or sell their businesses. Fleur’s work focuses on addressing a persistent pattern in entrepreneurship — that women are far more likely to close a business than successfully exit one — by helping founders build value and optionality as their businesses grow.

Fleur currently serves as Brisbane’s inaugural Women in Business Champion, advising the city on initiatives that support women’s economic participation and leadership. Alongside her commercial work, she contributes to community organisations supporting women in crisis and is proudly the Chairwoman of 4Voices. Her work centres on creating practical pathways for women to sustain success on their own terms.

Headshot of Bill Ovenden smiling against a dark background.

Bill Ovenden​

Human-centred designer

Bill Ovenden is a design leader whose work focuses on making positive behaviours easier to follow through on in real life. As co-founder and CEO of The Lad Collective, he began by addressing a practical everyday problem and quickly became immersed in how design choices shape human action.

Through years of building and refining products used at scale, Bill developed a deep understanding of how small design decisions influence whether people follow through on what they already care about.

Bill is interested in how leaders, organisations and communities can rethink the systems they create — not to fix people, but to design environments that better reflect how humans actually behave.

Headshot of Abbas Shafiee smiling against a dark background.

Abbas Shafiee

Regenerative scientist

Dr Abbas Shafiee is a regenerative scientist and bioengineer working at the intersection of stem cell biology, tissue engineering and human-relevant model systems. He leads interdisciplinary research focused on building complex living human tissues that better reflect how the body grows, repairs and protects itself.

His work has contributed to emerging approaches across regenerative medicine, biotechnology and non-animal testing, and is supported through international collaborations spanning academia, industry and health systems. At the core of Abbas’s research is a commitment to rethinking how we study the human body — moving beyond simplified models toward living systems that behave more like us.

Beyond the laboratory, Dr Shafiee is passionate about translating deep science into ideas that reshape how we understand the human body and our relationship with biology, technology and healing.