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Alum finds ways to have a big impact on health and students

David Kerr (BSc’19, MBA’23) loves to have an impact. Thanks to his MBA, he’s doing that by enhancing Nova Scotia’s health-care system and supporting a new generation of BIPOC MBA students.
David Kerr portrait

Posted: October 17, 2024

By:Ā Emm Campbell

David Kerr (BSc’19, MBA’23) is always looking for an opportunity to have a positive impact. That led him to the Nova Scotia Health Innovation Hub, where he works to support the enhancement of the province’s health-care system as a business development coordinator.

ā€œI get to work with clinical and operations teams, understand their challenges, and help them to identify and trial solutions,ā€ says Kerr. ā€œMost of the time, we are looking at new technologies to see if they can improve a particular area of health care. The fact that I get to be part of that process is profound.ā€

A change of career plans

Growing up in Ontario, Kerr wanted to be a doctor. His mom suggested ×īŠĀŠÓ°ÉŌ­““ for his Bachelor of Science degree.

ā€œShe said it was far enough away for me to gain independence, but close enough to visit often,ā€ he says. "We went to some of the recruitment events, and I realized that, at Dal, you're less of a number and more of a person compared to other universities I was looking at."

Ā After graduating, Kerr took a job at Tranquility, a mental health startup that developed a digital cognitive behavioural therapy platform. His goal was to save money for medical school, but his work helping the company grow inspired a change of plans.

ā€œWe did a project where we offered the app to Dal’s Faculty of Graduate Studies students,ā€ says Kerr. ā€œIt was incredibly rewarding to be part of this project. It made me realize that by bringing new medical technologies to market, I could still make a meaningful impact on people’s lives, just in a different wayā€

Kerr returned to ×īŠĀŠÓ°ÉŌ­““ to earn an MBA. He chose the university in part because he knew the calibre of its programs and professors. He also saw opportunities to gain unique hands-on experience through the Faculty of Management’s Doing Business in Emerging Markets course and the Corporate Residency MBA Pathway.

ā€œDal was the only university that offered an eight-month residency in the middle of a two-year program, which is a whole academic year,ā€ Kerr says. ā€œGiven my interest in health, I knew I could accomplish more and gain more knowledge in that time than I could with a four-month internship at another university.ā€

Kerr’s internship was with the Nova Scotia Health Innovation Hub, opening the door for his current role. ā€œI wouldn’t have gotten the job without the experience my MBA internship provided me,ā€ he says. ā€œIt gave me the know-how to conduct due diligence on companies from both a financial and a competencies perspective. But it also taught me the value of relationship management and navigating complex organizations, which is helpful when working with clinical and operational teams.ā€

Helping a new generation of students

ā€œThe one thing I truly strive for is to have a tangible impact,ā€ Kerr says. ā€œI want to continue growing in my career so that I can give back even more to my community and help others. Those are the values I was raised with and that’s what drives me.ā€