Working across multiple medical, regulatory, compliance, and drug safety disciplines.What do you do?Lead a broad team of expert medical, pharmacist, and scientifically qualified colleagues in medical affairs, clinical operations, drug safety, regulatory, and quality departments to ensure the safe provision of specialist medicines.What qualifications and experience do you have?MSC, BSc, BM, Dip Pharm Med & MRCPMWhat does your typical day involve?Every day is different! Early start (to avoid traffic); team meetings; traveling to meet scientific leaders / coach team members – flexible working pattern – work approximately 2 days a week from home.How has your career developed since you entered the industry?I have owned my own career: 4 companies, 6 roles over 10 years in research, early clinical development, medical affairs, and senior leadership.When did you decide on a career in the pharmaceutical industry?08/2007: why: looking for something different! Trained as a pathologist; but realized this career didn't match my core strengths.Do you work mostly on your own or as part of a team?100% teamwork.What is it like socially where you work?Fast, fun, challenging, every day is different.What are you most proud of in your career?Leading successful teams to achieve significant outcomes often with very short timelines. Seeing my team(s) be recognized locally and globally – company awards.Do you think additional qualifications or experience would be an advantage for someone entering the industry now?YesWhat possibilities are there for your career in the future?Limitless to my needs and desires (likely geography and work / life balance for international roles).What do you think the most important skills are for someone in your role?Negotiating, communicating, decision-making, leading teams to success rather than individually succeeding. Credible medical / technical expertise.What's the biggest difference between working in academia and the pharmaceutical industry?Academia is often measured by publication outcomes; working in the pharmaceutical industry is not publication-driven, and metrics of success vary from company to company depending on their size / structure / portfolio.What one piece of advice would you give to someone seeking a career in the pharmaceutical industry?Don't give up (I joined at a time when no one wanted to recruit a pathologist)
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