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Understanding the Scientific Enterprise as a Field Applications Scientist in Field Science
Each scientific organization is different, and when you work with ALL the different scientific organizations as a Field Scientist it is crucial to know exactly HOW these organizations differ from one another. You need to know these differences because you have to tailor your approach to each specific institution - whether it is a small start up, an establish biopharma company, a privately funded translational research institute, or a public academic institution -- otherwise you will be ineffective. Understanding the goals, structures, values, resource allocation, etc. of each of these types of scientific institutes is key to succeeding in my job. For example, managing conflicts of interest and navigating confidentiality issues are two massive parts of my job that - if mishandled - can have devastating ramifications (lost deals, legal issues, etc). How these two issues are handled vary significantly from institution to institution, so I conduct myself differently regarding these issues when working with a public academic institution versus a non-profit research institute versus a for-profit biopharma company.
- Broad-based knowledge of science
- Can identify and manage conflict of interest
- Careful recordkeeping practices
- Experimental design
- Understanding of data ownership/sharing issues
Teamwork as a Regional Applications Manager in Field Science
The Technical Applications Team is all work-from-home. We use Microsoft Teams to share expertise and advice. One person will post a technical question they have run into and everyone will try to help them solve their problem. The goal is that nobody would be embarrassed to ask a question, and that solutions can be organized into a Knowledge Center.
- Ability to work on a team
- Providing constructive feedback
Managing Up/Down as a Regional Applications Manager in Field Science
In terms of managing down, I want to be sure that people are on top of their annual goals, or if a goal seems too ambitious, to break it down into the doing parts. In terms of managing up, our head of R&D is extremely busy, and it is important to have done as much work as possible on a problem before passing it up the chain. The question should be specific and not able to be answered by someone else.
- Negotiating difficult conversations
- Seeking advice from advisors and mentors
- Training and mentoring individuals
Project Management as a Regional Applications Manager in Field Science
I am working on a collaboration with a Tier 1 customer. We have well defined goals for each phase of the collaboration, and progress across all collaborations is being monitored by a Collaborations Manager
- Delegating responsibilities
- Planning and organizing projects
- Providing instruction and guidance
Empathy as a Design Strategist in Consulting
Being able to understand and prioritize the pain points a user experiences with a process or system is central to design. Healthcare and design are both highly empathetic fields because they are both in service of people.
Communication as a Design Strategist in Consulting
Simplifying user feedback into insights so we can then translate that into something we build. Helping folks who are the closest to the problem drawback and see overarching problem areas requires communication skills around insightful questioning and facilitation.
- Basic writing and editing
- Oral communication skills
- Speaking clearly and effectively
- Written communication skills
Teamwork as a Design Strategist in Consulting
We bring our individual 'work-in-progress' projects to a weekly design team so we can get impartial feedback from teammates to help improve what we are putting together. It helps to surface and correct problems before a client sees it or it goes to the engineering team for a build.
- Ability to work on a team
- Providing constructive feedback
Strategic Thinking as a Design Strategist in Consulting
First, we have to help clients clearly explain the outcome they seek and then work backward from there given the constraints of time, budget, and feasibility. Then we have to think strategically about the human element and how we will identify and influence key decision-makers to move the project forward.
- Ability to make decisions and solve problems
- Ability to set a vision and goals
- Creating vision and goals
- Creativity/innovative thinking
Communication as a Science Writer in Science Communication
I communicate daily - whether it's writing a social media post, reaching out to a reporter about a story they might be interested, and my job itself involves communication in writing a wide range of articles for a broad audience.
- Writing for nonscientists
- Written communication skills
Interpreting Information as a Science Writer in Science Communication
When writing a news article about a recent research breakthrough, I have to understand complex and intricate research papers from a variety of fields, and pick out what is newsworthy. Even when writing other pieces that translate a new scientific or clinical finding, I have to interpret the information and translate into something that patients and consumers will care about.
- Ability to learn quickly
- Critical evaluation of scientific literature
- Interpretation of data