Big Fish Help Out the Smaller Fish in the Life Sciences Pond

In spite of the abundance of PhDs, MDs, JDs, and MBAs in biotech and pharma, we all know that on-the-job learning is really how this industry is built. Nobody goes to university to learn how to be a great CEO or manager, and there aren’t any courses in grad school where budding researchers can learn the way a pharmaceutical company operates.

That’s why it’s good to hear about the industry experience program started by the MassGeneral Postdoc Association (MGPA) with help from MGH and the MassBio Ed Foundation. It’s a grown-up version of the “take your child to work day” in which postdocs at MGH-affiliated laboratories—there’s about 1,100—have a chance to see what it’s like to work in a biotechnology or pharmaceutical company. They meet executives and scientists, tour offices and the labs, and get to ask questions about lifestyle, freedom to publish, and the various career tracks one can follow at a company. “Industry is this huge black box that academic trainees haven’t been able to see into,” says Adnan Abu-Yousif, a postdoctoral fellow at MGH who founded the program.

The idea of visiting a company for a day came to Abu-Yousif in early 2009, when he was co-chair of the postdoc association and realized there weren’t a lot of resources for people researching and considering, but not yet sure of, making the leap to industry. “We’re all scientists and we make our decisions based on observation,” says Abu-Yousif. So, he reasoned, a good way to find out if a career in pharma or biotech would be worthwhile could be to see that for himself.

He pitched the idea to folks at the MassBio Ed Foundation, and pretty soon they were approaching local companies to see who wanted to host. Three pilot rounds of visits, each involving a dozen or so postdocs, have already taken place. One of the visits already led to a collaboration between an MGH postdoc and New England Biolabs.

The program has now expanded, and this month it launched a web site on which companies and postdocs may sign up to be paired based on common interests. Already signed-up are AstraZeneca, EMD-Serono, and New England Biolabs–the three companies that participated in the pilot phase-as well as Merck Research Laboratories, Merrimack Pharmaceuticals, Novartis, and Quanterix. I’m told several other big names in Boston are in the process of coming on board.

The industry’s warm reception of the postdoc association’s program—which entails not only opening up company doors, but sharing information about research and operations—is in line with a broader trend noticed by Rohit Shukla, chief executive of The Larta Institute, a non-profit organization that helps commercialize government-funded technologies. Shukla says that, over the years,

Author: Sylvia Pagán Westphal

Sylvia is Xconomy’s life sciences columnist. She has a Ph.D. in genetics from Harvard Medical School and studied journalism at the Boston University Center for Science and Medical Journalism. She has worked as a staff reporter for The Los Angeles Times, New Scientist Magazine, and The Wall Street Journal. Her work has also appeared in The Boston Globe, CNN.com, The New York Times, and Smithsonian Magazine. Sylvia was a Knight Science Journalism Fellow at MIT in 2004-2005. Sylvia’s disclosure: I am married to a certain biotechnology entrepreneur/pharmaceutical executive/venture capitalist named Christoph Westphal, whom most folks in Boston know. That exposes me to a lot of smart people in the industry who are willing to speak candidly, but it also means I could be conflicted if writing about some biotechnology and pharma companies. My aim with The Pulse is not to report on specific companies, but to discuss trends involving all players in life sciences (academics, companies, regulators). Nonetheless, I will disclose any potential conflicts of interests to my readers when my editors and I deem appropriate.