What do people value about this career?
In our careers and skills survey, scientists working in project management told us that they appreciate that their work:
- involves collaboration/working closely in a team
- is financially rewarding
Career guidance for early career researchers in the life sciences and related fields
Project management is a broad term, and there are a variety of roles that involve project management or have the job title ‘project manager’.
Former researchers may:
This career information page focuses on the broader, cross-functional roles. Many scientists in such management roles tell us that they enjoy the dynamic work and communicating with many people. They also frequently mention that they like that it is detail-orientated but that it is focused on the entire project, not just a small part of the process. Challenges include the need to influence without having power, that day-to-day progress can be slow as it is time-intensive to gain/maintain an overview of everything in the project.
Project management roles typically are meeting-intense, and involve a range of strategic planning and communication activities. Possible tasks may include a subset of the following activities:
Strategy and collaborative decision-making:
Communication at different levels:
Organization:
Life scientists who enter cross-functional project management often do so in pharma, biotech or other science-based companies, where their scientific knowledge is required to understand the intricacies of the project. One way to enter these roles is to first move to a lab-based industry role, where you can gain an understanding of how different functional roles contribute to projects. Or to first move into a project management related role within a single functions (e.g. Scientific Administration, Clinical trial management or Regulatory affairs). However, direct entry from a PhD/postdoc into junior project management roles is possible in some companies/organizations; some pharma companies, for example, have traineeship roles in project management. A carefully crafted application, that demonstrates that you have successfully managed a project (either your research project or something from your extracurricular activities) and are motivated to up-scale your project management skills for larger projects will be required to enter directly into project management.
Investing time to understand specific project management tools and methodologies can help you write a tailored application and impress at interview. If you would like to go into project management in non-scientific companies, a project management certification may also be beneficial. However, before spending time and money on certification courses, it is important to check whether a project management certification will increase your employability for the type of company/role you want. Where companies deal with a very specific environment with additional regulations and have their own project management methodology, they sometimes prefer to train you in this methodology themselves. If a certification will be advantageous, there are many project management certifications available including Prince2, PMP, Six Sigma, and Agile (used in particular in the IT sector). For projects at the EU level, the EU also has its own project management methodology PM2. Informational interviews and looking at job vacancy adverts can help you to understand which, if any, certification will be best for the specific sector and country you are targeting.
In our careers and skills survey, 8 project managers told us about the competencies they used most often. The most commonly selected competencies were:
In our careers and skills survey, scientists working in project management told us that they appreciate that their work:
We highly recommend learning more about the careers using the resources above, then conducting informational interviews to gain further insights directly from former PhDs working in career areas that interest you.
Further internal resources (e.g. library of recorded career talks) can be found on our intranet pages.
In this blog interview, we talk with EMBL alumna Anna Bartosik who applies her scientific background to a career in project management in the biotech sector. Anna kindly talked us through her career path, and her thoughts on the skills required to become a great project manager.