Categories
Uncategorized

October 2020 Executive Search Market & Other Observations

The Search Market From 5,000 Feet

Executive search is a very cyclical profession. In my 20+ years doing life sciences senior executive search I have worked through three downturns: The dot-com bust in late 2000 that rolled into 9/11 and thereafter; the financial crisis beginning in 2008; and the current Corona Virus pandemic. Might a brief review of the prior downturns give a bit of insight into what we might expect for our current Covid-19 world? If we look at the North American (US & Canada) revenues of two of the largest publicly-traded executive search firms (then and now and also among the five largest in the world) and use them as a proxy for the industry’s fortunes overall, we see that the prior slowdowns were significant. 

For the dot-com to post 9/11 period, revenues peaked in either late 2000 or the first few months of 2001, and then began declining at a  roughly 20% compound annual rate for approximately three years. From peak to trough, revenues fell over 50% on an absolute basis, attributable primarily to declines in the number of executive searches. During the financial crisis, the downturn was not as steep and didn’t last as long. Revenues peaked in 2008 (though the decline began in the second half of that year) and fell for two years at a roughly 15% compound annual rate. Overall, revenues fell between 30% and 40% on an absolute peak to trough basis.  Similarly, the declines were largely due to decreases in the number of searches.

Not surprisingly, in 2020 since US lockdowns began in earnest around March, the first quarter of this year was quite a bit better than the next 3 months. Revenues declined relative to the same period in 2019 by 7% to 10% in the first quarter, but were off by approximately 15% to 35% in the second quarter of 2020 compared to 2019. As for the rest of 2020, anecdotally, people I’ve spoken to don’t necessarily expect things to be worse than they are now (i.e. they don’t see revenues continuing to rapidly fall in quarters three and four) but they don’t expect a return to growth now either. This could perhaps imply the first year of the Corona Virus could take search revenues down 25% to 40% [Of course, all this speculating and $6 could get you a latte]. 

Strawn / Arnold is a premium-level, life sciences-only boutique firm (11 consultants) and is furthermore a private partnership. Our business, like everyone’s, is certainly down meaningfully relative to 2019 but it is now also stable. We do not see results getting worse every month, we expect things to continue as they’ve been the rest of this year, and are cautiously optimistic for 2021. Obviously, for the search industry and the economy as a whole, progress against the pandemic will have much to say about what happens in 2021. Hopefully this will only be a one year downturn as opposed to the two and three year slumps that characterized the financial crisis and dot-com bust to post 9/11 periods respectively.

What We’re Seeing in Life Sciences

The pandemic is affecting but not fundamentally changing the supply/demand dynamic that always operates in the market for executive talent. Those functions/roles that have restricted supply of quality people and robust demand for them continue to see more search activity than those where the converse operates. However, the pandemic has helped some companies, upended some, and not appreciably changed the plans or fortunes of  others. For example, manufacturers, developers and marketers of Covid-19 related medicines or vaccines are of course very busy if not expanding and growing. Overall the pandemic has also led to steady demand for hospital drugs, though many of these are generics and price competition remains fierce. 

On the other hand, the pandemic has hurt the ability to enroll patients in some clinical trials and/or to interpret the results of ongoing trials (this isn’t affecting everyone as it depends on the particulars of the compound and trial). The Corona Virus has also made it harder to launch products, made it harder to sell and market existing products and temporarily disrupted supply chains. Companies generally are also more cautious, hunkering down so to speak until they see signs of stability/turn-around or clear evidence that the current realities will become the “new normal” far into the future.

All of these things, good or bad, impact executive hiring. Below are some headline observations in that regard.

  • Demand for stand-alone company Chief Financial Officers remains brisk across all life science sectors (biopharmaceuticals, medical devices, diagnostics etc.) Prior experience raising money, taking companies public and managing investors are always sought after.
  • In biopharmaceuticals, demand for Chief Medical Officers, heads of regulatory, and clinical development leaders is always strong; these are classic constricted supply/strong demand roles. Demand for corporate development and business development leaders also remains good to steady, though the relative supply of these people is larger, so supply and demand is more balanced. There is good demand for marketing executives but it is very therapeutic area centered (e.g. oncology, rare diseases) and somewhat harder for the big pharma traditional marketing “athlete” that worked across many TAs over time to position themselves as experts in a particular space. 
  • In the biopharmaceuticals operations realm,  oral solid dose and API manufacturing is now largely done in India and China. The supply of executives in this space in the US has fallen sharply (retirements and people moving into biologics or other areas) along with demand. No surprise there, right? It remains to be seen when or if pandemic-related calls to “reshore” the US pharma supply chain would take hold. However, in tech ops and manufacturing/site 

operations, demand for biologics, biosimilar and small molecule sterile injectable expertise remains steady if not high.

  • The brutal pricing environment in generic drugs and niche “mature products” has hurt private equity, as these were often their investment targets in the life sciences products space (in contrast to early-stage proprietary drug VC investors). We have seen them moving away from generic/mature products investments and increasing their efforts on the services side with CROs, contract manufacturers and contract development businesses (i.e. CDMOs).
  • Earlier this year, the pandemic-related prohibition on elective surgeries in hospitals killed demand for many medical device companies (and also badly hurt provider profits), but this has now largely abated and absent another major lockdown due to the virus won’t likely return.
  • As always during particular times of stress, the pandemic environment will push many companies into danger and necessitate major change. This will create C-Level turnover.
  • In general, larger companies have deeper talent benches and more robust functional processes and infrastructure than smaller ones. As such, they are perhaps less likely than smaller entities to need to look outside for talent (unless confronted with major change at the top as referenced above).
  • The willingness of executives to relocate for a new opportunity has steadily declined in the 20+ years I have been in executive search and the life sciences. In fact, today many executives won’t even do long daily commutes in the same region or metro area (e.g. Palo Alto to Marin County, the Princeton area to northern New Jersey). One of the main reasons for these trends I believe is the more transactional, “hired gun” approach to the relationship between executives and their employers (i.e. “I need to you do this job for the next 3-5 years and help us sell the company” versus “This is one move among several we think you will make with us over the next 15 years and will be a key step in our career development path for you.”). Additionally, if they live in a life sciences concentrated area (e.g. San Francisco Bay, Boston, Philadelphia, Chicago perhaps), executives generally don’t have to move to find new, compelling opportunities.  Technology has also made it easier to work virtually or on a partial commuting basis, and some executive teams are a mixture of virtual and office-based executives (“if the CEO’s hasn’t relocated then why should I?”). In my opinion, the pandemic has cemented and accelerated this trend, and has shown that working outside the office is more feasible than some traditional executives might have once thought. Going forward, companies’ mindset should be that “It’s more about the talent than the location,” and at a minimum they should be flexible and creative with commuting situations.

 

Time For A Board Check-Up?

The famous 18th century British historian Edward Gibbon once said, “The wind and the waves favor the ablest navigators,” and this clearly applies to corporate governance. Good board leadership (from the Chair, Lead Director and Committee Chairs) entails periodically and objectively evaluating whether an organization’s board of directors remains optimally fit for purpose. Specifically, 1) Are all board members robustly up-to-date and informed about an organization’s business and the issues and trends coursing through its industry? 2) Does the organization have the ideal mix of Director experience and perspective around the board table? Or, are there key gaps relative to current and/or expected future developments? Similarly, is there duplication in some areas in addition to a gap (e.g. multiple people with commercial experience but lacking in another function or geographic perspective)? And finally 3) What is the culture of the board and mix of personalities like? Do all board members contribute relatively equally or do one or two people tend to dominate and drive decision-making? And if this is the case, why is that? Is it purposeful design or more a function of individual styles and personalities or the way the board is led? 

The changes being wrought by the pandemic to past strategic assumptions, business models and organizations are significant and will likely be far-reaching. Simple, highly-effective tools and processes can be readily employed to help board leadership objectively answer some of these fundamental board composition questions. A variety of entities advise organizations in this regard, including Strawn / Arnold. Regardless of how an organization goes about this, it is a crucial foundation of corporate governance, especially in our current times.

A Book Recommendation

Dr. Ezekial Emanuel, a physician and Chair of the department of Medical Ethics and Health Policy at the University of Pennsylvania (no, I am not his agent!) has a new book out: Which Country Has the World’s Best Healthcare? The book is an analysis of the history, structure, issues/opportunities, barriers to change, and pros/cons of eleven health systems around the world: US, Canada, UK, Norway, France, Germany, Netherlands, Switzerland, Australia, Taiwan and China. 

He adeptly points out that there is no perfect system and that all offer strengths, weaknesses and challenges relative to one another. However, though drug costs are a politically-charged topic in the US, the book also points out that right or wrong, there are increasing concerns about high drug costs in all of the countries studied in the book. Something for all of us who believe in the bright future of the drug industry to address with creative, effective, just and innovative solutions.

Be Well 

I hope you have found these few pages interesting. I welcome your comments, and please don’t hesitate to contact me if I can ever be helpful to you in any way. I especially hope that you and your 

families are doing well during these crazy times. I will leave you with the sentiments of the late comedian George Carlin……”May the forces of evil get lost on the way to your house.”

All the best

Jeff

Categories
Uncategorized

Lessons from an Executive Recruiter – Help me, Help you! Optimize your LinkedIn profile.

LinkedIn – First Things First

If you don’t fully utilize social media, you are dating yourself! You need a great profile to stand out from the masses. It is valuable free digital real estate that is wasted if you don’t use it to your benefit, and I do mean to use as much of the space as possible. You should assume your LinkedIn profile URL will be sent with a quick summary to key executives considering you for positions even if we find you through a different channel. The days of opening multiple emails and attachments have passed. It is a digital world and you need to stand out.

Do Your Homework

  • Identify the types of roles/companies that you want.
  • Identify the critical skills associated with that role/organization – this will help you identify keywords.
  • Structure your LinkedIn profile so that the skills/keywords can be found (repeated) throughout your profile. 

Understanding Keywords

Once you have identified your keywords, the next step is to make sure they are present throughout your profile. The key areas to concentrate on in your LinkedIn profile for the search engine algorithms are the headline, about section and experience (employment history). Repetition helps! This is one of the tools we use to find you.

Headline – high value/high impact for the algorithms

Please, please, please be more creative than just your job title. You have a maximum of 240 characters (recently expanded), including spaces, to get someone’s attention. Don’t waste spaces spelling out titles; LinkedIn is smart and knows the acronyms. You don’t need to mention your current employer in your headline, so customize your headline for the role you want. 

About (summary)

LinkedIn automatically shows the first three lines – so make them count with an impactful statement about you. Sell yourself! Remember, it is the current best practice to write in the first person. Social media is about making connections and writing in the third person puts up a wall. This section has 2,600 characters (recently expanded but I have not yet tested it) and is a great place to repeat your keywords and skills. Be creative and show a little of your personality!

Experience – (job title – this is another critical section for the algorithms)

LinkedIn provides 100 characters for each job title – think of it as a mini headline and expand how you use it beyond just the exact title your last employer gave you. Make sure you translate your title and job description to make sense to the outside world. Don’t assume everyone uses the same lingo. Not using your space/characters is a lost opportunity. You have 2,000 characters for the description. You should consider repeating your keywords/skills throughout your employment history.

Skills

LinkedIn allows you to have up to 50 skills on your profile. The skills you include on your profile should relate to the job you want, not just the one you had. The LinkedIn skills directory offers you a choice of recognized skills to choose from and don’t create your own – if it is not on the list, it is not in the search engine. Make sure you have enough depth related to the job you want.  

Check your homework before you hand it in

  • Please, please, please update your LinkedIn URL and not doing so tells the world you are not tech-savvy.
  • Customize your banner. This is another way to stand out from the crowd. Sticking with the standard default banner is a missed opportunity to help people feel connected to you.

LinkedIn by the Numbers (characters)

  • First Name – 20
  • Last Name – 40
  • Headline – 240
  • About/Summary – 2,600
  • Position/Title – 100
  • Position Description – 2,000

* LinkedIn is constantly updating their platform, so numbers/characters are subject to change

Categories
Uncategorized

Raise your hand if you need help! Why LinkedIn Is Not an Option for Leaders! Important items to check.

Why LinkedIn Is Not an Option, It’s a Must!

If you’re a business leader reading this, you may be thinking, “I’m not looking for a job, so why should I bother?”

Here’s why: contrary to popular belief, looking for a job is not the top use for LinkedIn. In fact, the two main reasons are thought leadership and to attract top talent. With professionals signing up at a rate of more than two new members per second, having a strong profile and presence is essential. Not only do employers in every industry use LinkedIn for talent acquisition, it is still the number one site for professional career networking.

However, with over 8 million C-suite executives on LinkedIn, it is easy to get lost in the crowd. LinkedIn is the world’s largest professional network on the Internet, with nearly 675 million members in over 200 countries and over 184 million in North America alone. Needless to say, in order to stand out, you need to optimize your profile. 

Here are three easy ways to give your LinkedIn a makeover in 10 minutes or less:

  1. A good profile picture – It may seem obvious, but first impressions really do matter. While it doesn’t necessarily need to be a professional headshot, it does need to be clear. It is the first thing people will see and if you don’t have one, it looks like you’re hiding.
  2.  Create a customized URL – This shows the world that you are savvy enough to edit the default URL. When you don’t take the extra second to make this change, it sends the message that you’re potentially out of touch with current trends.
  3.  Share your accomplishments – Your profile needs to be more than just a job history list. It’s meant to showcase who you are as a professional, and accomplishments present a well-rounded picture. You don’t need to list everything, but do be sure it’s up-to-date and relevant. 

Now that we’ve covered the basics, let’s kick it up a notch:

  • Change the default banner picture – Get rid of the LinkedIn constellation. Your banner should reflect you. It’s simple and it’s free! Consider it to be part of your personal branding. If you’re looking for inspiration, check out LinkedIn Background.
  • Write in first person – Show others that you are aware of modern social media best practices. Third-person summaries put a wall between you and the reader. On social media, it’s all about connecting.  
  • Choose your keywords wisely – Remember you are found through an algorithm so consider keywords for you and your organization. When choosing keywords consider how others will search for you or your company. Then repeat those words in various sections of your profile.  
  • Focus less on promoting and more on connecting – One of the biggest mistakes people make on social media is heavy self-promotion. To strengthen your presence, you need to become part of a community and find ways to engage in genuine dialogue with business partners, industry influencers, and potential clients. 
  • Effectively convey your company vision – An easy way to do this is to share content that reflects your brand’s mission. More specifically, this means telling people what your company does and why. Explain the value your business brings to the table. As a general rule, with every piece of content you post, you should always be asking yourself: why should they care? What’s the takeaway? 

Are You Ready to Take Your LinkedIn Strategy to the Next Level?

The bottom line: You cannot establish yourself as a thought leader without utilizing social media – and LinkedIn is the best place to start. And the benefits go beyond better personal branding. By boosting your executive visibility, you’ll gain more credibility, generate more engagement for your business and significantly broaden your network.

Categories
Uncategorized

Want to Help Your New Executives Succeed?

Over two thousand years ago Aristotle noted that “Well begun is only half done,” and that seems an apt way to think about bringing new executives into an organization. The signed offer letter is the culmination of one part of the process, but on-boarding is the other and its often done badly or not at all. A wrong hire at the executive level is never good: It’s disruptive, time-consuming and expensive in multiple ways. A mistake is bad for business plans and needs, and if hiring mistakes are repeatedly made, they are also detrimental to a company’s “brand” in the market for talent. These situations are obviously also bad for a newly-hired executive, who likely left a prior organization to join yours.

While a rigorous hiring process consistently applied can greatly lessen the risks of hiring the wrong person, it’s not foolproof. Also, companies may have indeed hired the right person, but various errors of omission and commission in bringing them into the organization doom the marriage. In that instance, the first anniversary gift of paper, is a severance package.

Based on my 20 years of life sciences retained executive search experience over roughly 250 client engagements across the US, Europe and elsewhere, I believe that executives rarely fail in new situations because of shortcomings in functional competence. Instead, the culprit is usually a failure to build and manage relationships in a new situation. This can make early credibility-building wins harder, can camouflage organizational “landmines” and can obscure informal realities that often govern the rhythm of how things get done in a company.

When companies put an internal candidate into a role, the executive’s strengths, weaknesses and developmental needs are usually well known. Additionally, the executive in question knows the organization; its culture and while usually not everyone, its people. She/he has a built-in network they can call upon for advice to help them transition into a new position. Candidates hired from the outside don’t have that, though they usually bring other skills and experiences to a role that hiring executives need and value that weren’t available internally.

When executive appointments fall apart in the first year, the fault usually lies with both the person and the organization. Often new executives don’t fully appreciate the importance of formally and informally building a wide swath of relationships in their new company, and are also too slow to ask for help or coaching if they are struggling. Organizations in turn are often too passive in helping new executives accelerate their internal network-building. And hiring executives can also be too slow to help clear unreasonable internal obstacles for the new executive, and also to send clear messages of support to others internally who might not be fully invested in the new person’s success (maybe a peer wanted the job and didn’t get it, maybe other peers see the new person as a rival, or perhaps feel that the new person will get resources that they need). Internal competition is good in the executive ranks, but it shouldn’t be allowed to sabotage the overall goals of the organization.

In my experience, a few simple on-boarding processes, regularly applied, can minimize the chances a new executive will fail in their first year in a new role. Below are four suggestions each for organizations and executives in this regard:

For the Organization

  • Require that references in the hiring process contain detailed observations of the executive’s developmental gaps/weaknesses, especially with respect to leadership and relationship-building behaviors. Most importantly, the hiring executive should pay attention to these and incorporate them into how the executive is managed, developed and coached.
  • While the new executive obviously needs to get up to speed, gain traction and have a timely positive impact, the hiring executive cannot just assume that the auto-pilot has been switched on and nothing else will be needed. The hiring executive must actively and publicly invest in the new person’s success, and if needed move quickly to stamp-out destructive political or unhelpful behavior (by peers, others and the executive) if counter-productive developments are unfolding.
  • The hiring executive must give ongoing, candid feedback to the new executive. The hiring executive should also remember that patience is a virtue in these situations. Coach actively and often, but resist the urge to jump to conclusions and make snap judgments about the wisdom of the recent hire.
  • The hiring executive, alone or in conjunction with HR, should conduct a formal 360 degree internal reference process with the new executive periodically in the first year (e.g. at three and nine months). The executive should be interviewed as to their assessment of how things are going, where they feel they need help etc. and others with whom she/he interacts should be queried as well. The hiring executive should then deliver the 360 feedback to the executive and set plans if needed to act on the findings. It is critical that this process be done in the spirit of a joint investment by the organization and the executive for development and effective on-boarding, and not as a punitive “gotcha” process.

For the New Executive

  • Be aware that your ability to build relationships, influence and manage conflicts with your peers as well as with other senior executives may determine whether you succeed in your new role. Of course, executives must manage their own organizations well too, but they sometimes neglect peer and other senior relationships at their ultimate peril.
  • Have an honest and realistic view of your skills in the whole relationship arena. Are you generally fast or slow to build new relationships or do you even think it important to build them? If these areas aren’t your strengths, you need to work hard to get better at them, fast. Talk to people, study up on relationship building behaviors and even get a coach if needed. And remember, honest, well-intentioned feedback, even if you don’t agree with it, is a gift. Accept it as such and regularly seek it.
  • Don’t be afraid to ask for help, from your boss, peers, your own organization or others.
  • Be patient and honest with yourself if things aren’t going well. If this is the first time you’ve changed organizations in many years, realize that it may not be your best skill. Don’t despair and instead keep working the problem. If on the other hand you’ve seamlessly changed organizations multiple times, use past experience to diagnose the current situation and devise new paths for success.

Bringing new executives into an organization is a significant investment of time, money and emotion for all concerned, and the costs of failure are typically not unimportant. The suggestions above are simple and can be used by organizations of all sizes. Awareness and a genuine commitment to use them or something similar are all that’s required. Too often however, parties think the work is done once the new executive starts work. Uncertainty will always feature to a degree in the executive hiring process, but the thoughts here are a relatively simple way to tilt the odds of success strongly in your favor.

Categories
Uncategorized

Strawn Arnold & Associates, Ltd. Adds Jenny Millsap Crutchlow as Director of Recruiting

Strawn Arnold & Associates (SAA), a premier provider of executive search to the healthcare and life science industries, is pleased to announce the addition of Jenny Millsap Crutchlow as Director of Recruiting.

“As we at SAA continue to grow and meet demand, we remain dedicated to our business model, which relies on former industry executives who enter search with the experience necessary to fully relate to the client and their needs”, says John Groover, Managing Director. “Having a proven recruiting specialist such as Jenny who can optimally support this model with exceptional sourcing and candidate identification skills is a big boost for our business as we move forward.”

Jenny joined Strawn Arnold & Associates, Ltd. in May of 2018 as Director of Recruiting. Jenny uses her extensive experience at some of the top retained search firms in the country to partner with the senior leadership at Strawn Arnold to design search strategies and to source, recruit, screen, and develop candidates for our clients. Her career in executive search began at Diversified Search, one of the top 5 retained executive search firms in the country, in their Technology/CIO, Industrial/Manufacturing, and Diversity practices. She then spent three years honing her skills at Solomon Page, the 6th largest retained executive search firm focused on Health Care, placing Director, VP, and C-level executives at some of the top health care companies in the United States. Prior to entering the world of search, Jenny worked for several major financial firms and hedge funds in New York City, following a national performing career as a singer and actress. Jenny earned her Master of Music degree in Vocal Performance and Pedagogy from Westminster Choir College, her Bachelor of Music degree in Vocal Performance and her Bachelor of Arts in Plan II from the University of Texas at Austin where she was invited to join Phi Beta Kappa.

Categories
Uncategorized

Strawn Arnold & Associates, Ltd. Adds Jeff Frazier as an Executive Vice President

May 14, 2018 – Strawn Arnold & Associates (SAA), a premier provider of executive search to the healthcare and life science industries, is pleased to announce the appointment of industry veteran Jeff Frazier as Executive Vice President. Jeff has a tremendous background as a senior Human Resources leader, with almost 30 years of pharmaceutical industry experience in Europe and the United States.

“As we at SAA continue to grow and meet demand, we remain dedicated to our business model, which relies on former industry executives who enter search with the experience necessary to fully relate to the client and their needs”, says John Groover, Managing Director. “Having executives such as Jeff who choose search as a second career, and are also committed to conducting the search process in a non-leveraged model, are the backbone of our business and our continued success.”

Prior to joining SAA, Jeff was The Medicines Company (MDCO) Executive Vice President and Chief Human Strategy Officer from June 2014. During his tenure, he was an officer and member of the Executive Management team that lead the business transformation from an 800 person organization with multiple “in market”, hospital sector products to a development stage company of 60 people focused exclusively on Inclisiran, an important cardio vascular product in late stage development. Three distinct divestitures were executed from 2016-2018, which generated $1 billion in non-dilutive capital plus the potential of an additional $1 billion in milestone payments. This capital infusion was required to complete phase III trials and bring Inclisiran to NDA filing. Inclisiran, is an investigational agent which is potentially a first-in-class lipid-lowering drug, to reduce LDL-cholesterol. The Medicines Company is a publicly traded biopharmaceutical company with market capitalization of around $2.8 billion.

Prior to joining MDCO, Jeff was the Corporate Vice President of Human Resources and Public Affairs at Novo Nordisk Inc. from 2004 to 2014. His leadership resulted in Novo Nordisk being named the number one “Best Place to Work” in New Jersey for four out of six years (2004 – 2010), and in being named to the Fortune Magazine “100 Best Companies to Work For” for six consecutive years (2009-2014). Before taking his position at Novo Nordisk, Jeff was Head of Human Resources for Pharmacia Corporation’s Global Pharmaceutical Business unit, where he served as a member of the global commercial leadership team. There he supported international commercial operations of 12,500 employees in 50 countries, through the design and execution of human resources strategy and programs. Prior to that role, he held a number of different senior human resources positions in Europe and in the USA. Jeff received a bachelor’s degree in business administration from Kent State University.

Categories
Uncategorized

Strawn Arnold & Associates, Ltd. adds Barry Duke as an Executive Vice President

August 15, 2017 – Barry Duke joined Strawn Arnold & Associates in 2017 after a successful 30+ year career in the BioPharma industry. Most recently, Barry served as EVP, Chief Commercial Officer at Collegium Pharmaceutical, building a launch ready commercial organization from scratch with over 200 employees and supporting infrastructure within 15 months. Prior to that role, he served as VP of Sales and Marketing for Sanofi/Genzyme and was the US commercial lead for a $400M orthopedic product. Before those two roles, Barry’s career includes working in leadership positions of increasing responsibility from small and mid-size to large, well-established organizations including: The Upjohn Company, Centocor, Astra USA, The Liposome Company, Élan, and Enzon. Barry has been consistently recognized in his career for strong leadership skills, including hiring and developing exceptional talent. Barry has spoken on multiple occasions at industry forums on leadership and commercial innovation.

The focus of Barry’s search work is on senior leadership placements at the Board, C-Suite, VP, and Director levels. Barry’s extensive experience as an operating executive within the BioPharma industry, which includes a broad network of contacts across commercial operations, medical, regulatory, clinical and business development, provides a unique foundation for valued insights for clients making their most important and impactful hiring decisions.

Barry earned a BA from the University of Virginia and suffers every Sunday in the fall supporting his Carolina Panthers.