Managing your career – Part 1: A crash course on how to manage your career in Medical Affairs
By Cezary Statuch, MD, VP, Medical, International Markets, Biogen
Like many things in life, when managing your career timing is everything, and being in the right place at the right time is important. Knowing whether it is the right time for you to move on is not always easy. The pharma and biotech industries are an attractive place to pursue your professional dreams, and some markets are in great demand for medical affairs talent–so the phone rings more often than ever with calls from headhunters. Unfortunately, at times of high demand for talent the recruiters are less likely concerned if you have completed your career cycle, and if your skill set fits what they are after you will have to deal with serious temptations. Here are a few tips on how to manage your career planning and how to get ready for your next job.
Look back and do a quick assessment of your career to date. Understanding your career trajectory, what you have accomplished and where you want to go will significantly help with the challenge. But most importantly understanding your limitations is critical. Only when you know them will you be able to close the gaps. Ask yourself these questions: Have you have been in your current role long enough? Have you completed a career cycle? Have you fully learned the role? “Job jumpers” or “non-stickers” as I call them are very easy to spot. If you happen to have a very short stint in the role, be prepared to provide a compelling explanation why.
Understanding what the industry can offer is a common challenge for candidates, especially the younger ones. The knowledge of basics of drug development and the commercialization process is crucial as it will help in understanding what opportunities exist in your country/territory and how to navigate them. The industry has evolved dramatically over the past decade and there are many roles now which never existed previously. There is a wealth of resources offering insights into how pharma companies are structured. Many companies offer training in the drug-development process as part of their curricula for employees. If your company does not, look online. Talking to more senior colleagues is also a good source of acquiring that knowledge.
Compete for the right job, one which matches your skill set. Understand your strengths and create a competitive advantage. Create a simple checklist of attributes/skills which may differentiate you from other candidates competing for this position and sell yourself well.
Do not be a title junkie! Titles are important as they help to position us in the industry and make us proud of what we have achieved. We all like attractive titles, particularly those which reflect our seniority, but beware of inflated titles which are easy to spot. Do not take the job simply because it offers a higher grade or a more impressive title, as this could easily put your career on the wrong track. Reversing this could take a long time.
Having a great boss is a big draw, but don’t choose the job purely because of the manager. Follow the job content and opportunity to learn, not the person. Your boss will always remain part of your professional circle and you will always be able to rely on his/her career advice, even if you stop working together.
Having the right work-life balance is critical for your success, so ask yourself how moving to your next career step will affect your personal life and if you are ready for it. Frequent travel, need to relocate, necessity to work out of hours—these things can seriously impact your job satisfaction.
Creating the right image is very important and is a process which takes time. You can start with creating a high-quality LinkedIn profile. LinkedIn has become a powerful tool. Read profiles of those whom you respect and admire. Use a professional, high-quality photo and ensure the use of proper English. When you apply, provide a quality CV adapted to showcase your skills for the role for which you are applying.
Always respond to recruiters but be very transparent about your true intensions. Do not interview if you are not seriously considering the opportunity. Telling recruiters that you are not ready to change the job yet will speak highly of you, proving you to be loyal to your organization and mature about your career goals. They will remember that and will keep you on their radar screen.
Get help from those around you. Pay attention to relationships and build your social capital. The pool of professionals in the industry is defined, and so is the number of companies. The proverbial “small world” applies to our industry as well, so take care of your reputation, not only within your own company, but most importantly within the industry. Become visible within your organization and outside of it. Build your own pool of advisors, coaches and mentors. They can be peers, but don’t have to come from the same department or the same company.
Make your company aware of your aspirations; otherwise your manager may assume that you are not interested and therefore not consider you for the job you want. Apply for the jobs which may be a stretch for you even if you think that the probability of getting them is low. It will send a strong message to your manager as to what you aspire to, and will help you and your manager to understand what you need to learn to land the job the next time. Treat every interview as a lesson and always ask for feedback. Unfortunately, providing high-quality, timely feedback for those candidates who failed to get the job is still not a common practice in the industry. If feedback was not provided to you, do not be afraid to reach out to the hiring manager or the recruiter to discuss the outcome of your interview. Constructive feedback is an invaluable source of direction for your future career steps and providing it is not always easy. You may need to be persistent and ask questions as to why the interview was not successful or why you were not chosen. Regardless how well you are supported in your career development, there is one principle which should always guide you: remember that ultimately, you own your career and no one else but you should drive your development.
https://medicalaffairs.org/wp-content/uploads/2020/08/10-1.png321845Medical Affairshttps://medicalaffairs.org/wp-content/uploads/2022/11/MAPS-Logo-R-NoTagLine.pngMedical Affairs2020-05-11 23:52:232023-11-13 10:21:48Managing Your Career – Part 1: A crash course on how to manage your career in Medical Affairs
Ralph Rewers, Sr Director, Global Field Medical Excellence at AbbVie, shares how Field Medical professionals are in a position to impact thousands of patients. At the MAPS 2020 Global Annual Meeting, Dr. Rewers encourages Field Medical professionals to step into the shoes of the individuals they’re speaking with to better understand their beliefs and behaviors, so organizations can better tailor medical communications to how they receive scientific data.
If the video above does not play, or to view full screen, CLICK HERE to open in a new window.
Download the Presentation
Members may also download a PDF copy of the slides from the Field Medical program from the MAPS 2020 Global Annual Meeting as well as a recording of the session in the Community Portal. Not a member and wish to access the slides? Membership is only $250 USD per year ($425 for a 2-year subscription) and includes access to all new live Webinars, all on-demand Webinars (over 50 Webinars and growing each month), discussion forums to share best practices and questions with over 4,000 Medical Affairs professionals from across the globe, copies of past meeting presentations, white papers, standards & guidance tools and templates, and much, much more. Click here for membership details or to sign up: https://medicalaffairs.org/membership/
https://medicalaffairs.org/wp-content/uploads/2020/05/Ralph.Rewers.Interview.png321845Medical Affairshttps://medicalaffairs.org/wp-content/uploads/2022/11/MAPS-Logo-R-NoTagLine.pngMedical Affairs2020-05-10 16:11:162024-04-26 11:51:53Interview: Field Medical’s Broad Impact on Patients and Organizations
As experts with a deep knowledge of our medicines, medical technologies, and therapeutic area science, Medical Affairs is uniquely placed to help the industry and healthcare community navigate through these unusual times. While remaining flexible and agile to meet changing needs and requirements today, we can also begin to look forward to see how to flourish in the new normal.
Turning challenges into opportunities
Medical Affairs always puts patients first, and that will not change. But there are opportunities for improvement that can make the most of the current situation.
This is a make-or-break scenario for relationships—ensure your interactions are highly relevant and healthcare professionals (HCPs) will remember you in the future
HCPs may be more willing to engage with Medical Affairs as a trusted source of medical and scientific information
Conversations should be more focused and impactful
Expedite reviews of research proposals to ensure patient access to medicines and medical devices
Look for opportunities to work cross-company to meet the needs of patients, HCPs, and professional societies
Best practices during the pandemic
We are all getting accustomed to working virtually—here are some best practices to help you and your colleagues:
Encourage, rather than demand, virtual HCP interactions
Utilize vendors with expertise in virtual meetings to convert face-to-face meetings such as advisory boards
Be flexible and tolerant should technical issues arise during an engagement
Master the four Cs of virtual engagement: CONFIDENCE, CONTROL, CREDIBILITY, and CONNECTIVITY
Be aware of meeting fatigue, for yourself and others
Be Medical Affairs at its best!
Stay connected with your strategic partners, internal and external
Identify and ensure delivery of data and medical information that your HCPs and patients need
Liaise with professional societies and patient organizations to ensure external stakeholder needs are met
Help your HCPs not to feel overwhelmed—give them the information they need when they need it, and no more
FLOURISHING IN THE NEW NORMAL
How Medical Affairs as a profession emerges from this crisis depends on us and our actions. We can anticipate some longer-term changes that will help us flourish in the new normal, allowing us to do even more good for patients, HCPs, and medicine.
Identify what information your HCPs and their patients will need in the post-COVID world, and work to obtain and disseminate it
Continue to keep your interactions with HCPs focused and valuable
Consider what pressures your HCPs will have after the pandemic and how you can best support them
Continue to keep patients at the center of everything you do
Based on presentations given by Dr. Charlotte Kremer, Dr. Robin Winter-Sperry, Dr. Tamas Koncz, Dr. John Pracyk, Dr. Peter Piliero, and Dr. Joseph Eid during the MAPS Global Town Hall webinar on April 21, 2020.
https://medicalaffairs.org/wp-content/uploads/2020/08/4.png321845Medical Affairshttps://medicalaffairs.org/wp-content/uploads/2022/11/MAPS-Logo-R-NoTagLine.pngMedical Affairs2020-05-10 12:20:332024-05-03 13:52:02COVID-19: Best Practices & the Future of Medical Affairs – Medical Affairs as a Whole
Bill Strickland, AVP, US Field Medical at Allergan, speaks on “demystifying artificial intelligence” at the MAPS 2020 Global Annual Meeting in Miami, and how AI can enhance daily life in this new frontier for Medical Affairs professionals. Dr. Strickland also touches on patient centricity and his leadership philosophy.
If the video above does not play, or to view full screen, CLICK HERE to open in a new window.
Download the Presentation
Members may also download a PDF copy of the slides as well as a recording of the session in the Community Portal. Not a member and wish to access the slides? Membership is only $250 USD per year ($425 for a 2-year subscription) and includes access to all new live Webinars, all on-demand Webinars (over 50 Webinars and growing each month), discussion forums to share best practices and questions with over 4,000 Medical Affairs professionals from across the globe, copies of past meeting presentations, white papers, standards & guidance tools and templates, and much, much more. Click here for membership details or to sign up: https://medicalaffairs.org/membership/
In this session, you will hear “insider tips” from three senior-level Medical Affairs leaders from leading multinational biopharma companies. The discussion will be broken into three practical sections:
1. How to advance your career in Medical Affairs;
2. What employers look for when hiring;
3. Competencies required for a modern Medical Affairs organization.
At the conclusion of this session, participants should:
• Be able to create a checklist of the key (basic and advanced) capabilities that managers and recruiters expect MA professionals to have experience and knowledge in
• Walk away with specific tips and expert advice to help develop a strategy to manage a successful career in the Medical Affairs field
• Discover the importance of gaining enough tenure in a specific role to acquire necessary breadth and experience as well as the value of building “social capital” within your organization to advance your career
Access Options
https://medicalaffairs.org/wp-content/uploads/2021/04/On-Demand-Webinar-Featured-Images-24.png321845Medical Affairshttps://medicalaffairs.org/wp-content/uploads/2022/11/MAPS-Logo-R-NoTagLine.pngMedical Affairs2020-04-30 09:51:082024-03-06 11:47:30How To Build A Successful Career As A Medical Affairs Professional
The COVID-19 pandemic is affecting Medical Affairs professionals around the world, and each team is responding in different ways. During this live Global Town Hall, we will discuss how Medical Affairs can continue to function during the COVID-19 pandemic, as well as share industry best practices and consider how Medical Affairs could change post-COVID-19. By strengthening our understanding within the pharmaceutical industry of how Medical Affairs can support HCPs and patients in these times, this Town Hall will help to achieve industry-wide alignment on the issue and might even save lives.
Objectives:
The objective of the Town Hall is to discuss and communicate best practices that can be applied to Medical Affairs departments across companies, with a specific focus on the ongoing global COVID-19 pandemic.
If the video above does not play, or to view full screen, CLICK HERE to open in a new window.
Members may also download a PDF copy of the slides in the Community portal. Not a member and wish to access the slides? Membership is only $250 USD per year ($425 for a 2-year subscription) and includes access to all new live Webinars, all on-demand Webinars (over 50 Webinars and growing each month), discussion forums to share best practices and questions with over 4,000 Medical Affairs professionals from across the globe, copies of past meeting presentations, white papers, standards & guidance tools and templates, and much, much more. Click here for membership details or to sign up: https://medicalaffairs.org/membership/
https://medicalaffairs.org/wp-content/uploads/2020/04/Global.Town_.Hall_.COVID_.png321845Medical Affairshttps://medicalaffairs.org/wp-content/uploads/2022/11/MAPS-Logo-R-NoTagLine.pngMedical Affairs2020-04-22 13:12:332024-05-03 13:52:58COVID-19 – A MAPS Global Town Hall: Best Practices & the Future of Medical Affairs
Episode 1: Host John Pracyk, MD, PhD, MBA, Worldwide Integrated Leader, Medical Affairs, Pre-Clinical & Clinical Research, DePuy Synthes – Spine | Johnson & Johnson Medical Devices Companies welcomes Philip Desjardins, JD, Vice President, Global Regulatory Affairs Spine and Medical Device Regulatory Policy, DePuy Synthes | Johnson & Johnson Medical Devices Companies, and Drilon Saliu, PharmD, MBA, Head, Medical, Clinical and HEOR, Connected Care, Philips, to share insights into the importance of compliance with the new European Device Medical Regulation (EUMDR), including key deadlines for compliance.
Episode 2: Host John Pracyk, MD, PhD, MBA, Worldwide Integrated Leader, Medical Affairs, Pre-Clinical & Clinical Research, DePuy Synthes – Spine | Johnson & Johnson Medical Devices Companies welcomes Philip Desjardins, JD, Vice President, Global Regulatory Affairs Spine and Medical Device Regulatory Policy, DePuy Synthes | Johnson & Johnson Medical Devices Companies, and Drilon Saliu, PharmD, MBA, Head, Medical, Clinical and HEOR, Connected Care, Philips, to continue their comprehensive discussion of: Covid’s impact on EUMDR; USFDA and EUMDR global regulator comparison; short and long term impacts; how Brexit might impact the UK’s regulatory oversight; the importance of investing in top talent; new capabilities that are required; the importance of leading with influence; and, evidentiary compliance planning and budget impact.
CLICK HERE to subscribe to the Elevate Podcast Channel on Apple iTunes.
https://medicalaffairs.org/wp-content/uploads/2020/04/2.png321845Medical Affairshttps://medicalaffairs.org/wp-content/uploads/2022/11/MAPS-Logo-R-NoTagLine.pngMedical Affairs2020-04-09 19:32:252024-04-24 15:26:37Podcast: European Union Medical Device Regulations (EUMDR)
• What is the role for Medical Affairs in launch readiness?
• Who is part of launch readiness and how is it accomplished?
• Execution of Global Strategic Plans at the Regional Level
• How do local affiliates impact the global strategy?
• Demonstrating Value & Impact for Medical Affairs
• What performance measures (KPIs) can we use to refine strategy?
Access Options
https://medicalaffairs.org/wp-content/uploads/2021/04/On-Demand-Webinar-Featured-Images-17.png321845Medical Affairshttps://medicalaffairs.org/wp-content/uploads/2022/11/MAPS-Logo-R-NoTagLine.pngMedical Affairs2020-04-08 10:00:442024-03-06 11:40:34Launch Readiness 2020: Ensuring Strategy And Value From Global To Local Perspectives
Executive stress has come under scrutiny recently, most pointedly in an open letter published by Arianna Huffington, founder of the Huffington Post, to Elon Musk, in which she appealed to him to change the way he works to be more in line with the science of how humans are most effective.
The letter came hot on the heels of the Tesla chairman and chief executive’s anguished New York Times interview where he broke down multiple times as he recounted the excruciating pressure he was under in what he named “the most difficult and painful year of my career”. Asked if the exhaustion was taking a toll on his physical health, Musk answered: “It’s not been great, actually. I’ve had friends come by who are really concerned.” The public admission subsequently sparked a tumble in Tesla shares.
Huffington decried Musk’s 120-hour weeks and continued with an argument calculated to break through his denial – science. Musk is nothing if not a scientist, so Huffington asked him to look at the science of human overwork and sleep deprivation: “The science is clear. And what it tells us is that there’s simply no way you can make good decisions and achieve your world-changing ambitions while running on empty.”
“To cite just one study, after 17-19 hours without sleep, we begin to experience levels of cognitive impairment equivalent to a blood alcohol level of 0.05%, just under the threshold for being legally drunk. No business leader would hire people who came to work drunk, so don’t model that behavior for your employees.”
The missive drew a Twitter response from Musk. “You think this is an option. It is not.” Huffington, founder of wellness website Thrive Global, where she published the open letter, refuses to accept that. In fact, she sees a lesson here for us all. “This is not about sleep, or about slowing down, or about asking Elon to chill out under a mango tree,” she said in a statement shared with CNN. “It’s about how we can unlock and sustain our peak performance, and see solutions and opportunities where others can’t.”
The running debate highlights some key points. “Firstly, people who are burnt out are the last to see it and it takes others, family members or friends to point it out to them,” says Lewis Garrad, Business Lead for Employee Experience Research at global consulting firm, Mercer. “Secondly, there’s the question of whether it’s an employer’s responsibility or that of the individual.”
Huffington would argue that burning out is not the price of success. “As all the recent scientific findings show, the opposite is true,” she said, noting people “perform better” when they “take time to refuel and recharge.”
Picking up the pieces
According to Jenn Fenwick, Founder of Rebel Road Executive Coaching, who frequently coaches stressed-out executives, it comes down to sustainability. “There’s a balance between the duty of care of the employer to support the employee and the responsibility of the individual to manage their own health and wellbeing. Frankly, in my experience, leaders are frequently left out at sea, especially during extremely stress-inducing times like transitioning into more senior positions. The employer is often not forthcoming in terms of providing onboarding support, and employees are left floundering – not sleeping, experiencing severe anxiety due to lack of internal support, lack of clarity around the role, and this ‘all-or-nothing’ approach where the employee forsakes all health and wellbeing activities in order to prove to their employers that they made the right decision in hiring them.”
It’s a considerable cost to the employer. “Many often leave because of burnout. In this one case, it was going to lead to losses of £200,000 if this particular senior Medical leader resigned – not to mention the impact on team morale if she left. As a coach, I’ve had a lot of experience of rescuing situations where leaders are on the point of leaving due to overwhelm. Employers need to provide better support particularly at flashpoints like transitioning to new roles, or during mergers and takeovers where people can suffer due to lack of communication from the top and insecurity surrounding the continuity of their role. But employees also need to learn how to self-care,” says Fenwick.
A tailored approach
While well-managed wellness programs are beneficial in redressing the onset of workplace stress and burnout, they often target the wrong cohort. “You’ll often see the highest uptake in these wellness programs are among those that least need them – the people who are typically health-conscious anyway and are into health and fitness. The likely burnout candidates may not take up these initiatives and this is where we need to have a more personalized approach to the issue of burnout. Are there other stressors at play within the overall culture? Are there other stressors at play, which are impacting on employees’ stress levels, like financial concerns? Tailored programs – for example, financial security programs – may be appropriate in this instance so it’s vital to acknowledge that one-size does not fit all. We need a very tailored approach to the issue,” says Garrad.
Christina Maslach, creator of the Maslach Burnout Inventory and author of The Truth About Burnout, has identified six “mismatches” that make a person more likely to burn out – and only one of these factors is too much work. “It is a common belief that there is just one dimension to job stress, work overload. Indeed, overload is often considered to be a synonym for stress. But in our burnout model, overload is only one of six mismatches in the workplace. And it’s not always the most critical, especially it things are going well in some of the other areas.” (2) Maslach cites five other triggers than can lead to burnout, including lack of control, insufficient reward, lack of community, absence of fairness, and conflict in values.
Mental health strain
The health and safety precautions applied to an employee’s physical health apply equally to their mental health. Jeffrey Pfeffer is professor of organizational behavior at Stanford University Graduate School of Business. In his most recent book, Dying for a Paycheck, he writes:
“The workplace profoundly affects human health and mortality, and too many workplaces are harmful to people’s health – people are literally dying for a paycheck.”
Pfeffer cites extensive examples from across the globe of the negative effects toxic work practices have had on people – to the point, in some cases, of pushing them to suicide. Other examples given include serious health effects such as collapsing from fatigue, developing a dependency on anti-depressants, or substance abuse. (3)
“For men, prolonged exposure to work-related stress has been linked to an increased likelihood of lung, colon, rectal, and stomach cancer and non-Hodgkin lymphoma. Moreover, we are increasingly understanding the mechanisms linking stress to disease.”
Pfeffer namechecks a few positive cases throughout the book. He cites companies such as Southwest Airlines, Toyota, and SAS Institute for their resistance to layoffs, and Patagonia and Aetna for progressive policies regarding healthcare insurance and work-life balance.
His response to corporate wellness programs as a salve to reduce burnout is that they are largely ineffectual, mainly because they focus on the wrong things. “We know, from extensive research summarized in Dying for a Paycheck that individual behaviors such as overeating, smoking, excessive alcohol consumption, and drug abuse are related to the stress, including workplace-induced stress, that individuals experience. So instead of trying to get people to engage in healthier individual behaviors, workplace wellbeing initiatives would be more effective if they focused on preventing the stress-inducing aspects of work environments that cause the unhealthy individual behaviors in the first place. Simply put, companies need to build cultures of health – and that begins by creating work environments that help people thrive both physically and psychologically. Not on trying to remediate the harm that toxic workplaces inflict through limited-intervention ‘programs’.” (4)
The solution is simply the flip side of his data: it’s providing more job control, reducing work-family conflict, being fair to employees and providing social support at work. It’s also avoiding lay-offs; Pfeffer quotes evidence that while layoffs “increase fear and stress, they do not lead to higher profits, productivity, stock price, innovation or quality.”
Creating safe, supportive human environments
For Danie du Plessis, it’s time to bring workplace stress out into the open. The Executive Vice President of Medical Affairs at Kyowa Kirin, du Plessis has a strong background in coaching and mentoring, with a heavy emphasis on employee health and wellbeing.
He explains: “In the UK, there has recently been a huge emphasis on mental well-being in the workplace, including support from the House of Windsor. This is great and can unfortunately also have a downside of not seeing the bigger picture and how many factors influence an individual’s resilience. Both individuals and employers have responsibilities. Employees need to take time to understand their own purpose in life, in the first instance, and how that relates to the work they are doing and their career aspirations (a great coaching/mentoring conversation). They need to be aware how they manage problems, emotions and their own physical well-being, and be prepared to change their own behavior if the status quo does not serve them well. This will increase their resilience and fulfillment. It is quite amazing how often resilience becomes a key conversation in coaching and mentoring. Sadly, many people are scared to be open at work and discuss this with their managers.”
According to du Plessis, employers need to create a safe space for employees to be themselves at work and be vocal about the fact that it is OK to be human. “Offering access to different programs that inform the journey of growth towards managed resilience is the ideal – either in-house or through third parties. I believe this should be the norm for all companies and organizations, while one should appreciate that different size companies will have different offerings. What is in it for the company? Resilient employees perform better and retain their aligned passion for the purpose of the company, which is why they joined in the first place. It becomes easier to really be present (which links again with mindfulness and mental well-being). This takes the term ‘presenteeism’, coined by Professor Cary Cooper, a psychologist specializing in organizational management at Manchester University in the UK one step further. And by default, absenteeism decreases which reduces workload on co-workers. Having a reputation of caring about employees can in no perceivable way harm any organization.”
Psychologically safe versus fearing the next round of layoffs
Prioritizing your employees over the short-term goals of your company can be the best strategy in the long run, according to Simon Sinek, author of Leaders Eat Last.
“The irony is when our top priority is to take care of our people, our people will take care of the numbers. People-focused companies outperform numbers-focused companies over the long-term dramatically.”
When organizations take care of their employees to such an extent, they make them feel safe. And according to Simon Sinek, the natural response to feeling safe is to offer trust and cooperation.
“Charlie Kim, who is the CEO of a company called Next Jump, a tech company in New York City, makes the point that if you had hard times in your family, would you ever consider laying off one of your children? We would never do it. Then why do we consider laying off people within our organizations? Charlie implemented a policy of lifetime employment. If you get a job at Next Jump, you cannot get fired for performance issues. In fact, if you have issues, they will coach you and they will give you support, just like you would if one of your children came home with a C from school.”
Ben Whitter, Founder and CEO of World Employee Experience Institute, suggests that both employees and employers have a role in creating the conditions for burnout to occur. “The thing about some companies, and the tenure figures from Silicon Valley bear this one out, is that they can create a fantastic workplace experience, but in return, they expect EVERYTHING an employee’s got to give, which is very intense and challenging to sustain over the long-term. The increasing numbers of people opting to work freelance within the gig economy is an indicator that people want to take back control of their life and work to hours that suit them. Companies are responding with various flexible working arrangements, and also the four-day week is growing in popularity, to deliver stronger productivity that can be sustained by the employer and employees. Work and life are converging at a rate we haven’t seen before, and everyone needs to get ready for radically new ways of working within the economy.
Employees are no longer resources to be exploited and commanded, they are now allies in a shared mission to co-create experiences that deliver better results. For Whitter, the future of work and HR is human and this human touch is where we need to get to. “A quote I love from Trudy Purchase (an Employee Experience Award Winning Learning & Development Manager) is: ‘“Don’t judge the quality of an employer by how they treat you on your best day. Instead, judge them by how they treat you on your worst day.’ And in return for that humanity you get a whole lot more: discretionary effort, loyalty, creativity, innovation, because if you treat me like this, I’ll give you everything I have. It certainly beats free snacks or fußball tables.”
https://medicalaffairs.org/wp-content/uploads/2020/08/9-1.png321845Medical Affairshttps://medicalaffairs.org/wp-content/uploads/2022/11/MAPS-Logo-R-NoTagLine.pngMedical Affairs2020-03-07 01:59:492023-11-13 10:25:59The Human Touch: The Real Issues Behind Burnout
To provide the best experiences, we use technologies like cookies to store and/or access device information. Consenting to these technologies will allow us to process data such as browsing behavior or unique IDs on this site. Not consenting or withdrawing consent, may adversely affect certain features and functions.
Functional
Always active
The technical storage or access is strictly necessary for the legitimate purpose of enabling the use of a specific service explicitly requested by the subscriber or user, or for the sole purpose of carrying out the transmission of a communication over an electronic communications network.
Preferences
The technical storage or access is necessary for the legitimate purpose of storing preferences that are not requested by the subscriber or user.
Statistics
The technical storage or access that is used exclusively for statistical purposes.The technical storage or access that is used exclusively for anonymous statistical purposes. Without a subpoena, voluntary compliance on the part of your Internet Service Provider, or additional records from a third party, information stored or retrieved for this purpose alone cannot usually be used to identify you.
Marketing
The technical storage or access is required to create user profiles to send advertising, or to track the user on a website or across several websites for similar marketing purposes.
To provide the best experiences, we use technologies like cookies to store and/or access device information. Consenting to these technologies will allow us to process data such as browsing behavior or unique IDs on this site. Not consenting or withdrawing consent, may adversely affect certain features and functions.
Functional
Always active
The technical storage or access is strictly necessary for the legitimate purpose of enabling the use of a specific service explicitly requested by the subscriber or user, or for the sole purpose of carrying out the transmission of a communication over an electronic communications network.
Preferences
The technical storage or access is necessary for the legitimate purpose of storing preferences that are not requested by the subscriber or user.
Statistics
The technical storage or access that is used exclusively for statistical purposes.The technical storage or access that is used exclusively for anonymous statistical purposes. Without a subpoena, voluntary compliance on the part of your Internet Service Provider, or additional records from a third party, information stored or retrieved for this purpose alone cannot usually be used to identify you.
Marketing
The technical storage or access is required to create user profiles to send advertising, or to track the user on a website or across several websites for similar marketing purposes.