• Leading Pharmaceutical Operations From The Ground Up With Jeff Rope
    Jan 5 2026

    In this episode of the Active Ingredients podcast, host Thomas Dove interviews Jeff Rope, a pharmaceutical operations executive with four decades of experience in technical operations, supply chain leadership, and acquisition integration.

    Jeff's journey from aspiring veterinarian to leading global operations shows how failure and rural values shape strong leadership. His experience building teams, coaching systems, and working through the changing generics landscape offers insights for executives. The conversation explores authenticity, site management experience, and staying flexible during industry changes.


    Key Takeaways

    Learn how being authentic makes you a better leader after years of trying to copy others, focusing on being yourself in pharmaceutical leadership.

    Discover why integrity stays important in life sciences operations, recognizing that practicing integrity consistently across complex manufacturing requires effort and courage.

    Understand how rural farming experiences carry over into operational leadership, including solving problems independently, supporting your community, and staying disciplined.

    Explore why the Site Manager role gives the best leadership training, sitting at the intersection of all functions and requiring mastery of compliance, medical, finance, and operations.

    Take away the principle of coaching systems rather than individuals, recognizing that long-term change requires fixing structural issues not personal development.

    Gain insights into balancing technical skills with people leadership, with Jeff noting few people move from shop floor to senior positions without developing people skills.

    Apply methods for staying flexible in pharmaceutical operations, as the generics industry faces patent cliffs, biosimilar complexity, and therapies like GLP-1 creating market changes.

    Uncover how continuous learning and effort stay required, with Jeff stressing that applying yourself fully builds the foundation for career success.

    Identify important leadership qualities needed during uncertainty, including making strategic choices with incomplete information while keeping flexibility to manage mistakes.


    Snippets

    • "Whenever you do something, you have to apply yourself. You have to learn. You have to put time and effort. And it's not enough to think things come naturally to you."

    • "The Site Manager job was the best job I've ever had. Take two funnels at the pointy end and put them together. The site manager sits right in the joint."

    • "Very few people make it from the shop floor to senior roles. You're on that journey because there's something about what you've done or accomplished to date that's working."


    Timestamps & Topics

    • 00:23:22 -- Introduction: Jeff Rope's journey from New Zealand to global pharmaceutical leadership

    • 00:24:39 -- Three Active Ingredients: Being authentic, having integrity, treating people with respect

    • 00:26:25 -- Early Formation: Rural farming values and path from veterinarian to pharmaceutical operations

    • 00:30:18 -- The Chemistry Pivot: How a failed school exam started a lifetime of learning

    • 00:45:30 -- Site Management Excellence: Why this role provides the best leadership development

    • 01:02:15 -- Coaching Systems vs Individuals: Building long-term organizational change

    • 01:15:36 -- Industry Evolution: Generics changes, GLP-1 impact, leading through industry shifts


    Resources

    • Follow Jeff Rope on LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/jeff-rope-345b84197/

    • Follow Thomas Dove on LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/lifesciencesexecutivesearch/


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    1 hr
  • Building Teams With Heart With Paul Janssen
    Dec 15 2025

    In this episode of the Active Ingredients podcast, host Thomas Dove interviews Paul Janssen, Regional Vice President and General Manager for Germany, Austria and Switzerland at Advanz Pharma.

    Paul's career shows how principled leadership under pressure can reshape pharmaceutical organisations. From turnarounds to scaling challenges, his journey highlights the power of listening, building trust through presence, and creating entrepreneurial cultures that put patients first.

    The conversation dives into how leaders stay clear in crisis, build teams with heart, and develop talent using frameworks that value learnability as much as experience. Paul shares stories from military leadership to million-euro mistakes, demonstrating how vulnerability and accountability fuel psychological safety and innovation.


    Key Takeaways

    • Learn how the three L's framework guides crisis leadership through listening to every level of the organisation, leading with clear direction, and letting teams execute with trust once alignment is achieved.
    • Gain insights into building companies with heart by establishing patient-centric cultures where teams achieve exceptional market share through responsiveness and genuine commitment to improving lives.
    • Discover why calm presence matters more than perfect solutions when leading through regulatory challenges or market disruptions that threaten patient access and team morale across multiple markets.
    • Understand how patient immersion creates entrepreneurial fire by visiting patients in their homes and witnessing first hand the daily impact of therapies on quality of life and treatment burden.
    • Explore the five-element hiring framework Paul uses to build high-performing teams by assessing winning attitude, impact, learnability, adaptability, and judgment rather than prioritising industry experience.
    • Take away strategies for creating psychological safety where team members can make mistakes, admit errors early, and maintain entrepreneurial courage without fear of punishment when acting in good faith.
    • Apply principles for talent development over experience hiring, understanding that learnability and adaptability predict long-term success more accurately than therapeutic area expertise or established relationships.

    Snippets

    • "Listening is a very important element to be a successful leader."
    • "In the beginning, I wasn't selling because I didn't know that you have to listen and not talk. That was a big learning for me at the time."
    • "You need to be very calm….You need to be pulling people together, and you need to tell them this is the situation."


    Timestamps & Topics

    • 00:37:12 - Three Active Ingredients: Listening, leading, and letting teams execute with trust
    • 00:42:28 - Entry into Pharma: Consulting experience that revealed product safety issues and sparked industry passion
    • 00:54:08 - Leading in the Fire: Military leadership lessons applied to pharmaceutical crisis management
    • 01:04:02 - Building with Heart: Patient-centred startup philosophy that drove 50% market share growth
    • 01:12:04 - Million Euro Mistakes: Creating cultures where teams report errors early without fear
    • 01:15:30 - Hiring for Talent: Five-element framework prioritising learnability over industry experience
    • 01:24:01 - Future of Life Sciences: AI integration, digital therapeutics, and human-centred leadership evolution

    Resources

    • Follow Paul Janssen on LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/paul-janssen-ma-mba-msc/
    • Follow Thomas Dove on LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/lifesciencesexecutivesearch/

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    54 mins
  • The AI-Enabled Procurement Leader With Alan Rankin
    Dec 1 2025

    In this episode of the Active Ingredients podcast, host Thomas Dove interviews Alan Rankin, Chief Procurement Officer at Moderna.

    Alan's career trajectory from organic chemist to transformational procurement leader spans some of pharma's biggest names, including Novartis, Sandoz, and Moderna. His journey reveals how technical expertise combined with people-centric leadership creates extraordinary value in life sciences. The conversation explores bold career transitions, the private equity mindset, and how AI-enabled procurement teams will reshape pharmaceutical operations in the coming decade.

    Key Takeaways

    • Discover how AI agents will sit alongside human teams in pharmaceutical procurement, with Alan explaining Moderna's approach to managing digital and human workforces together, positioning AI capabilities within HR rather than IT.
    • Understand why experimentation with AI technology matters more than fear of job replacement, as Alan shares how Moderna's culture allows people to learn and build with AI tools, enabling workforce reinvention rather than displacement.
    • Learn how curiosity, connection, and the ability to lower judgment form the foundation of impactful leadership, especially in procurement roles where stakeholder influence is crucial in driving organisational change.
    • Discover why asking questions instead of providing answers fosters accountability in teams and strengthens ownership, as Alan explains how this shift transformed his leadership approach from content-driven to people-centred.
    • Understand the private equity lens as a value multiplier rather than cost-cutting pressure, where delivering bottom-line impact translates to exponential enterprise value at exit.
    • Explore the critical importance of data quality as the foundation for procurement value creation, with Alan's framework: data > insights > ideas > projects > savings.
    • Take away strategies for successful transitions from big pharma to smaller organisations, recognising that moving from thousand-person teams to lean operations requires building systems from scratch without the corporate machine behind you.
    • Gain insights into defining personal success internally rather than through external validation, as Alan shares how working with coaches helped him discover that self-defined success metrics around wellbeing and detachment matter more than titles.


    Snippets

    • "Your job as a leader is to make people who work for you successful. And the theory is if they're successful, then you'll be successful."
    • "Data leads to insights. Insights leads to ideas. Ideas lead to projects. Projects, when executed well, lead to money in the bank. But at the end of the day, it all starts with the data."
    • "The private equity lens is just a wonderful appreciation of what procurement can do and what procurement can bring to the table."


    Timestamps & Topics

    • 00:30:17 -- Three Active Ingredients: Curiosity, connection, and the ability to lower judgment
    • 00:42:23 -- First Leadership Role: Managing a unionised workforce as the youngest production lead
    • 00:52:13 -- Big Pharma to PE Transition: Building procurement systems from scratch at Stata
    • 01:00:25 -- Moderna Mission: Joining to advance platform mRNA technology in oncology
    • 01:16:46 -- Procurement of the Future: Integrating AI agents alongside human workforce


    Resources

    • Follow Alan Rankin on LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/alan-rankin-a2733a6/
    • Follow Thomas Dove on LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/lifesciencesexecutivesearch/


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    1 hr and 5 mins
  • From Manufacturing Floor To Commercial Leadership Success With Thomas Wilson
    Nov 17 2025
    In this episode of the Active Ingredients podcast, host Thomas Dove interviews Thomas Wilson, Chief Commercial Officer at AmbioPharm, a global peptide CDMO.Thomas Wilson brings a unique perspective that spans 30 years at Pfizer, from elite manufacturing and supply chain roles to his current commercial leadership position in the biopharma CDMO space. His journey from military service through frontline manufacturing supervision to senior commercial roles demonstrates how operational fluency can fuel authentic commercial leadership.The conversation explores the critical transition from technical operations to commercial excellence, the mentors who shaped his servant leadership philosophy, and how to build high-performing teams where people are empowered to win.Key TakeawaysLearn how having a clear mission serves as your fundamental leadership compass, ensuring every decision aligns with what truly motivates you and drives meaningful results for your organisation.Discover the power of working for your people by giving them a fighting chance, creating conditions where team members can succeed rather than setting them up for failure.Understand why being the honest voice in difficult situations defines leadership credibility, especially when accurately assessing challenges before attempting to solve problems.Explore how servant leadership transforms from management concept to a practical framework, putting leaders in a position to enable others' success rather than seeking personal recognition or ego gratification.Take away strategies for transitioning from superhero to sidekick mentality in CDMO, recognising that commercial success comes from being 'Alfred to your customer's Batman' rather than trying to be the hero.Gain insights into creating non-toxic workplace cultures through structured disagreement, teaching teams how to challenge ideas without being disagreeable and fostering permission structures for open dialogue.Apply the 'Practice of 3' technique for better decision-making under pressure, consciously considering multiple response options before reacting to challenging situations or difficult conversations.Uncover how patient-centricity serves as the ultimate motivational foundation, connecting daily operational challenges to real human impact in the life sciences.Snippets"There's a patient at the end of everything you do."“You have to work for your people. You've got to put your people in a position where they can win.”“Disagreement is where the best ideas come from.”“Sometimes you need to lose to win.”“Make your own choice. You are your own agent”Timestamps & Topics00:50:16 -- Active Ingredients: Mission, working for your people, and being the honest voice00:52:00 -- Early Formation: Military service, career transition through What Color is Your Parachute00:58:05 -- Corporate Adjustment: Moving from military precision to union manufacturing environments01:01:44 -- Natural Leadership: Boy Scouts leadership retreat and connecting the dots mentality01:02:52 -- Early Lessons: Learning to lose strategically for better team culture01:05:05 -- Manufacturing Foundation: Converting raw materials and building deep product knowledge01:08:57 -- Virtual Plant Innovation: Transforming procurement model to engagement-based CDMO relationships01:25:08 -- Commercial Transition: From manufacturing interface to selling what you loveResourcesFollow Thomas Wilson on LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/thomas-p-wilson-pfizer-centreone/Follow Thomas Dove on LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/lifesciencesexecutivesearch/Don't Miss an EpisodeRemember to tune in to our next episode for more inspiring insights. You can also subscribe to the Active Ingredients podcast on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, and other leading podcast platforms.Loved this episode?Share it with your friends, family or your peers!
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    1 hr and 18 mins
  • Multidimensional Leadership and Failing Forward with Cliff Pacaro
    Nov 3 2025
    In this episode of the Active Ingredients podcast, host Thomas Dove interviews Cliff Pacaro, an HR executive with an illustrious career in the life sciences. Cliff's unconventional journey from aspiring astronaut to transformational HR leader reveals how multidimensional thinking and embracing failure can create exceptional leadership in the life sciences.His experience spans biopharma, CDMO, and beverage industries, demonstrating how stepping outside traditional HR boundaries and into business leadership roles builds the adaptive capabilities pharmaceutical executives need to thrive. The conversation explores how authenticity, calculated risk-taking, and leading through the messy middle of transformation drive organisational success in an industry facing talent development challenges and increasing consolidation pressures.Key TakeawaysDiscover how recognising everyone's human lays the foundation for effective leadership, especially when navigating pressure-filled transformations in pharmaceutical and biotech environments.Uncover why viewing failure as testing and evolution rather than defeat builds resilient leaders who can navigate the uncertainty inherent in drug development and organisational change.Understand the power of multidimensional leadership by stepping into different functional seats, allowing you to view business challenges through finance, operations, and supply chain lenses beyond your primary role.Explore how curiosity and asking "why" help develop authentic leadership, rather than simply copying other leaders and taking only the pieces that resonate, while staying true to yourself.Take away strategies for leading through the messy middle of transformation by celebrating small milestones, reassessing progress, and maintaining momentum even when things don't go to plan.Gain insights into breaking linear career progression assumptions by placing strong leaders in unfamiliar roles, as Cliff demonstrates through his experience stepping into a general manager position.Apply frameworks for staying anchored during complex transformations through meditation, reflection, and connecting with mentors who can provide perspective when chaos threatens to overwhelm progress.Snippets“Don't be afraid of failure... failure is testing. It's evolving. It's trying something new.”“Leadership is coming with a clear understanding and direction, but it's also leveraging the skill sets and resources around you.”“We're all human, we're all trying to get through our lives, be successful, grow, develop, encourage others, make cool choices, build great humans ourselves, and experience the world around us.”“Become the leader you are meant to be through the eyes that you have.”“We're not developing dynamic leaders. We're developing a repetition of what we're seeing within leadership in the organisations today.”Timestamps & Topics01:35:52 -- Three Active Ingredients: Humanity, embracing failure, and authentic leadership01:39:22 -- The human foundation: Why people are not obstacles but essential to success01:44:19 -- The leadership spark: How a university program ignited leadership development01:56:22 -- Multidimensional leadership: Viewing business through multiple functional lenses02:00:39 -- Stepping outside HR: Taking on a general manager role without traditional qualifications02:12:23 -- Failing forward: Using failure as a learning tool rather than an anchor02:36:26 -- Future of life sciences: Talent development challenges and the need for dynamic leadersResourcesFollow Cliff Pacaro on LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/cliffpacaro/Follow Thomas Dove on LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/lifesciencesexecutivesearch/Don't Miss an EpisodeRemember to tune in to our next episode for more inspiring insights. You can also subscribe to the Active Ingredients podcast on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, and other leading podcast platforms.Loved this episode?Share it with your friends, family or your peers!
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    1 hr and 8 mins
  • Building High-Performing Teams Under Pressure With Jason Martin
    Oct 8 2025

    In this episode of the Active Ingredients podcast, host Thomas Dove interviews Jason Martin, a seasoned biotech leader with extensive technical operations experience across pharmaceutical and biotech organisations.

    Jason's career spans from pharma giants to smaller biotech companies, demonstrating how leadership fundamentals remain constant while adapting to different organisational sizes. The conversation explores building trust in new environments, managing CDMO relationships, and creating high-performing teams under pressure. Jason shares practical frameworks for life sciences executives navigating transitions between large pharma infrastructure and biotech agility.


    Key Takeaways

    • Learn how communication serves as the foundation of technical operations leadership, requiring clear messaging with validation loops to ensure teams execute effectively.
    • Discover the trust equation framework for building credibility in new organisations, combining reliability, authenticity, and minimal self-interest to establish leadership reputation.
    • Understand how to transition successfully between large pharma and biotech settings by adapting leadership style to match organisational resources and culture.
    • Explore situational awareness when selecting CDMO partners, evaluating leadership quality, compliance history, and long-term relationship potential for strategic products.
    • Implement practical hiring strategies that utilise personality assessment tools to complement teams with the right mix of drivers, integrators, and analytical guardians.
    • Apply the "teams" framework of trust, engagement, accountability, and making stars to create psychological safety and ground rules for pharmaceutical teams.
    • Gain insights into managing upwards through breadcrumb communication, helping leaders reach conclusions gradually rather than overwhelming them with direct feedback.


    Snippets

    • "I love the life sciences. I love the aspect of creating health care, and that's pretty much what drew me into the desire to be a surgeon…Using science to help people with my hands."
    • "Trust is not instantly given or taken away. It's really a history of experience that people trust you or not."
    • "Every role in the company has a purpose. Every role in the company is precious and valuable."
    • "Always leave relationships and jobs in a better state than when you joined"
    • "Walk the floor, talk to people, understand what's going on in the organisation. You'll hear and learn things that you would never get from a conference room."


    Timestamps & Topics

    • 00:14:50 -- Three Active Ingredients: Communication, trust building, and visionary leadership as core foundations
    • 00:25:52 -- Transition to Leadership: Moving from managing to leading leaders at Novartis Sandoz
    • 00:34:18 -- Trust Equation: Building credibility through reliability, authenticity, and minimal self-interest
    • 00:43:08 -- Startup Mindset: Adapting to smaller organisations and wearing multiple hats effectively
    • 00:52:19 -- CDMO Management: Navigating contract manufacturing relationships and leadership assessment
    • 00:59:07 -- High-Performing Teams: Building excellence under pressure during pivotal clinical trials
    • 01:10:30 -- Team Ground Rules: Creating psychological safety and accountability frameworks


    Resources

    • Follow Jason Martin on LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/jason-m-741bb98/
    • Follow Thomas Dove on LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/lifesciencesexecutivesearch/


    Don't Miss an Episode

    Remember to tune in to our next episode for more inspiring insights. You can also subscribe to the Active Ingredients podcast on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, and other leading podcast platforms.


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    1 hr and 7 mins
  • The Unconventional Path to Life Sciences Leadership with Jesse Sibarium
    Sep 28 2025
    In this episode of the Active Ingredients podcast, host Thomas Dove interviews Jesse Sibarium, a seasoned life sciences executive with experience spanning supply chain and commercial leadership across multiple continents. Jesse's unconventional path from Manhattan to Moldova, Romania, the Netherlands, and Switzerland demonstrates how cultural immersion and calculated risk-taking can create what he calls "leadership luck." His journey through organisations, including Amgen and PTC Therapeutics, offers insights into building credibility through lived experience rather than traditional career progression.The conversation explores global adaptability, decision-making under pressure, and the evolving landscape of pharmaceutical leadership in an increasingly interconnected world.Key TakeawaysLearn how curiosity and inner drive serve as foundational leadership qualities, particularly when entering unfamiliar territories or industries where traditional experience may not apply.Discover the critical importance of selecting diverse teams with complementary skills, personalities, and nationalities who will challenge you while supporting your vision through difficult periods.Understand that resilience and grit become essential when carefully crafted plans inevitably face unexpected challenges, requiring leaders to adapt quickly without losing momentum.Explore how cultural immersion creates competitive advantages, with Jesse's language learning experiences in Moldova and the Netherlands opening doors that traditional qualifications could not.Take away strategies for creating "leadership luck" by positioning yourself in uncomfortable situations where unique opportunities may emerge for those willing to take calculated risks.Gain insights into transitioning between large pharma and smaller biotech environments, understanding when each setting serves different career development purposes.Apply frameworks for building international teams that can operate seamlessly across multiple jurisdictions and cultural contexts in today's globalised pharmaceutical landscape.Uncover how soft skills increasingly function as hard skills in leadership roles, particularly in relationship-building and cross-cultural communication within life sciences organisations.Snippets"Some people see things as they are and ask why. Some people dream things that never were and ask, why not?" "I thought, there is no way I can quit, because if I can make it here, I can make it anywhere.""Don't underestimate those soft skills, because the soft skills are really the hard skills."Timestamps & Topics00:16:27 -- Introduction: Jesse's journey from Manhattan to international pharmaceutical leadership00:17:56 -- Three Active Ingredients: Curiosity, team selection, and resilience as leadership foundations00:23:05 -- Early Formation: High school performing arts lessons that shaped professional mindset00:28:12 -- Global Awakening: Meeting international people and developing an appetite for a European career00:30:01 -- The Moldova Gamble: Taking risks through Peace Corps to create an unconventional pathway to Europe00:42:59 -- Leadership Luck: Creating opportunities through cultural immersion and language learning01:02:25 -- Future of Leadership: Diverse backgrounds, international experience, and evolving pharmaceutical landscapeResourcesFollow Jesse Sibarium on LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/sibarium/Follow Thomas Dove on LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/lifesciencesexecutivesearch/Don't Miss an EpisodeRemember to tune in to our next episode for more inspiring insights. You can also subscribe to the Active Ingredients podcast on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, and other leading podcast platforms.Loved this episode?Share it with your friends, family or your peers!
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    58 mins
  • Building Global Leadership Through Cultural Curiosity with Erin Federman
    Sep 14 2025

    In this episode of the Active Ingredients podcast, host Thomas Dove interviews Erin Federman, a Global Life Sciences Commercial Leader.

    As a seasoned "global American" who truly integrated into European culture over a decade, Erin shares her transformation from a fired retail manager who was "a baby dictator" to a seasoned life sciences leader. Erin discusses the reality of "de-Americanising" your worldview, from navigating salary perceptions to rewiring your brain for slower, more integrated ways of working.

    The conversation explores how leadership isn't a template but lived experience, why career curiosity trumps straight-line progression, and how internal mobility challenges strangle talent development across the life sciences.


    Key Takeaways

    • Learn why leadership isn't a template but lived experience, moving beyond "be yourself" advice to understand that authentic leadership comes from trial, error, and evolution through real challenges.
    • Discover the reality of "de-Americanising" your worldview when relocating to Europe, including salary evaluation beyond dollar amounts and embracing slower, integrated working styles.
    • Explore how career curiosity beats straight-line progression, with Federman demonstrating how following intellectual spark across functions creates more valuable leaders than rigid career ladders.
    • Understand moving from judgement to curiosity as a leadership tool when managing diverse, international teams.
    • Take away Federman's framework for breaking down complex challenges by working backwards from end goals and creating manageable 30, 60, and 90-day implementation chunks.
    • Apply practical strategies for internal mobility by demonstrating capabilities and advocating for team members to cross functional boundaries, especially for diverse candidates facing higher barriers.
    • Gain insights into building teams as "living recipes" where different communication styles and personalities create stronger outcomes than homogeneous skill sets.
    • Uncover how to maintain your spark through career transitions, recognising when you've outgrown systems and need to seek new challenges to avoid professional burnout.


    Snippets

    • "Leading is not being a dictator. Because you grow up thinking leading is telling people what to do."
    • It's not just doing the thing, it's actually being able to communicate what you're doing in a way that gives other people trust and confidence that you can do the thing.”
    • “Curiosity versus judgment, which sounds so obvious when you say it, but it's so easy to come from a place of judgment without even thinking."
    • It is a responsibility to not just climb the ladder and holler down some advice. Reach not only reach down and pull people up, but look to the side who is also trying to get somewhere and they just need a bridge across."


    Timestamps & Topics

    • 00:40 -- Introduction: Erin's background across pharma, biotech and diagnostics
    • 05:42 -- Leadership Foundations: Beyond templates to lived experience and three key ingredients
    • 15:33 -- Early Leadership Lessons: Retail management failure and learning that leadership isn't control
    • 25:15 -- Global American Transformation: The reality of relocating from Seattle to Europe
    • 35:20 -- De-Americanising Your Worldview: Salary perception, lifestyle changes, and cultural integration
    • 45:18 -- Career as Curiosity: Following intellectual spark across functions and building capabilities
    • 55:12 -- Internal Mobility Challenges: Breaking down barriers and advocating for career transitions


    Resources

    • Follow Erin Federman on LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/erinfederman/
    • Follow Thomas Dove on LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/lifesciencesexecutivesearch/


    Don't Miss an Episode

    Remember to tune into our next episode for more inspiring insights. You can also subscribe to the Active Ingredients podcast on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, and other leading podcast platforms.

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    59 mins