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Insider Insights

This is where I share practical insights from inside biotech hiring teams.


Frameworks, thinking and tools to help you make better career decisions, apply with intention and stand out for the right reasons.

Not Sure What Your Next Step Should Be?

Two Sides of the Same CV

How Recruiters and Hiring Managers Read Your Application

One CV, Two Audiences.

Recruiters need clarity and reassurance.
Hiring managers need depth and trust.


Your CV must satisfy both.


When you understand how each audience reads your application, you stop guessing and start designing your CV intentionally.


That is when applications become easier to assess, easier to advocate for and more likely to progress.


Most people imagine their CV will be read in a single, linear way.


In reality, it is interpreted through two completely different lenses, each with its own priorities and pressures.


After 7+ years inside biotech hiring teams, this is one of the biggest reasons talented biotech professionals are overlooked. Not because they lack capability, but because their CV only works for one audience.


This article explains how recruiters and hiring managers read your CV, what each is trying to understand, and how to reduce friction for both.


Part One: The Recruiter Lens

How Recruiters Decide Whether to Keep Reading


Recruiters are the first filter.


They are not reading slowly. They are reviewing 100’s of CVs per role, switching between priorities and making quick decisions under time pressure.


Their job is not to assess deep technical skill.
Their job is to decide whether you are worth progressing.


Your CV has one primary task at this stage: convince them to keep reading.


What Recruiters Are Asking Immediately


Within seconds, recruiters are trying to answer:

  • Have you done a similar role before? If not, where are the transferable skills?
  • Can you hit the ground running?
  • Do you meet around 60% or more of the job description?
  • What kind of environment have you worked in?
  • Where are you located and can you realistically work in this set-up?
  • Can I confidently describe your profile to a hiring manager?


If these answers are difficult to find, friction appears.

And CVs that create friction might not progress.


The 6 second scan


Recruiters scan before they read.


In around six seconds, they should be able to see:

  • your current role and seniority
  • the name of your company and what it does
  • your core skill set
  • evidence that you are relevant to the role


If they need to hunt for this information, you are asking them to work too hard.


What Helps a Recruiter Keep Reading


CVs that perform well for recruiters tend to:

  • make the current role obvious at a glance
  • clearly position the company and its domain
  • surface relevant skills early
  • use white space intentionally so the page feels readable
  • use numerals and widely accepted abbreviations to increase scan speed
  • include links only when they add value and are up to date


Every one of these choices reduces friction.


The easier your CV is to interpret, the easier it is for a recruiter to feel confident progressing you.


At this stage, reassurance matters more than depth.


Part Two: The Hiring Manager Lens


What Hiring Managers Look for Beyond the First Scan


Once your CV reaches a hiring manager, the lens changes.


Hiring managers are assessing capability, judgement and impact, not just relevance.


This is where depth matters.


What Hiring Managers Are Trying to Understand


Hiring managers are reading your CV to evaluate:

  • Do you truly understand the science, data or technology?
  • Which methods, tools or approaches have you worked with?
  • Can you communicate clearly across teams and disciplines?
  • How do you analyse, interpret and explain results?
  • What meaningful impact have you had?
  • Are you someone they would want in their team?


They are not just assessing whether you can do the work.
They are assessing whether they can rely on your thinking, judgement and communication.


Depth Without Overwhelm


Hiring managers value detail, but only when it is relevant and structured.


Strong CVs for this audience:

  • reference thesis titles or areas of specialisation where relevant
  • name methods, tools and approaches accurately
  • show depth of understanding, not just exposure
  • demonstrate progression in both responsibility and thinking


Rather than long lists of tools, hiring managers respond better to clear examples that show how you work, how you approach problems and how you communicate.


Impact Over Activity


Hiring managers want to understand:

  • what changed because you were there
  • how you approached complex or ambiguous problems
  • how you collaborated across teams
  • how your work influenced decisions, outcomes or direction


Evidence of impact outweighs long task lists every time.


Team Fit and Trust


Hiring managers are also asking:

  • Would I enjoy working with this person?
  • Would they collaborate well with the team?
  • Do they communicate in a clear and grounded way?

Your CV cannot demonstrate everything, but language choice, structure and clarity all help shape their impression.


Bringing Both Sides Together


Recruiters need quick clarity.
Hiring managers need depth and substance.


Your experience is the same, but the way you structure and present it determines whether both audiences get what they need.


The strongest CVs are designed intentionally with both perspectives in mind.


Final Thought


There are always three perspectives in an application:

  • the recruiter
  • the hiring manager
  • and your own


The best CVs acknowledge all three and guide each reader with confidence.

The Elevator Pitch

Stop Your Waffling

If you work in biotech, you will be asked to explain what you do.


By a recruiter.
By a hiring manager.

By someone you meet through your network.


And very often, the moment matters more than you realise.

An elevator pitch is not about sounding impressive.


It is about being clear, confident and memorable.

After 7+ years inside biotech hiring teams, one pattern shows up again and again.


Talented people talk for too long, say too little, and miss the opportunity to shape how they are understood.


This article explains what an elevator pitch is, why it matters, and how to build one that actually works.


What an Elevator Pitch Really Is


An elevator pitch is a short, intentional explanation of:

  • who you are professionally
  • what you do
  • where you create value


It is not a full career summary.
It is not a list of technologies.

And it is definitely not your CV read out loud.


Think of it as the opening paragraph to your professional story.


Its job is simple:
to make the other person want to keep the conversation going.


Why It Matters More Than You Think


Inside hiring teams, elevator pitches show up everywhere.


They influence:

  • recruiter screening calls
  • how recruiters introduce you to hiring managers
  • first impressions in interviews
  • informal conversations that turn into referrals


Very often, the words you choose become the words others use to describe you.


If your pitch is vague, that vagueness travels.
If it is clear, focused and confident, so is the narrative built around you.


The Most Common Mistake


The biggest mistake biotech professionals make is waffling.


They:

  • start too far back
  • include unnecessary detail
  • list responsibilities instead of value
  • lose the listener before the point lands


This usually happens because people are trying to be accurate rather than intentional.


Accuracy matters.
But clarity matters more.


What a Strong Elevator Pitch Does


A strong elevator pitch helps the listener understand, quickly:

  • your current level
  • your area of focus
  • what makes you relevant


It gives them the language they need to:

  • remember you
  • introduce you
  • advocate for you


From an insider perspective, this is critical.


Recruiters and hiring managers often need to summarise you in one or two sentences to someone else.


Your pitch should make that easy.


How This Connects to Your CV and LinkedIn Profile


Your elevator pitch should align with:

  • your CV summary
  • your LinkedIn headline and About section
  • how you introduce yourself in interviews


When these tell the same story, your positioning becomes consistent.
And consistency builds confidence.


This is why, inside The Insider Method, the elevator pitch is not treated as a standalone exercise.


It is built alongside your CV and LinkedIn profile, not separately.


A Practical Way to Build Your Pitch


Rather than memorising a script, focus on structure.


A useful framework is:

  • your role and context
  • your core strength or focus
  • the type of problems you work on or impact you create


Keep it short enough that you can say it comfortably.
Clear enough that it can be repeated accurately by someone else.


You should be able to adapt it slightly depending on:

  • whether you’re speaking to a recruiter or a hiring manager
  • the role you’re discussing
  • the setting you’re in


One pitch.
Multiple versions.


A Subtle but Powerful Tip


If you can understand what a role is really assessing, you can tailor your elevator pitch to match.


If the role prioritises:

  • leadership
  • delivery
  • communication
  • depth of expertise


You can choose examples and language that quietly reinforce those strengths.


This is not manipulation.
It is preparation.


And it is one of the clearest differences between candidates who feel reactive and those who feel in control.


Final Thought


Your elevator pitch is not about selling yourself.

It is about helping others understand you quickly and accurately.


When that happens:

  • conversations flow more easily
  • introductions are stronger
  • interviews start on firmer ground


And most importantly, you stop leaving first impressions to chance.

The Brag Box:

Not Just for Job Seekers. Make It. Use It.

Most professionals underestimate how much they have achieved.


Not because they lack impact, but because they have never taken the time to capture it.


After 7+ years inside biotech hiring teams, this is one of the biggest gaps I see. Talented people struggle to articulate their value, not because they do not have it, but because they have never documented it.


That is where the Brag Box comes in.


A Brag Box is one of the simplest and most effective tools you can build for your career. It supports confidence, clarity and strong decision-making, whether you are actively job searching or not.


What Is a Brag Box?


A Brag Box is a personal record of your achievements, strengths and moments of impact.


It does not need to be polished.
It does not need to be formal.
It simply needs to live somewhere you can access quickly.


Your Brag Box might live in:


  • your notes app
  • a Notion page
  • a folder in your personal inbox
  • a spreadsheet


The format does not matter. Access does.


From an insider perspective, hiring conversations often hinge on examples. Candidates who have these ready, move through processes with far more confidence and clarity.


Why Everyone Should Have One (Not Just Job Seekers)


A Brag Box is useful at every stage of your career.


From my experience inside hiring teams, people who maintain one find it easier to:


  • prepare for promotion or progression conversations
  • contribute clearly in annual reviews
  • summarise their impact across projects
  • counter imposter syndrome on difficult days


Job searching and interviewing can be mentally draining. Even high performers have moments where confidence dips. A Brag Box becomes a grounding tool on those days.


A Powerful Exercise: Ask Others


One of the most valuable additions to a Brag Box comes from other people.


I often suggest asking trusted colleagues or managers, past or present:


  • “Why would you come to me?”
  • “What do I do particularly well?”
  • “What problems do you trust me to solve?”


From an insider point of view, this exercise does three important things:


  1. It gives you language you would rarely use for yourself
  2. It strengthens relationships and reconnects you with your network
  3. It surfaces strengths that hiring managers genuinely care about


Be genuine when you ask. Receive the praise fully. Do not minimise it.


How Your Brag Box Supports Your Job Search


When you are job searching, your Brag Box becomes a strategic asset.


The Evidence layer

Your CV, LinkedIn profile and elevator pitch should be supported by evidence. A Brag Box gives you real examples that prove your skills, rather than simply listing them.


From a recruiter’s perspective, evidence is what builds confidence in a candidate quickly.


Interview preparation

Review your Brag Box before interviews. It anchors you in facts and examples when nerves appear or confidence wobbles.


Confidence on hard days

From experience, job searches often feel personal, even when they are not. Your Brag Box is a reminder of your capability when momentum feels slow.


WARNING

As a seasoned recruiter, this is one of my biggest pet peeves.


Do not keep your strongest achievements hidden.


Waiting to “reveal” them in interview is risky. If your impact is not visible on your CV or LinkedIn profile, you may never get invited to talk about it.


From inside hiring teams, decisions are made early. Visibility matters.


Your strongest achievements should be visible:


  • in your CV summary
  • within your role descriptions
  • or clearly linked to key skills


Be proactive. Make it easy for hiring teams to see your value.


Final Thought

A Brag Box does not need to be impressive.


It needs to be honest and accessible.


If you can open it at a moment’s notice and be reminded of your capability, it is doing its job.

The Reverse Job Description:

The Missing Step Before You Apply For Your Next Role

Most biotech professionals start their job search by updating their CV or scrolling through LinkedIn. But the strongest and most efficient searches start much earlier, with clarity.


A Reverse Job Description (RJD) is one of the most powerful tools you can use to make better decisions, save time and increase your chances of finding a role that genuinely aligns with your needs.


A RJD helps you deliberately select roles in or out. That deliberate choice creates clarity, which naturally leads to passion, enthusiasm, confidence and drive. These are powerful soft skills that stand out immediately in interviews and cannot be taught in the same way technical skills can. Hiring teams feel the difference. This can be what separates candidates who progress from those who come close but lose out to a competitor.


After 7+ years inside biotech hiring teams, reviewing 1,000s of CVs and supporting hiring managers across Europe, I can confidently say this: candidates who are clear on what they want make better choices and interview with more confidence.


A RJD gives you that clarity.


What Is a Reverse Job Description?

A Reverse Job Description is your own personal version of a job description.
Not what a company asks for, what you need in order to thrive.


Before you apply for your next role, pause. Take 10 minutes to create your own Reverse Job Description and notice how your intention and focus change.


A good RJD should work for you on a good day and still hold up on tougher days, when clarity, boundaries and structure matter most.


Those 10 minutes can save a significant amount of time and heartache later. 


A RJD influences every step of your application journey, which roles you apply to, the questions you ask in interview and the offers you are willing to accept.


Why This Matters

Without a RJD, job searching becomes reactive.


You apply for roles that sound interesting but are misaligned.
You progress through interviews only to realise too late that the role is not right.
You feel pressure to accept offers that do not fully meet your needs.


With a RJD, your decision making becomes intentional. You identify fit earlier, ask better questions and approach each step with clarity rather than hope.


Inside hiring teams, clarity makes candidates easier to advocate for. When your direction is clear, others can see where you fit and why.


The Reverse Job Description Framework

This is the framework I use to help biotech professionals define what they truly want next.


Working model and rhythm

  • Remote, hybrid or on-site
  • Days in the office
  • Working hours and flexibility
  • Meeting rhythm


Project and delivery style

  • Agile, waterfall or mixed
  • Pace and stability
  • Deep work versus reactive work


Data, tools and tech environment

  • Type of data you enjoy working with
  • Tools and tech stack preferences
  • Openness to AI in workflows


Company focus and maturity

  • Company specialism
  • Age and stage
  • Funding stability
  • Risk level


Personal growth and progression

  • Promotion criteria
  • Mentoring and support
  • Learning opportunities
  • Visibility and conferences


How to Use Your Reverse Job Description

Once created, your RJD becomes a practical decision-making tool.


Use it to assess roles quickly

Instead of asking “could I do this job?”, you start asking “does this role match what I want?”


Use it to guide networking

When your direction is clear, conversations become more focused and more useful.


Use it to shape your CV and LinkedIn profile

Your positioning becomes consistent and forward-looking.


Use it to shape your interview questions

Your RJD helps you ask meaningful questions about working style, expectations, progression and culture — not just role responsibilities.


Use it to stay grounded in a noisy market

Clarity prevents reactive applications and poor compromises.


A Final Thought

A RJD is not just a document.


It is a filter, a compass and a confidence-building tool.


When you deliberately select roles in or out, you show up with more conviction, energy and intent — qualities that are immediately felt in interviews and difficult to teach.

  • Contact me

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