Q&A with Stephen Brown, Chief Operating Officer of Encap Drug Delivery - Pharmaceutical Technology

Latest Issue
PharmTech

Latest Issue
PharmTech Europe

  • Search
  • Suppliers
  • Careers

Enter a company or product name

KeywordLocation
About Search
Q&A with Stephen Brown, Chief Operating Officer of Encap Drug Delivery

Pharmaceutical Technology
Volume 33, Issue 10

PharmTech:

What is the biggest industry challenge you're now facing?

Brown:




The biggest challenge facing the pharmaceutical and biotechnology industries is to become more efficient. In essence, the industry needs to do more with less. This is fairly obvious, given the financial pressures that are being faced by Big Pharma as major products come off patent and the difficulty that biotechnology companies have in securing funding. Our business is entirely focused on providing pharmaceutical development and manufacturing services to the pharmaceutical and biotechnology community, and our challenge is to provide solutions that make our clients' overall operations more efficient.

PharmTech:

How do you stay abreast of new developments in the industry?

Brown:

It is easy to become blinkered and focused on your own backyard. It is really important to keep in touch with what is going on in the world around you, both in your clients' and competitors' organizations. Having worked for most of my life in pharmaceutical development, I really enjoy networking and keeping in touch with old work colleagues at Sterling Winthrop (Pittsburgh, PA), sanofi aventis (Paris), Chiroscience (Cambridge, England), Celltech (Slough, England), and UCB (Brussels). I also think it is very important to be an active member of professional organizations such as the Academy of Pharmaceutical Sciences and the American Association of Pharmaceutical Scientists.

PharmTech:

Do you see a new industry trend emerging?

Brown:

I see an increasing trend for pharmaceutical and biotechnology companies to set up strategic relationships with service organizations. There will be a move away from a client–provider relationship to more of a partnership where the contract service provider will operate as an extension of the pharmaceutical or biotechnology company. I see this as a great opportunity for the industry and am sure that the new ways of working that will be required will result in greater speed and efficiency in global pharmaceutical development.

ADVERTISEMENT

post a comment
Your email address will NOT be published.
appears with your comment
read our privacy policy
Note: does not support HTML
All comments submitted are subject to review, and may be delayed before posting. We reserve the right not to post comments.
LCGC E-mail Newsletters

Subscribe: Click to learn more about the newsletter
| Weekly
| Monthly
|Monthly
| Weekly

Survey
In light of the fact that most of the world is now out of the recession, how is your company faring compared with this time last year?
Better
Worse
About the same
Better
48%
Worse
30%
About the same
22%
View Results
Jim MillerOutsourcing Outlook Jim Miller Time for a Model Upgrade
Patricia Van ArnumIngredients InsiderPatricia Van Arnum Navigating the Global Pharmaceutical Supply Chain
Faiz kermaniSpotlightFaiz Kermani Reinvigorating European R&D innovation
Faiz kermaniStatistical Solutions Lynn Torbeck%RSD: Friend or Foe?
Shelves Await Pediatric Formulations
FDA, Pharma, and Alliance Partner to Treat TB
Framing the argument
Pharma Companies and Suppliers Meet at DCAT Week
Biopharmaceutical Collaboration Is a Sign of the Times
FindPharma Custom Search
Source: Pharmaceutical Technology,
Click here