Transformation & Organizational Capability / Service
Structured assessment of regulatory leadership maturity — stakeholder influence, decision rights, business partnering, executive communication, and strategic capability.
The Work
Technical excellence is what gets a regulatory leader promoted into the senior ranks. It is rarely what makes them successful once they get there. At the VP and SVP level, the work shifts: from authoring positions to setting them, from managing submissions to influencing portfolio strategy, from leading reviewers to partnering with commercial heads, R&D heads, and the C-suite. Many regulatory leaders are never given a structured way to assess where they are on that shift — or where their team is.
The Regulatory Leadership Compass is a structured assessment, not a personality test. It evaluates a regulatory leader (or a team of regulatory leaders) across five dimensions that determine whether the function is treated as a strategic partner or a cost center: stakeholder influence, decision rights, business partnering, executive communication, and strategic capability. Each dimension is grounded in observable behaviors and the specific situations regulatory leaders encounter in life sciences and consumer health organizations.
The Compass is used in four ways. Individual coaching — a senior leader uses the assessment to identify the two or three highest-leverage shifts to make over the next twelve months. Team development — a head of regulatory uses team-level results to design a development plan for direct reports and to clarify where the team needs external support. Succession planning — HR and the head of regulatory use the Compass to identify which high-potential leaders are ready for stretch assignments and which need targeted development first. Post-promotion onboarding — a newly promoted regulatory leader uses the Compass to accelerate the transition from technical lead to business-facing executive.
What the Compass is not: a 360 wrapped in regulatory language. The questions, the rubric, and the development recommendations are anchored in how regulatory leadership actually plays out inside life sciences operating teams — not generic competency frameworks.
Newly promoted regulatory leaders, organizations doing succession planning, team development workshops, or executives moving from technical roles into business-facing regulatory leadership.
A structured individual report, a coaching plan, a team capability map, and recommendations for development priorities.
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