Principal/Manager (12-16 years)

Head of R&D Manager

You'll be leading a significant chunk of our R&D efforts, translating big-picture strategy into actual research programmes and managing the brilliant minds making it happen. It's about balancing scientific ambition with commercial reality, day in, day out. You're the one who makes sure our research bets pay off.

Job ID
JD-RERE-MGRRD-005
Department
Research and Development
NOS Level
Level 7-8
OFQUAL Level
Level 7-8
Experience
Principal/Manager (12-16 years)

Role Purpose & Context

Role Summary

As our Head of R&D Manager, you'll be running a key part of our research and development engine, making sure we're building the right things, the right way. Day-to-day, that means leading a team of scientists and engineers, overseeing multiple projects, and keeping a keen eye on our overall research portfolio. You'll sit squarely between our strategic vision and the lab bench, turning ambitious ideas into concrete experimental plans and, eventually, new products. When you do this well, we're launching groundbreaking products that genuinely change the market and our bottom line. If it's not done well, we're wasting millions on dead-end projects or, worse, missing out on the next big thing. The tricky part is navigating the inherent uncertainty of research while still delivering against tight commercial targets. But the reward? Seeing a concept you championed move from a crazy idea to a tangible product in customers' hands—that's pretty special, honestly.

Reporting Structure

Key Stakeholders

Internal:

External:

Organisational Impact

Scope: This role directly shapes our future product pipeline and technological capabilities. Your decisions on resource allocation, project prioritisation, and team structure will determine our ability to innovate, compete, and grow in the market. Get it right, and we're market leaders; get it wrong, and we're playing catch-up.

Performance Metrics

Quantitative Metrics

  1. Metric: R&D Programme Delivery Rate
  2. Desc: The percentage of major R&D programmes under your remit that hit their key milestones (e.g., TRL transitions, proof-of-concept completion) within the planned timeline and budget.
  3. Target: 80% of programmes meet major milestones on time and within +/-10% budget
  4. Freq: Quarterly review, with monthly progress tracking
  5. Example: If you're managing five programmes, four of them should hit their Q3 TRL 4 target without significant overspend or delay. One might slip, but it shouldn't be a habit.
  6. Metric: Risk-Adjusted Portfolio Value Contribution
  7. Desc: The estimated increase in the Net Present Value (NPV) of the R&D pipeline attributed to projects under your management, adjusted for technical and commercial risk.
  8. Target: Increase the rNPV of your portfolio segment by 15% year-on-year
  9. Freq: Annually, as part of strategic planning
  10. Example: Your team's projects contribute an additional £2M in projected rNPV to the overall pipeline this year, reflecting successful de-risking and progression of promising technologies.
  11. Metric: Intellectual Property Generation
  12. Desc: The number of patent applications, trade secrets, or significant scientific publications originating from your teams, reflecting novel innovation and defensible technology.
  13. Target: Contribute to 8-12 new patent filings or trade secrets annually
  14. Freq: Annually, reviewed with Legal and IP teams
  15. Example: Your team files two provisional patents for a new material formulation and one for a novel process improvement in Q2, adding to our IP portfolio.
  16. Metric: Team Engagement & Retention
  17. Desc: The overall engagement score and voluntary turnover rate for your direct and indirect reports, indicating a healthy and motivated team environment.
  18. Target: Maintain an engagement score above 75% and voluntary turnover below 10%
  19. Freq: Bi-annual engagement surveys, monthly HR reports
  20. Example: Your team's latest engagement survey shows an average score of 80%, and you've only had one voluntary departure in the last 12 months, which is well below the company average.

Qualitative Metrics

  1. Metric: Strategic Alignment & Influence
  2. Desc: How well your R&D programmes align with the broader company strategy and your ability to influence senior leadership and cross-functional partners towards shared goals.
  3. Evidence: You're regularly invited to strategic planning sessions, your input is actively sought by the Director and Product leads, and your teams' projects clearly map to our top corporate objectives. People trust your judgment on technical feasibility and market potential.
  4. Metric: Talent Development & Mentorship
  5. Desc: The observable growth and progression of your team members, including their technical skills, leadership capabilities, and career advancement.
  6. Evidence: You've got a clear succession plan for key roles, at least two of your senior scientists have been promoted or taken on significant new responsibilities in the last year, and junior team members consistently report feeling supported and challenged. You're known for 'growing' great people.
  7. Metric: Technical Leadership & Problem Solving
  8. Desc: Your ability to provide clear technical direction, troubleshoot complex scientific or engineering challenges, and guide your teams through difficult R&D hurdles.
  9. Evidence: When a project hits a wall, your team looks to you for guidance, and you can either provide the answer or connect them to the right resources. You're seen as someone who can cut through the noise and get to the root of a technical issue, helping unstick projects that would otherwise stall.
  10. Metric: Culture of Innovation & Collaboration
  11. Desc: The extent to which your teams embrace experimentation, learn from failures, and collaborate effectively both internally and with other departments.
  12. Evidence: Your teams are comfortable proposing novel, even risky, ideas. They share learnings openly, even when experiments fail. You see active, constructive collaboration with Product and Manufacturing teams, not just hand-offs. People actually enjoy working across teams under your leadership.

Primary Traits

Supporting Traits

Primary Motivators

  1. Motivator: Building the Future
  2. Daily: You get a real buzz from seeing a new material or technology move from a concept on a whiteboard to a tangible prototype. You're driven by the idea that your team's work will genuinely change things, whether it's a new product, a more efficient process, or a deeper understanding of a scientific problem.
  3. Motivator: Solving Hard Problems
  4. Daily: You thrive on tackling complex, multi-faceted scientific and engineering challenges that don't have obvious answers. You enjoy the process of breaking down a big problem into smaller, solvable pieces and guiding your team through the discovery process.
  5. Motivator: Developing People & Teams
  6. Daily: You genuinely enjoy mentoring and coaching scientists and engineers, helping them grow their skills, overcome challenges, and advance their careers. You see your success tied directly to the success and development of your team members.

Potential Demotivators

Honestly, R&D isn't always glamorous. You'll spend a fair bit of time dealing with budget constraints, justifying projects that don't immediately show commercial return, and managing expectations when experiments inevitably fail. You'll rerun the same analysis three times because stakeholders keep changing the question. The 'urgent' request that disrupted your Thursday will get deprioritised on Friday. You'll build a beautiful model that never gets deployed because the business moved on. If you need to see every piece of work make it to production, you'll struggle here. If you can accept that 60% impact on 40% of projects beats 100% impact on 10%—and genuinely believe that, not just say it in interviews—you'll thrive.

Common Frustrations

  1. Watching a scientifically elegant, fully functional technology fail to gain market traction because it doesn't solve a real-world problem or fit the business model – that's the commercialisation chasm.
  2. Being forced to divert precious resources from strategic platform development to build a one-off feature promised to a single large customer by the sales team – we call that 'sales-driven roadmaps'.
  3. Participating in corporate innovation challenges and hackathons that generate buzz but have no real budget or executive mandate to implement the winning ideas – pure 'innovation theatre'.
  4. The immense energy drain of managing a 10x scientist or engineer who is technically brilliant but toxic to team culture, forcing a choice between productivity and morale – 'managing brilliant jerks'.
  5. The pressure to show 'progress' on a quarterly basis for fundamental research projects that naturally operate on multi-year timelines – 'quarterly-driven science'.
  6. Seeing long-term, foundational research projects being the first to be cut during a financial downturn because their ROI isn't immediate – that's the 'budget guillotine'.

What Role Doesn't Offer

  1. A predictable, linear path where every experiment yields a clear, positive result.
  2. Complete autonomy without needing to justify investment or commercial viability.
  3. A quiet, solitary environment focused purely on individual scientific work.
  4. Immediate gratification for every project you initiate.

ADHD Positives

  1. The fast-paced, multi-project nature of R&D management can be highly engaging for those with ADHD, offering constant novelty and stimulation.
  2. Excellent ability to hyperfocus on complex technical problems or strategic challenges when deeply interested, leading to breakthrough insights.
  3. Often brings creative, 'outside-the-box' thinking to problem-solving and hypothesis generation, which is crucial for innovation.

ADHD Challenges and Accommodations

  1. Managing numerous parallel projects and administrative tasks can be challenging; we can help with structured project management tools (e.g., Jira, Notion) and dedicated administrative support.
  2. Maintaining focus during long, less stimulating meetings might be difficult; we encourage active participation, breaks, and providing agendas in advance.
  3. Potential for impulsivity in decision-making; we foster a culture of 'think-aloud' and peer review for critical decisions to ensure thorough consideration.

Dyslexia Positives

  1. Often excels in big-picture strategic thinking, pattern recognition, and connecting disparate ideas – vital for R&D portfolio management.
  2. Strong verbal communication skills for presenting complex scientific concepts and influencing stakeholders are common.
  3. Excellent spatial reasoning and problem-solving abilities, which are invaluable in experimental design and troubleshooting.

Dyslexia Challenges and Accommodations

  1. Extensive reading and writing of scientific reports, grant proposals, and patent applications can be demanding; we offer access to dictation software, proofreading tools, and administrative support for drafting.
  2. Organising complex written information might require more effort; we use structured templates for documentation and encourage visual aids (e.g., Miro, Confluence) for planning and communication.
  3. Processing detailed written feedback can be time-consuming; we prioritise verbal feedback sessions and provide written summaries for clarity.

Autism Positives

  1. Exceptional ability to deep-dive into complex technical details and identify logical inconsistencies or novel solutions.
  2. Strong adherence to scientific principles, methodologies (e.g., DoE, Stage-Gate), and data integrity, which is critical for robust research.
  3. Reliable and consistent in following established processes and ensuring high-quality scientific output.

Autism Challenges and Accommodations

  1. Navigating complex social dynamics and unspoken expectations in cross-functional leadership roles can be taxing; we provide clear communication guidelines, direct feedback, and opportunities for pre-meeting preparation.
  2. Unexpected changes in project priorities or experimental results can be unsettling; we aim for transparent communication about changes and provide structured debriefs.
  3. Sensory sensitivities in a busy lab or office environment; we offer flexible working arrangements, noise-cancelling headphones, and options for quieter workspaces when available.

Sensory Considerations

Our R&D labs can be quite active, with various equipment running, some background noise, and occasional strong odours from chemicals (though safety protocols are strict). The office environment is typically open-plan, which means some ambient noise and visual activity. Social interactions are frequent, with team meetings, cross-functional discussions, and presentations being a regular part of the role. We do offer flexible working options, including hybrid models, and quiet zones for focused work.

Flexibility Notes

We believe in working smart, not just hard. We offer hybrid working options, meaning you'll typically be in the office/lab 3 days a week, with flexibility for the other two. We're also open to discussing adjusted hours if that helps you do your best work. The key is delivering results, not clocking specific hours.

Key Responsibilities

Experience Levels Responsibilities

  1. Level: Head of R&D Manager
  2. Responsibilities: Own the R&D portfolio segment for your area, which means deciding which projects get funded, which get paused, and which get 'killed' (yes, it's tough, but necessary). You'll balance short-term wins with long-term strategic bets.
  3. Lead, mentor, and develop a team of 10-25 scientists and engineers, including some team leads. This means regular 1-to-1s, career planning, performance reviews, and making sure everyone has what they need to succeed.
  4. Set the technical direction and experimental strategy for multiple complex R&D programmes. You'll be the one guiding your teams through the 'Valley of Death' from TRL 3 to 4 and beyond, de-risking the technology at each stage.
  5. Manage a significant R&D budget (typically £500K-£2M annually), ensuring efficient allocation of resources across projects, equipment, and personnel. You'll need to justify every pound spent to the Director and Finance.
  6. Represent R&D in cross-functional leadership meetings, getting Product, Manufacturing, and Commercial teams on the same page about what's coming down the pipeline. This often involves translating complex science into clear business implications.
  7. Drive our IP strategy within your domain. That means identifying patentable inventions, working closely with Legal on filings, and keeping an eye on the competitor patent landscape (no one wants a 'patent cliff' surprise).
  8. Foster a culture of rigorous scientific inquiry, lean experimentation, and continuous improvement within your teams. We want people to 'fail fast' and learn quickly, not hide mistakes.
  9. Supervision: You'll be largely self-directed, working towards quarterly objectives set with the Director of R&D. We'll check in monthly for strategic alignment, but day-to-day execution is yours to own.
  10. Decision: Full authority for your R&D function: this includes budget allocation up to £2M, hiring and firing decisions within your teams, and vendor selection up to £100K. You'll set the technical standards and methodologies for your programmes. Any decisions impacting the broader R&D strategy or requiring significant capital expenditure (above £2M) will need alignment with the Director and potentially the C-suite.
  11. Success: Your success here is measured by the health and productivity of your teams, the successful progression of your R&D programmes through our Stage-Gate process, and the tangible contribution of your work to our future product pipeline and IP portfolio. Ultimately, it's about delivering innovative, commercially viable technologies consistently.

Decision-Making Authority

Save 15-25 hours weekly with AI-powered R&D

Let's be real, managing R&D isn't just about groundbreaking science; it's also about mountains of literature, complex data, and endless reports. What if you could cut through all that noise and free up significant time for actual strategic thinking and team leadership? You can, with AI.

ID:

Tool: Automated Literature & Patent Review

Benefit: Use AI tools (like Scite or Elicit) to rapidly summarise existing research, identify seminal papers, and conduct initial prior art searches. What used to take days of sifting through academic papers and patent databases can now be done in hours, giving you a massive head start on any new project or IP landscaping effort.

ID:

Tool: Hypothesis Generation Engine

Benefit: Leverage knowledge graph AI to analyse vast datasets of public and internal research. These tools can identify non-obvious connections and propose novel hypotheses for investigation that even the most experienced scientists might miss. It's like having an always-on, super-intelligent brainstorming partner for your team.

ID:

Tool: Intelligent Experiment Design

Benefit: Utilise AI platforms to suggest optimal parameters for complex Design of Experiments (DoE). This means maximising the learning from each experimental run and significantly reducing the number of cycles needed to reach a conclusion. Spend less time on trial-and-error, more time on validated results.

ID: ✍️

Tool: Grant & Report Drafting Assistant

Benefit: Use generative AI to create first drafts of grant proposals, internal progress reports, and patent disclosures. Your scientists can then focus on editing for scientific nuance and strategic messaging, cutting drafting time by more than half. Imagine the time saved across your entire team!

15-25 hours weekly across your team's administrative and research support tasks Weekly time savings potential
Access to 5+ AI-powered R&D tools and platforms Typical tool investment
Explore AI Productivity for Head of R&D Manager →

12-15 specific tools & techniques with implementation guides

Competency Requirements

Foundation Skills (Transferable)

As an R&D Manager, you're not just a brilliant scientist; you're a leader, a strategist, and a problem-solver. These are the underlying skills that let you navigate the complex world of research and development, both technically and interpersonally.

Functional Skills (Role-Specific Technical)

These are the specific methodologies, tools, and knowledge areas that you'll need to master to effectively lead our R&D efforts. It's a blend of scientific rigour, technical proficiency, and strategic foresight.

Technical Competencies

Digital Tools

Industry Knowledge

Regulatory Compliance Regulations

Essential Prerequisites

Career Pathway Context

To step into this Head of R&D Manager role, you'll need more than just technical brilliance. We're looking for someone who has already proven they can lead people, manage complex programmes, and make strategic decisions that impact the business. This isn't a first-time management role; it's for someone ready to take on significant responsibility and shape a key part of our R&D future.

Qualifications & Credentials

Emerging Foundation Skills

Advancing Technical Skills

Future Skills Closing Note

The reality is, R&D never stands still. Your ability to anticipate, understand, and strategically integrate these emerging technical skills will be a defining factor in your long-term success and our company's future innovation.

Education Requirements

Experience Requirements

You'll need roughly 12-16 years of progressive experience in research and development roles, with at least 5-7 years specifically in a leadership or management capacity, overseeing teams and complex R&D programmes. We're looking for someone who has genuinely 'been there, done that' when it comes to bringing new technologies through the development pipeline.

Preferred Certifications

Recommended Activities

Career Progression Pathways

Entry Paths to This Role

Career Progression From This Role

Long Term Vision Potential Roles

Sector Mobility

Your skills as an R&D Manager are highly transferable. You could move into similar leadership roles in other industries (e.g., pharmaceuticals, aerospace, consumer goods) that rely heavily on scientific innovation. You might also transition into venture capital, consulting, or even start your own deep-tech company, drawing on your experience in de-risking and commercialising new technologies.

How Zavmo Delivers This Role's Development

DISCOVER Phase: Skills Gap Analysis

Zavmo maps your current competencies against all requirements in this job description through conversational assessment. We evaluate your foundation skills (communication, strategic thinking), functional skills (CRM expertise, negotiation), and readiness for career progression.

Output: Personalised skills gap heat map showing strengths and priorities, estimated time to competency, neurodiversity accommodations.

DISCUSS Phase: Personalised Learning Pathway

Based on your DISCOVER results, Zavmo creates a personalised learning plan prioritised by impact: foundation skills first, then functional skills. We adapt to your learning style, pace, and neurodiversity needs (ADHD, dyslexia, autism).

Output: Week-by-week schedule, each module linked to specific job responsibilities, checkpoints and milestones.

DELIVER Phase: Conversational Learning

Learn through conversation, not boring modules. Zavmo uses 10 conversation types (Socratic dialogue, role-play, coaching, case studies) to build competence. Practice difficult QBR presentations, negotiate tough renewals, and handle churn conversations in a safe AI environment before facing real clients.

Example: "For 'Stakeholder Mapping', Zavmo will guide you through analysing a complex enterprise account, identifying key decision-makers, and building an engagement strategy."

DEMONSTRATE Phase: Competency Assessment

Zavmo automatically builds your evidence portfolio as you learn. Every conversation, practice scenario, and application example is captured and mapped to NOS performance criteria. When ready, your portfolio supports OFQUAL qualification claims and demonstrates competence to employers.

Output: Competency matrix, evidence portfolio (downloadable), qualification readiness, career progression score.

Discover Your Skills Gap Explore Learning Paths