Principal/Manager (12-16 years)

R&D Manager

As an R&D Manager, you'll be the one steering the ship for a portfolio of research projects. You're not just managing people; you're managing the future of our products and services. This means balancing scientific curiosity with commercial reality, making sure our brilliant ideas actually make it out of the lab and into the market. It's about building a team, securing the funding, and making tough calls on what to pursue and what to drop.

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

Role Purpose & Context

Role Summary

The R&D Manager is responsible for leading a team of scientists and engineers, driving multiple research programmes from concept to commercial readiness. You'll be the one translating our overall R&D strategy into concrete project plans, making sure your team has what they need to deliver. This directly impacts our product pipeline and long-term market position, honestly. Day-to-day, you'll sit at the intersection of deep technical work and business strategy, turning raw scientific potential into viable commercial opportunities. You'll need to speak both 'geek' and 'business' fluently, which isn't always easy. When this role is done well, we'll have a robust pipeline of innovative, de-risked technologies ready for product development, giving us a real competitive edge. When it's not, we risk falling behind the market, wasting significant investment on dead-end projects, or worse, missing critical market windows. The challenge is navigating the inherent uncertainty of research while still delivering predictable outcomes for the business. The reward? Seeing your team's groundbreaking work transform into real-world products that customers love, and building a high-performing, engaged research team.

Reporting Structure

Key Stakeholders

Internal:

External:

Organisational Impact

Scope: This role directly shapes the innovation pipeline for a significant part of our business. Your decisions on project funding, resource allocation, and technical direction will determine which ideas make it to market and which don't. You're essentially building the future revenue streams for the company, which is a pretty big deal, frankly.

Performance Metrics

Quantitative Metrics

  1. Metric: Project Portfolio Progress (TRL Advancement)
  2. Desc: The average Technology Readiness Level (TRL) advancement across your managed projects.
  3. Target: Successfully transition >20% of managed projects from TRL 4 to TRL 6 annually.
  4. Freq: Quarterly & Annually
  5. Example: If you manage 5 projects, and one moves from TRL 4 to 6, that's 20% success. We're looking for real progress, not just activity.
  6. Metric: R&D Budget Adherence
  7. Desc: How closely your project portfolio stays within its allocated budget.
  8. Target: Within ±5% of the approved annual budget for your portfolio (£500K-£2M).
  9. Freq: Monthly & Quarterly
  10. Example: If your annual budget is £1M, staying between £950K and £1.05M is hitting the target. No nasty surprises, please.
  11. Metric: Invention Disclosure & Patent Filings
  12. Desc: Number of high-quality Invention Disclosure Forms (IDFs) submitted and patents filed/granted from your team's work.
  13. Target: Minimum of 3-5 IDFs submitted and 1-2 patents filed annually from your team.
  14. Freq: Annually
  15. Example: Your team develops a novel material, you ensure the IDF is robust, and it progresses to a patent filing within 12 months. That's a win.
  16. Metric: Team Retention & Development
  17. Desc: The retention rate of your direct reports and their individual development progress.
  18. Target: Maintain >90% team retention and ensure 100% of direct reports have active development plans, with at least 75% achieving their goals.
  19. Freq: Annually (retention), Bi-annually (development reviews)
  20. Example: Keeping your best scientists happy and growing, evidenced by low turnover and successful internal promotions.

Qualitative Metrics

  1. Metric: Strategic Alignment & Portfolio Health
  2. Desc: How well your project portfolio aligns with the company's long-term strategic goals and overall R&D roadmap.
  3. Evidence: Regularly presents clear project rationales to senior leadership; projects are demonstrably linked to future product lines; able to articulate why certain projects were 'killed' or pivoted based on strategic fit.
  4. Metric: Cross-Functional Collaboration & Influence
  5. Desc: Your ability to get other departments (Product, Manufacturing, Sales) bought into your team's research, and to gather their input effectively.
  6. Evidence: Product team proactively seeks your input on future roadmaps; Manufacturing provides early feedback on scalability; Sales uses your team's research insights in their pitches; you're seen as a trusted partner, not just 'the R&D guy/gal'.
  7. Metric: Risk Management & Problem Solving
  8. Desc: Your approach to identifying, assessing, and mitigating technical and project risks, especially when things go wrong (and they will).
  9. Evidence: Proactive identification of 'showstopper' risks in project plans; clear contingency plans in place; ability to quickly pivot or re-scope projects when unexpected technical hurdles arise; transparent communication of failures and lessons learned.
  10. Metric: Team Leadership & Mentorship Quality
  11. Desc: The effectiveness of your leadership in fostering a high-performing, innovative, and supportive team culture.
  12. Evidence: Team members feel supported and challenged; clear career paths are discussed; you're actively coaching junior and mid-level scientists; team members are empowered to take ownership and innovate; peer feedback highlights your strong leadership.

Primary Traits

Supporting Traits

Primary Motivators

  1. Motivator: Building and Nurturing a High-Performing Team
  2. Daily: You'll spend a good chunk of your week coaching your direct reports, helping them unblock technical challenges, and celebrating their successes. You'll genuinely enjoy seeing a junior scientist grow into a senior expert under your guidance. It's about creating an environment where people thrive and do their best work.
  3. Motivator: Shaping the Future through Innovation
  4. Daily: You'll be constantly thinking about 'what's next' for our industry and how our research can get us there. This means leading brainstorming sessions, evaluating new technologies, and making strategic decisions that will impact our product roadmap years down the line. It's about seeing the big picture and making it a reality.
  5. Motivator: Translating Science into Commercial Value
  6. Daily: You'll get a real kick out of taking a complex scientific breakthrough and figuring out how it can be turned into a profitable product or service. This involves working closely with Product and Commercial teams, making sure the research is commercially relevant, and championing its transition from lab to market. It's about impact, not just discovery.

Potential Demotivators

Honestly, this job isn't for everyone. You'll often find yourself caught between the scientific idealism of your team and the commercial pressures from the business. You'll have to 'kill' projects that are technically brilliant but commercially unviable, which can be tough. Expect to spend a fair bit of time on administrative tasks like budget reviews and performance management, which aren't always glamorous. You'll also deal with the 'Valley of Death' – that frustrating gap where a promising prototype dies because no business unit wants to fund its scale-up. If you need to be hands-on in the lab every day, or if you struggle with ambiguity and changing priorities, you'll probably find this role quite frustrating.

Common Frustrations

  1. The 'Predictability Paradox': Being asked for fixed timelines and budgets for research that is inherently unpredictable.
  2. The 'Valley of Death' Crossing: Watching a technically brilliant prototype wither because there's no clear path or budget for commercialisation.
  3. Procurement Purgatory: Waiting weeks for essential lab equipment or reagents due to slow corporate processes.
  4. 'Not Invented Here' Syndrome: Handing over a proven technology, only for other teams to ignore or try to re-invent it.
  5. Political Project Cancellation: Your project, hitting all milestones, gets axed due to a strategic pivot you had no say in.
  6. The Documentation Drain: Spending significant time documenting failed experiments, which is vital but feels like reliving mistakes.

What Role Doesn't Offer

  1. Daily, hands-on lab work (you'll be more strategic than experimental).
  2. A completely predictable schedule with no urgent, unexpected demands.
  3. Guaranteed success for every project you start (failure is part of R&D).
  4. An environment free from corporate politics or resource constraints.

ADHD Positives

  1. The constant need to pivot between different projects and problem-solve unexpected challenges can be highly engaging and stimulating.
  2. The 'big picture' strategic thinking required for portfolio management can be a strength, connecting disparate ideas and seeing novel pathways.
  3. The role often involves a high degree of autonomy in how you approach problems, which can be beneficial for self-directed individuals.

ADHD Challenges and Accommodations

  1. The administrative burden (budgeting, performance reviews, detailed documentation) might be challenging; consider tools for task management and delegation.
  2. Maintaining focus across multiple long-term projects can be tricky; structured check-ins and clear milestone definitions will help.
  3. We can offer flexible working hours to align with peak productivity times and quiet spaces for focused work when needed.

Dyslexia Positives

  1. Strong spatial reasoning and pattern recognition, often associated with dyslexia, are invaluable for understanding complex scientific systems and experimental design.
  2. The ability to think divergently and 'outside the box' can lead to truly innovative solutions and problem-solving approaches.
  3. Verbal communication and presentation skills are highly valued, allowing you to convey complex ideas effectively without relying solely on written reports.

Dyslexia Challenges and Accommodations

  1. Extensive written documentation (reports, IDFs, presentations) is a core part of the role; we can provide access to proofreading tools, dictation software, and support for reviewing critical documents.
  2. Reading dense scientific papers and patent documents can be tiring; consider text-to-speech software and allow for ample time for review.
  3. We encourage using visual aids, diagrams, and prototypes to communicate ideas, playing to strengths in visual thinking.

Autism Positives

  1. A deep focus on scientific rigour, data integrity, and logical problem-solving aligns well with the demands of R&D management.
  2. The ability to identify patterns and inconsistencies in complex data sets or experimental results can be a significant advantage.
  3. A preference for clear, direct communication can cut through ambiguity and improve team efficiency, especially in technical discussions.

Autism Challenges and Accommodations

  1. The role involves frequent, sometimes ambiguous, interactions with diverse stakeholders (internal and external); clear meeting agendas, pre-reads, and follow-up summaries can help.
  2. Managing team dynamics and navigating interpersonal complexities might require support; we can offer coaching on leadership communication and conflict resolution strategies.
  3. Sensory environment considerations: we can provide a quiet office space, noise-cancelling headphones, and flexibility for remote work days to manage sensory input.

Sensory Considerations

Our R&D labs can sometimes be noisy with equipment running, but office spaces are generally quiet. We offer a mix of open-plan and private offices. You'll be spending time in both, plus meeting rooms. We're happy to discuss specific needs to ensure a comfortable working environment.

Flexibility Notes

We believe in output, not just hours. We offer flexible working arrangements, including hybrid options (part-office, part-home), to help you manage your work-life balance and optimise your productivity. We're open to discussing what works best for you.

Key Responsibilities

Experience Levels Responsibilities

  1. Level: R&D Manager (L5)
  2. Responsibilities: Set the vision and strategy for your assigned research programmes, translating high-level company goals into actionable R&D roadmaps. This isn't just theory; you'll own the practical steps.
  3. Build and manage a high-performing team of scientists and engineers (typically 5-10 direct reports), including hiring, performance reviews, and career development. You're responsible for their growth, frankly.
  4. Own the P&L for your R&D portfolio, managing budgets between £500K-£2M annually. This means securing funding, allocating resources, and justifying spend to senior leadership.
  5. Drive multiple research projects through the Stage-Gate process, making critical 'go/no-go' decisions at each gate. You'll be the one deciding when to pivot or kill a project, which isn't always easy.
  6. Represent your organisation externally at conferences, with university partners, and in industry consortia, building our reputation and identifying new collaboration opportunities.
  7. Ensure robust Intellectual Property (IP) protection for your team's innovations, working closely with our legal team on invention disclosures and patent filings. You'll be the first line of defence for our ideas.
  8. Develop and implement robust risk management strategies for your projects, anticipating technical hurdles and market shifts, and having contingency plans ready. The unexpected is expected here.
  9. Supervision: You'll report to the Director of Research & Development, with quarterly objectives and strategic alignment meetings. For the most part, you're self-directed, accountable for the outcomes of your entire portfolio.
  10. Decision: You have full authority over project execution, resource allocation within your team, and budget management up to £2M. You'll approve hiring decisions for your direct reports and select vendors up to £100K. Strategic direction for your portfolio is yours to set, but major shifts or investments above £2M will require Director/VP alignment.
  11. Success: Your success is measured by the successful advancement of technologies through TRLs, the strength of your IP portfolio, your adherence to budget, and the growth and retention of your team. Ultimately, it's about delivering commercially viable innovation.

Decision-Making Authority

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

Let's be real, R&D management is tough. You're juggling budgets, timelines, scientific breakthroughs, and team dynamics. What if you could offload some of the heavy lifting to AI? We're talking about real, tangible time savings that let you focus on the big, strategic stuff.

ID:

Tool: Automated Literature & Patent Review

Benefit: Imagine AI tools like Scite or Elicit sifting through thousands of academic papers and patents for you. It'll summarise key findings, identify prior art, and spot emerging research trends in minutes, not weeks. This frees you up to analyse the strategic implications, not just the raw data.

ID:

Tool: Insight Accelerator & Hypothesis Generation

Benefit: Use machine learning models to analyse complex, multi-variable experimental datasets. AI can pinpoint non-linear relationships and optimal parameter combinations that are practically impossible for a human to spot. Beyond that, generative AI can even propose novel molecular structures or experimental pathways, acting as a creative partner to overcome research blocks.

ID: ✍️

Tool: Technical Documentation Assistant

Benefit: Spend less time writing and more time thinking. AI can draft initial versions of technical reports, invention disclosures, and crucial gate-review presentations directly from your raw experimental notes, data, and bullet points. It converts fragmented information into coherent, professional prose, saving you hours every week.

ID:

Tool: R&D Portfolio Optimisation

Benefit: AI-powered analytics can help you model different resource allocation scenarios, predict project success probabilities, and identify potential budget overruns before they happen. This means better, data-driven decisions on which projects to fund, pivot, or kill, optimising your entire R&D portfolio for maximum impact.

15-25 hours weekly across your team's activities Weekly time savings potential
£50-£200/month in AI tool subscriptions (typically covered by department budget), with time-to-value within 2-4 weeks. Typical tool investment
Explore AI Productivity for R&D Manager →

12-15 specific tools & techniques with implementation guides

Competency Requirements

Foundation Skills (Transferable)

These are the core human skills that underpin everything you'll do. You can be the smartest scientist, but without these, you won't succeed in leading a team and driving innovation.

Functional Skills (Role-Specific Technical)

These are the specific methodologies, technical knowledge, and tools you'll need to effectively manage a cutting-edge R&D team and portfolio.

Technical Competencies

Digital Tools

Industry Knowledge

Regulatory Compliance Regulations

Essential Prerequisites

Career Pathway Context

Typically, you'd have spent time as a Senior R&D Scientist/Engineer (L3) or a Staff/Principal Scientist (L4), where you've already led significant workstreams or acted as a technical authority. This role builds on that foundation by adding formal people management, strategic portfolio oversight, and P&L accountability.

Qualifications & Credentials

Emerging Foundation Skills

Advancing Technical Skills

Future Skills Closing Note

Staying technically relevant means more than just knowing the latest buzzwords. It means understanding how these new tools and concepts can genuinely accelerate your team's research, de-risk projects, and ultimately deliver more impactful innovations for the business. It's about being a strategic guide, not just a manager.

Education Requirements

Experience Requirements

You'll need roughly 12-16 years of progressive experience in Research & Development, with a significant portion of that time spent leading projects and, crucially, managing people. This isn't your first rodeo; you'll have moved beyond individual contribution to leading and shaping research programmes. We're looking for someone who's not just been 'in R&D' but has genuinely driven innovation and managed the complexities of a research portfolio and a team.

Preferred Certifications

Recommended Activities

Career Progression Pathways

Entry Paths to This Role

Career Progression From This Role

Long Term Vision Potential Roles

Sector Mobility

The skills you'll gain as an R&D Manager are highly transferable. You could move into similar leadership roles in other R&D-intensive industries (e.g., pharmaceuticals, aerospace, advanced manufacturing, clean energy). Your ability to lead scientific teams, manage complex projects, and drive innovation is universally valued.

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.

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