Director/VP Level (16-20 years)

Director, Regional Regulatory Engagement

This isn't just about knowing the rules; it's about shaping them and guiding our business through them. As a Director, you'll be the strategic brain behind our regional regulatory engagement, influencing business unit decisions and making sure we're not just compliant, but also ahead of the curve. You'll lead a team, represent the company at a senior level, and frankly, you'll be the one briefing our VPs and even the C-suite on what's coming next in the regulatory landscape. It's a high-stakes role, but incredibly rewarding if you like being at the intersection of business strategy and public policy.

Job ID
JD-CQHS-DIRREEN-006
Department
Compliance Quality Health Safety
NOS Level
OFQUAL Level
Level 8
Experience
Director/VP Level (16-20 years)

Role Purpose & Context

Role Summary

The Director, Regional Regulatory Engagement, is responsible for setting and executing our regulatory strategy across a significant region, making sure our business units understand and navigate complex compliance landscapes. You'll be the person translating dense regulatory texts into clear, actionable business impacts for our senior leadership, and then leading the charge to influence those regulations before they become law. This role sits right at the intersection of our business operations, legal, and external government affairs, acting as a critical bridge. When you get this right, we avoid hefty fines, maintain our licence to operate, and even find competitive advantages by anticipating changes. Get it wrong, and we're looking at significant financial penalties, reputational damage, and potentially even operational shutdowns. The challenge, honestly, is balancing aggressive business growth with an ever-tightening regulatory grip. The reward? You get to shape the future of our industry and protect our company from serious harm, all while leading a talented team.

Reporting Structure

Key Stakeholders

Internal:

External:

Organisational Impact

Scope: This role directly impacts our regional licence to operate, our financial risk profile (think fines and penalties), and our ability to launch new products or services in specific markets. Your strategic insights genuinely shape business unit planning, helping us avoid regulatory pitfalls and sometimes even identifying opportunities for market differentiation through proactive compliance. You're essentially the company's eyes and ears, and often its voice, in the regional regulatory arena.

Performance Metrics

Quantitative Metrics

  1. Metric: Regulatory Fines & Penalties Reduction
  2. Desc: The year-over-year reduction in regulatory fines or penalties incurred within your designated region.
  3. Target: Achieve a year-over-year reduction of 15% in regulatory fines or penalties.
  4. Freq: Annually, reviewed quarterly.
  5. Example: If the region incurred £500,000 in fines last year, the target for this year would be to keep them below £425,000. This is a big one, frankly.
  6. Metric: Strategic Regulatory Impact (Advocacy)
  7. Desc: Successfully advocating for substantive changes in proposed regulatory language or achieving favourable interpretations that reduce business impact or create opportunities.
  8. Target: Successfully influence ≥1 major new regulatory framework, resulting in <5% negative impact on projected revenue for affected business lines, or secure a material policy win.
  9. Freq: Annually, tied to specific rulemaking cycles.
  10. Example: Negotiating a 6-month extension on a critical implementation deadline for a new data privacy law, saving the business an estimated £2M in rushed compliance costs.
  11. Metric: Regulatory Relationship Score
  12. Desc: Qualitative feedback from internal business leaders, legal counsel, and external partners on the effectiveness and quality of our relationships with key regional regulators.
  13. Target: Measurable improvement in regulator relationship score (based on qualitative 360-degree feedback from internal stakeholders and external counsel) by at least 10% year-over-year.
  14. Freq: Bi-annually.
  15. Example: Feedback consistently highlights proactive engagement, clear communication, and a 'no-surprises' approach from your team, leading to regulators being more receptive to our positions.
  16. Metric: Budget Management & Resource Optimisation
  17. Desc: Managing the regional regulatory engagement budget effectively and ensuring resources (people, tools, external counsel) are deployed efficiently.
  18. Target: Manage the departmental budget to within +/- 5% of the annual plan, and demonstrate a 10% improvement in resource utilisation (e.g., reduced reliance on external counsel for routine matters).
  19. Freq: Quarterly and Annually.
  20. Example: Identifying a new regulatory intelligence tool that replaces two older, more expensive subscriptions, saving £50K annually while improving coverage.

Qualitative Metrics

  1. Metric: Proactive Risk Identification & Mitigation
  2. Desc: Your ability to anticipate emerging regulatory risks, communicate them clearly to senior leadership, and develop robust mitigation strategies before they become problems.
  3. Evidence: Regularly presents 'horizon scanning' briefings to the C-suite; strategic plans incorporate regulatory foresight; few 'surprises' from regulators; business units report feeling well-informed and prepared for upcoming changes.
  4. Metric: Cross-Functional Influence & Collaboration
  5. Desc: How effectively you can get different business units (e.g., Product, Sales, Tech) to understand and adopt necessary compliance changes, often without direct authority.
  6. Evidence: Consistently secures buy-in for compliance initiatives; business leaders proactively seek your team's input on new initiatives; successful implementation of complex, multi-departmental regulatory changes on time and within scope.
  7. Metric: Team Leadership & Development
  8. Desc: Your effectiveness in leading, mentoring, and developing your team, fostering a high-performance culture and ensuring succession planning.
  9. Evidence: High team retention rates; at least one direct report progresses to a more senior role or takes on significantly expanded responsibilities within an 18-month period; positive feedback in team engagement surveys; robust individual development plans in place.
  10. Metric: Strategic Communication & Board Briefing
  11. Desc: Your ability to distil complex regulatory issues into clear, concise, and impactful communications for executive leadership and the Board.
  12. Evidence: Board members and C-suite consistently praise the clarity and strategic relevance of your briefings; your team's 'read-outs' are widely circulated and referenced; you're often asked to present directly to executive committees on regulatory matters.

Primary Traits

Supporting Traits

Primary Motivators

  1. Motivator: Shaping Strategy & Policy
  2. Daily: You'll spend your days influencing how our business operates in a regulated environment, providing critical input to strategic planning sessions, and actively engaging with policymakers to shape future rules. This isn't just about reacting; it's about proactively setting direction.
  3. Motivator: Navigating Complexity & Solving Big Problems
  4. Daily: You'll thrive on dissecting ambiguous regulatory texts, understanding their multi-faceted impact across different business units, and then figuring out the most effective, practical way forward. It's like a giant, high-stakes puzzle every day.
  5. Motivator: Leading and Developing Talent
  6. Daily: You'll get a real kick out of seeing your team grow, coaching your managers, and empowering your specialists to tackle tougher challenges. Building a high-performing regulatory engagement function is a core part of your satisfaction.

Potential Demotivators

Honestly, this role isn't for everyone. If you're someone who needs constant, tangible wins that you can point to and celebrate, you might struggle. A lot of our biggest successes are the fines that *never* happened, the audits that went smoothly because of your proactive work, or the disastrous regulation that was softened because of your advocacy. These 'non-events' are incredibly valuable but hard to quantify in a traditional sense. You'll also be constantly fighting the internal perception that your job is to say 'no' and slow things down, rather than enabling sustainable growth. It's the 'business prevention department' stigma, and it's real.

Common Frustrations

  1. The 'Glacial Pace, Sudden Panic' cycle: watching a regulation move at a snail's pace for two years, only to have a 60-day implementation window once it's finalised, causing massive disruption for your team and the business.
  2. Translating vague regulatory phrases like 'reasonable' or 'effective' into specific, auditable business processes and then getting everyone to agree on what that actually means in practice.
  3. The endless battle to secure budget for proactive compliance systems when leadership is culturally wired to only fund fixes after a fine or incident has already occurred.
  4. Herding internal cats: the sheer difficulty of getting timely, accurate, and consistent information from 10 different departments (Engineering, Sales, Legal, Ops) for a single, high-stakes regulatory submission.
  5. Being held accountable for the company's regional compliance posture, while having no direct authority over the business units whose actions ultimately create the risk. It's accountability without direct control.

What Role Doesn't Offer

  1. A quiet, predictable 9-to-5 job with minimal external pressure.
  2. A role where you're always the most popular person in the room; sometimes you'll be the bearer of bad news.
  3. A role focused purely on technical compliance without any strategic or policy influencing components.
  4. A role where your biggest successes are always easily quantifiable in £ or % terms.

ADHD Positives

  1. The constant variety of regulatory challenges and the need to quickly pivot between different issues can be highly engaging and stimulating, preventing boredom.
  2. The high-stakes, fast-paced nature of responding to urgent regulatory inquiries can provide the necessary pressure for hyperfocus and rapid problem-solving.
  3. Strong ability to connect disparate pieces of information across different regulatory texts or business units, leading to novel strategic insights.

ADHD Challenges and Accommodations

  1. Maintaining focus on long-term, slow-moving policy advocacy campaigns can be tough; we can help by breaking these down into shorter, measurable milestones.
  2. The volume of detailed documentation and precise language required for formal submissions can be challenging; we can provide templates, AI drafting tools, and dedicated proofreading support.
  3. Managing multiple complex projects and deadlines simultaneously might require structured project management tools (like Jira) and regular check-ins to keep everything on track.

Dyslexia Positives

  1. Excellent verbal communication skills, especially in explaining complex regulatory concepts in simple terms during presentations or negotiations.
  2. Strong strategic thinking and 'big picture' pattern recognition, which is crucial for identifying overarching regulatory trends and their business implications.
  3. Often highly creative in problem-solving, finding unconventional but effective ways to navigate regulatory hurdles.

Dyslexia Challenges and Accommodations

  1. The sheer volume of dense, legalistic regulatory text can be overwhelming; we can use AI summarisation tools and provide text-to-speech software to assist with initial reviews.
  2. Drafting formal comment letters or board briefings requires extreme precision; we can offer robust editing support, grammar checkers, and dedicated time for review by others.
  3. Organising and categorising large amounts of information might be easier with visual tools (e.g., mind maps, flowcharts) rather than purely text-based systems.

Autism Positives

  1. Exceptional ability to identify inconsistencies or logical flaws in regulatory texts, leading to stronger advocacy positions or more robust compliance frameworks.
  2. Deep, focused expertise in specific regulatory domains, becoming the go-to person for intricate details and historical context.
  3. A preference for clear, direct communication can be highly effective in interactions with regulators and internal teams, cutting through ambiguity.

Autism Challenges and Accommodations

  1. Navigating the unwritten social rules and 'political' aspects of stakeholder engagement (e.g., the 'meeting before the meeting') can be challenging; we can provide explicit guidance and support in these scenarios, and debrief after key interactions.
  2. Unexpected changes in regulatory priorities or sudden urgent requests can be disruptive; we aim for as much predictability as possible and provide clear context for any shifts.
  3. Sensory overload in busy office environments or during intense, multi-party negotiations might be a concern; we offer flexible working arrangements and quiet spaces for focused work.

Sensory Considerations

Our main office environment is typically a modern, open-plan space, which can have moderate noise levels and visual activity. However, we offer dedicated quiet zones, noise-cancelling headphones, and the flexibility to work from home several days a week. Key regulatory meetings can be intense, often in formal settings, but we always ensure you have a clear agenda and support. Social interactions are frequent, but we value direct and clear communication over 'reading between the lines'.

Flexibility Notes

We believe in output, not presenteeism. We offer flexible working hours and a hybrid work model (typically 2-3 days in the office, depending on team needs and meeting schedules). We're open to discussing specific accommodations to help you thrive.

Key Responsibilities

Experience Levels Responsibilities

  1. Level: Director, Regional Regulatory Engagement (L6)
  2. Responsibilities: Define and drive the regional regulatory engagement strategy, aligning it with global policy and business unit objectives. This means you'll be the one setting the direction, not just following it.
  3. Lead and manage a team of Regulatory Engagement Managers and Senior Specialists, providing strategic guidance, coaching, and performance management. You're responsible for their growth and success.
  4. Act as the primary senior point of contact for key regional regulatory bodies and government agencies, building and maintaining credible, trusted relationships. You'll be the face of the company in these critical discussions.
  5. Influence business unit strategy and product development by providing proactive, strategic regulatory advice and foresight. You'll help them navigate potential minefields and spot opportunities.
  6. Oversee the preparation and submission of high-stakes regulatory filings, comment letters, and responses to regulatory inquiries, ensuring accuracy, completeness, and strategic alignment. Get this wrong, and we're in trouble.
  7. Present regular, concise, and strategic briefings to the C-suite and Board on emerging regulatory risks, policy developments, and their potential impact on the business. They'll expect you to know your stuff and distil it clearly.
  8. Manage the regional regulatory engagement budget, ensuring efficient allocation of resources, including external counsel and regulatory intelligence tools. You're accountable for the spend.
  9. Supervision: You'll operate with a high degree of autonomy, reporting to the VP, Global Regulatory Affairs & Policy, primarily for strategic alignment and major policy decisions. Day-to-day, you're expected to lead and execute independently.
  10. Decision: Full authority for strategic and operational decisions within your regional domain, including budget allocation up to £500K, hiring and performance management for your direct reports, and the selection of regional regulatory intelligence vendors up to £100K. Decisions impacting global policy or requiring significant capital expenditure (over £500K) will need alignment with the VP and potentially C-suite.
  11. Success: Success at this level means consistently mitigating significant regulatory risks, achieving measurable policy wins that benefit the business, maintaining excellent relationships with key regulators, and developing a high-performing, engaged team. You'll know you're succeeding when business units proactively seek your strategic advice, and when your briefings are consistently praised by the C-suite for their clarity and foresight.

Decision-Making Authority

Supercharge Your Strategic Impact: Save 15-25 Hours Weekly with AI

Let's be honest, a big chunk of your week as a Director is spent sifting through mountains of information, drafting complex documents, and trying to predict what's next. What if you could get a significant chunk of that back? We're not talking about replacing you; we're talking about giving you a serious superpower.

ID:

Tool: Automated Regulatory Summariser

Benefit: Use an AI model to ingest newly published Notices of Proposed Rulemaking (NPRMs) or final rules, which can be hundreds of pages long. It'll generate a concise, 2-page executive summary highlighting key changes, critical dates, and potential impacts tailored to our company's specific business lines. This means you get the gist quickly and can focus on the strategic implications, not the scanning.

ID:

Tool: Public Comment Sentiment Analysis

Benefit: Point an AI tool at a rulemaking docket to analyse thousands of public comments submitted by industry peers, NGOs, and other stakeholders. It can categorise arguments, identify key themes, and gauge the sentiment of influential groups, helping you predict the regulator's final direction and refine our advocacy posture. This is about getting ahead of the curve.

ID:

Tool: Jurisdictional Precedent Finder

Benefit: When facing a novel regulatory issue in your region, use AI to rapidly search global regulatory databases. It'll find precedents, similar rules in other countries, or enforcement actions that can be used to build a stronger advocacy position or an internal compliance strategy. Think of it as having an instant global research team at your fingertips.

ID: ✍️

Tool: First-Draft Briefing & Comment Generator

Benefit: Feed the AI your strategic position, key data points, and the text of the proposed rule. It can generate a structured first draft of an internal briefing memo for your VPs or an external comment letter, complete with citations and formal language. You'll then refine it, adding your strategic nuance, saving hours of initial drafting time.

15-25 hours weekly, giving you more time for strategic thinking and leadership. Weekly time savings potential
These capabilities come from integrating 3-5 core AI tools into your workflow. Typical tool investment
Explore AI Productivity for Director, Regional Regulatory Engagement →

12-15 specific tools & techniques with implementation guides

Competency Requirements

Foundation Skills (Transferable)

Beyond the technical know-how, a Director needs a solid set of foundation skills to lead, influence, and navigate complex organisational dynamics. These aren't 'nice-to-haves'; they're essential for success at this level.

Functional Skills (Role-Specific Technical)

These are the specific methodologies, technical tools, and deep industry knowledge you'll need to excel as a Director. This isn't just about knowing them; it's about applying them strategically and leading others in their use.

Technical Competencies

Digital Tools

Industry Knowledge

Regulatory Compliance Regulations

Essential Prerequisites

Career Pathway Context

You won't just 'fall into' this role. People typically reach this Director level after years of hands-on experience in regulatory engagement, often having led complex workstreams or managed smaller teams. You'll have cut your teeth on challenging policy issues and built a reputation for strategic thinking and effective advocacy. This isn't a learning role; it's a leading role.

Qualifications & Credentials

Emerging Foundation Skills

Advancing Technical Skills

Future Skills Closing Note

The reality is, the pace of change isn't slowing down. Your ability to not only keep up but to actively anticipate and shape these changes will define your success and the resilience of our compliance function. This isn't just about learning new tools; it's about evolving your strategic mindset.

Education Requirements

Experience Requirements

You'll need at least 16-20 years of progressive experience in regulatory affairs, compliance, public policy, or a related legal role. A significant portion of this experience (at least 5-7 years) should be in a leadership capacity, managing teams and driving strategic regulatory engagement within a complex, multinational organisation. We're looking for someone who has genuinely 'been there, done that' on significant regulatory challenges.

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 deep expertise in regulatory engagement, risk management, and policy advocacy is highly transferable. You could move into senior roles in other highly regulated industries (e.g., financial services, pharmaceuticals, energy, technology), or even into government affairs, consulting, or think tanks. The skills you develop here are universally valuable.

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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