Director/VP (16-20 years)

Director of Innovation Strategy

This isn't a lab coat role; it's about shaping where our R&D money goes and why. You'll be the person connecting the big picture—market trends, customer needs, competitor moves—to what our scientists and engineers are actually building. Think of yourself as the architect of our future product pipeline, making sure we're placing the right bets, not just throwing darts at a board. It's a strategic, forward-looking role that demands a blend of scientific understanding and commercial nous. You're not just advising; you're accountable for the strategic direction of our innovation portfolio, making the tough calls on what to fund and what to 'kill'.

Job ID
JD-RND-DIRINST-006
Department
Research and Development
NOS Level
Level 8
OFQUAL Level
Level 8
Experience
Director/VP (16-20 years)

Role Purpose & Context

Role Summary

The Director of Innovation Strategy is here to make sure our R&D efforts are pointed in the right direction, driving long-term growth and competitive advantage. You'll own the overall innovation strategy for a significant business unit, translating ambitious company goals into a tangible R&D portfolio. This means figuring out what technologies to invest in, what markets to target, and how to balance those risky, game-changing bets with the more predictable, incremental improvements. When you get this right, we launch breakthrough products that capture new markets and keep us ahead of the competition. If it goes wrong, we could end up pouring millions into dead ends, missing critical market shifts, or simply playing catch-up. The challenge is navigating immense uncertainty and getting a diverse group of smart, opinionated people to agree on a future that doesn't exist yet. The reward? Seeing your strategic vision become reality, shaping the very future of our company and industry.

Reporting Structure

Key Stakeholders

Internal:

External:

Organisational Impact

Scope: This role directly shapes the future revenue streams and market position of a major business unit. Your decisions on R&D portfolio allocation can make or break our ability to compete in 5-10 years. You're essentially steering a significant portion of the company's long-term investment, influencing everything from talent acquisition in R&D to the types of partnerships we pursue. Get it right, and you'll see new product lines, increased market share, and a stronger IP moat. Get it wrong, and we'll be playing catch-up, potentially losing market relevance and wasting significant capital.

Performance Metrics

Quantitative Metrics

  1. Metric: R&D Portfolio Value vs. Investment
  2. Desc: The projected Net Present Value (NPV) of the entire R&D portfolio you oversee, compared to the total R&D spend for that portfolio.
  3. Target: Achieve a 3:1 projected portfolio value to R&D spend ratio over a five-year horizon.
  4. Freq: Annually, with quarterly reviews of key projects.
  5. Example: If your business unit spends £50M on R&D this year, we'd expect the projected NPV of the resulting portfolio to be at least £150M by year five. This isn't about short-term ROI, but the long-term value creation.
  6. Metric: Percentage of Revenue from New Products
  7. Desc: The proportion of a business unit's total revenue generated by products or services launched within the last three to five years, directly influenced by your strategic portfolio choices.
  8. Target: Increase 'new product revenue' metric by 10% year-over-year for your business unit.
  9. Freq: Quarterly and Annually.
  10. Example: If 15% of your business unit's £500M revenue came from products launched in the last three years, the target would be to push that to 16.5% next year. This shows we're not just optimising old products, but truly innovating.
  11. Metric: R&D Portfolio Balance (Three Horizons)
  12. Desc: The strategic allocation of R&D resources (budget, headcount) across incremental (H1), adjacent (H2), and transformational (H3) innovation initiatives.
  13. Target: Maintain a 70% H1 / 20% H2 / 10% H3 split of resources, with slight variations based on market dynamics.
  14. Freq: Quarterly portfolio reviews.
  15. Example: If your R&D budget is £10M, roughly £7M should go to current product improvements, £2M to new features or market adjacencies, and £1M to truly disruptive, long-shot projects. This ensures we're managing short-term needs while building for the future.
  16. Metric: Strategic Partnership & Acquisition Pipeline
  17. Desc: The number of high-potential strategic partnerships, joint ventures, or M&A targets identified and progressed through initial evaluation stages, driven by your technology scouting and open innovation efforts.
  18. Target: Secure 2+ strategic university partnerships or progress 1-2 M&A targets to due diligence annually.
  19. Freq: Quarterly reviews with Legal and Corporate Development.
  20. Example: Identifying a university lab with a breakthrough in materials science and initiating a joint research project, or bringing a promising startup to the attention of our M&A team for initial discussions. It's about expanding our innovation ecosystem.

Qualitative Metrics

  1. Metric: Strategic Influence & Board Engagement
  2. Desc: Your ability to shape the long-term R&D agenda and effectively communicate complex innovation strategies to the executive leadership team and the Board of Directors.
  3. Evidence: Regularly invited to contribute to Board-level strategy sessions; your recommendations on major R&D investments are typically adopted; you're seen as the 'go-to' person for insights on future technology trends and their business implications. They trust your judgment on high-risk, high-reward bets.
  4. Metric: Quality of Innovation Pipeline
  5. Desc: The robustness and strategic fit of the ideas and projects entering the R&D pipeline, ensuring they address genuine market needs and align with long-term company vision.
  6. Evidence: The 'Kill-gate' decisions are well-justified and accepted by project teams (meaning you've set clear criteria); projects are consistently moving through the Stage-Gate process with clear objectives; a noticeable reduction in 'Innovation Theater' and an increase in projects with real strategic impact. Fewer projects are getting stuck in the 'Valley of Death'.
  7. Metric: Team Leadership & Development
  8. Desc: Your effectiveness in leading, mentoring, and developing your team of innovation strategists, fostering a culture of strategic thinking and accountability.
  9. Evidence: High retention rates within your team; your direct reports are visibly growing in their strategic capabilities and taking on more complex challenges; you're actively coaching them through difficult decisions and giving them space to lead. They feel supported and challenged, not micromanaged.
  10. Metric: Cross-Functional Collaboration & Buy-in
  11. Desc: The extent to which you successfully collaborate with other departments (Product, Commercial, Finance, Legal) to ensure innovation strategy is integrated and supported across the business.
  12. Evidence: Product teams are actively seeking your input on their roadmaps; Finance is proactively engaging on R&D budgeting; Legal is involved early in IP discussions; you're seen as a bridge-builder, not a silo. People across the business understand and support the innovation strategy, even if it means short-term sacrifices.

Primary Traits

Supporting Traits

Primary Motivators

  1. Motivator: Shaping the Future
  2. Daily: You'll spend your days thinking about what's next, identifying technologies and market shifts that could redefine our business. You're literally building the strategic roadmap for our next generation of products and services.
  3. Motivator: Impact at Scale
  4. Daily: Your decisions directly influence multi-million-pound R&D budgets and affect hundreds of engineers and scientists. You're not just making recommendations; you're making calls that shape the entire business unit's trajectory.
  5. Motivator: Intellectual Challenge
  6. Daily: You'll be constantly grappling with complex, ambiguous problems that have no easy answers. It's about synthesising vast amounts of information, connecting disparate dots, and making high-stakes judgments.

Potential Demotivators

Honestly, this role isn't for everyone. If you crave immediate gratification, hate dealing with corporate politics, or need every single one of your ideas to see the light of day, you'll probably struggle. You'll often be pushing against the natural inertia of a large organisation, which can be exhausting. You'll make tough calls to 'kill' projects that people have poured their hearts into. You'll also spend a fair bit of time in meetings, trying to get people on the same page, which isn't always the most 'innovative' part of the job.

Common Frustrations

  1. Fighting the 'corporate immune system'—the natural tendency of an established business to reject new, unfamiliar, or risky ideas.
  2. Explaining to the CFO why you can't calculate a precise 5-year ROI on a fundamental research project with a Technology Readiness Level (TRL) of 2.
  3. Your most promising 'H3' (transformational) project getting its budget slashed during a quarterly earnings crunch to protect 'H1' (core business) profits.
  4. The 'Not Invented Here' syndrome, where established business units refuse to adopt a brilliant technology developed by your central R&D team.
  5. Being asked to 'innovate' but being given a budget that only allows for incremental improvements, or worse, 'innovation theatre'.
  6. The political fallout from having to 'kill' a senior executive's pet project at a formal Stage-Gate review.
  7. Watching a competitor launch a product based on an idea your team proposed three years ago but couldn't get funded due to internal resistance.

What Role Doesn't Offer

  1. A predictable, routine day-to-day where every task is clearly defined.
  2. The satisfaction of hands-on technical execution or deep scientific research (you're guiding, not doing).
  3. Guaranteed success for every strategic initiative you champion.
  4. A low-pressure environment with minimal stakeholder management.

ADHD Positives

  1. The constant need to scan for new information, connect disparate ideas, and pivot between different strategic challenges can be a real strength here. Your ability to hyper-focus on a novel problem, then shift gears to a completely different one, is valuable.
  2. The strategic, big-picture thinking, and the drive to challenge the status quo often aligns well with ADHD traits. You're not expected to sit still and do repetitive tasks; you're expected to think big and move fast (mentally).

ADHD Challenges and Accommodations

  1. Maintaining focus during long, detailed board presentations or deep-dive financial modelling sessions might be challenging. We can offer regular short breaks or allow for standing/movement during meetings.
  2. Organising vast amounts of unstructured research data and ensuring consistent follow-through on long-term initiatives requires strong executive function. We use tools like Aha! and dedicated project managers to help keep things on track, and you'll have support for detailed documentation.

Dyslexia Positives

  1. The ability to think divergently, see patterns in complex systems, and excel at problem-solving from a non-linear perspective is highly valued in innovation strategy. You're often looking for the 'unobvious' solution.
  2. Strong verbal communication and storytelling skills, crucial for influencing senior leaders and selling a vision, are often strengths for dyslexic individuals.

Dyslexia Challenges and Accommodations

  1. Reading and synthesising large volumes of technical reports, market analyses, and patent documents can be taxing. We encourage the use of text-to-speech software, AI summarisation tools (see Section 4B), and provide support for proofreading critical documents.
  2. Creating highly structured, detailed written reports for board-level consumption might require extra time or support. We can pair you with a strong writer or provide access to editing services.

Autism Positives

  1. A deep, analytical focus on complex systems, identifying logical inconsistencies, and a preference for data-driven decision-making are major assets in strategic R&D. Your ability to spot patterns others miss is key.
  2. The drive for accuracy, consistency, and a methodical approach to problem-solving, especially in areas like portfolio balancing or TRL assessments, can be very beneficial.
  3. Direct, honest communication, particularly when delivering tough 'Kill-gate' decisions or challenging assumptions, is respected here, provided it's delivered professionally.

Autism Challenges and Accommodations

  1. Navigating complex organisational politics, unspoken social cues, and managing highly emotional stakeholder reactions (e.g., when a project is cancelled) can be difficult. We can provide coaching on these aspects and ensure clear, direct communication channels are available.
  2. The constant need for networking, informal influence, and navigating ambiguity in strategic discussions might be challenging. We aim for clear meeting agendas, defined outcomes, and provide opportunities for focused, one-on-one discussions rather than relying solely on large group dynamics.

Sensory Considerations

Our main R&D strategy offices are typically open-plan, so expect some background noise and general activity. That said, we have quiet zones, focus pods, and private meeting rooms available for deep work or sensitive conversations. You'll often be in various meeting settings, from formal boardrooms to more informal ideation spaces. We can provide noise-cancelling headphones if needed, and we're flexible about where you work when you need intense focus.

Flexibility Notes

We're pretty flexible on working hours and location, especially for a role at this level. You'll need to be present for key strategic meetings and leadership interactions, but we trust you to manage your time and deliver. If you need specific equipment or adjustments to your workspace, just let us know. We're here to support you in doing your best work.

Key Responsibilities

Experience Levels Responsibilities

  1. Level: Director of Innovation Strategy (L6)
  2. Responsibilities: Drive the multi-year innovation strategy for a significant business unit, ensuring it aligns with overall corporate growth objectives and market opportunities (think 5-10 year horizon, not just next quarter).
  3. Own the R&D portfolio for your business unit, making tough 'Go/Kill' decisions at Stage-Gate reviews for multi-million-pound projects and ensuring a healthy balance across the Three Horizons of Growth.
  4. Build and lead a high-performing team of Innovation Strategists and Managers, providing strategic direction, coaching, and development opportunities (you're shaping the next generation of leaders).
  5. Influence and secure buy-in from executive leadership, including the VP of R&D, Product Heads, and the Business Unit CFO, for significant R&D investments and strategic pivots.
  6. Architect and continuously refine the processes and frameworks we use for technology scouting, market intelligence, and R&D portfolio management (you're designing the engine, not just driving it).
  7. Represent the company externally at industry conferences, with academic partners, and in discussions with potential M&A targets, positioning us as a leader in innovation.
  8. Anticipate and mitigate strategic risks across the R&D portfolio, including IP challenges, market shifts, and technology obsolescence (you're the early warning system).
  9. Supervision: You'll operate with a high degree of autonomy, reporting to the VP of R&D with monthly strategic alignment meetings. The expectation is that you're setting direction and driving outcomes, not waiting for instructions. You're accountable for the strategic health of your business unit's innovation pipeline.
  10. Decision: Full authority for strategic R&D portfolio decisions within your business unit, including budget allocation up to £5M (with VP approval for larger sums). You'll have hiring and firing authority for your direct reports and significant influence over broader R&D talent strategy. You'll make 'Go/Kill' recommendations on projects that can have a £10M+ impact. You'll also approve strategic partnerships and vendor selections up to £500K. Decisions impacting overall corporate strategy or requiring Board approval will need alignment with the VP of R&D and other ELT members.
  11. Success: The long-term health and value creation of your R&D portfolio, measured by new product revenue, portfolio NPV, and strategic balance. Your ability to build a strong, credible team and influence executive decisions will also be critical. Ultimately, it's about whether your strategic bets pay off and position the business unit for sustained growth.

Decision-Making Authority

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

Let's be real, a big part of being a Director of Innovation Strategy is about synthesising mountains of information, spotting trends, and crafting compelling narratives. The good news? AI isn't here to replace you; it's here to give you superpowers, freeing you up to do more of the high-value, truly strategic thinking.

ID:

Tool: Automated Tech Scouting & Horizon Scanning

Benefit: Instead of manually trawling through academic papers, patent filings, and startup funding announcements, you'll set up AI agents to do it for you. These agents continuously scan and summarise based on your predefined strategic themes, delivering daily or weekly briefs on emerging technologies and potential disruptors. This turns a multi-day manual task into an automated, always-on intelligence feed, letting you spot 'weak signals' faster.

ID:

Tool: Thematic Analysis & Insight Acceleration

Benefit: Got thousands of customer interviews, market reports, or internal survey responses? Feed them into an LLM. It can perform thematic analysis in hours, identifying unarticulated needs, common pain points, and emerging opportunities that would take weeks of manual reading and coding. This means you get to the 'so what?' much quicker, informing your strategic choices with richer, faster insights.

ID:

Tool: Generative Scenario Planning & War-Gaming

Benefit: Use generative AI to rapidly brainstorm and flesh out dozens of future scenarios or 'what if' provocations for our R&D portfolio. This helps challenge assumptions, explore a wider range of strategic possibilities, and even 'war-game' competitor moves before committing to a path. It's like having a team of futurists on demand, helping you stress-test your strategy against various possible futures.

ID: ✍️

Tool: Strategic Communication Co-Pilot

Benefit: Need to draft a complex business case, an investment memo for the ELT, or a detailed board presentation? Use AI to generate a first draft. Provide the raw data, key insights, and target audience, and the AI can structure the narrative, create initial charts, and write compelling text. This frees you up to focus on refining the strategic arguments, ensuring clarity, and adding your unique insights, rather than getting bogged down in drafting.

Expect to save 15-25 hours weekly by intelligently applying AI tools to your strategic workflow. Weekly time savings potential
You'll typically use 3-5 core AI-powered tools, with an average investment of £50-200/month in subscriptions (often covered by the company). Typical tool investment
Explore AI Productivity for Director of Innovation Strategy →

12-15 specific tools & techniques with implementation guides

Competency Requirements

Foundation Skills (Transferable)

Beyond the technical know-how, a Director of Innovation Strategy needs a robust set of 'human' skills. These are the abilities that let you navigate complex organisations, inspire teams, and make sound judgments when the path isn't clear. They're not just 'nice-to-haves'; they're absolutely essential for success at this level.

Functional Skills (Role-Specific Technical)

This role demands a deep understanding of innovation methodologies and the tools that underpin strategic R&D. You're not just familiar with these; you're an architect of how they're applied across a business unit, ensuring they drive real strategic value.

Technical Competencies

Digital Tools

Industry Knowledge

Regulatory Compliance Regulations

Essential Prerequisites

Career Pathway Context

Before stepping into this Director role, you'd typically have spent several years as a Lead Innovation Strategist or Innovation Strategy Manager, where you would have already owned significant workstreams, managed smaller teams, and made impactful technical and strategic recommendations. This role builds on that foundation, demanding a broader scope, greater accountability, and a more pronounced leadership presence.

Qualifications & Credentials

Emerging Foundation Skills

Advancing Technical Skills

Future Skills Closing Note

The core of this role will always be about strategic judgment and leadership. These emerging and advancing technical skills are simply tools to amplify that judgment, allowing you to make more informed decisions, articulate a more compelling vision, and ultimately, drive greater impact for our business. Embrace them, and you'll not only stay relevant but lead the charge.

Education Requirements

Experience Requirements

You'll need at least 16-20 years of progressive experience in Research & Development, innovation strategy, or corporate strategy roles within a complex, R&D-intensive industry. This should include a minimum of 5-8 years in a leadership position, managing teams of strategists or project portfolios. We're looking for someone who has genuinely driven multi-year strategic programmes, made significant capital allocation decisions, and successfully influenced executive-level stakeholders. Experience working across multiple business units or product lines is a strong plus, as is exposure to M&A or strategic partnership development.

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 in strategic foresight, R&D portfolio management, and influencing senior stakeholders are highly transferable. You could move into similar Director or VP-level roles in other R&D-intensive industries (e.g., MedTech, Aerospace, Automotive, Clean Energy) or even into corporate venture capital or management consulting focused on innovation.

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