Lead (8-12 years)

International Regulatory Strategy Director

This role isn't just about knowing the rules; it's about figuring out how to get our products into new markets and keeping them there, all while staying on the right side of the law. You'll be the person who translates complex global regulations into a clear plan for our product teams, making sure we launch safely and legally. Honestly, you're a bit of a strategic chess player, always thinking several moves ahead in the regulatory game.

Job ID
JD-CQHS-LDIRS-004
Department
Compliance Quality Health Safety
NOS Level
N/A (OFQUAL aligned)
OFQUAL Level
Level 7
Experience
Lead (8-12 years)

Role Purpose & Context

Role Summary

As an International Regulatory Strategy Director, you'll be leading the charge on getting our products approved and keeping them compliant across multiple countries. This means you'll be looking after all the regulatory bits for a whole product family or a specific, big region. You're the one who develops the game plan, making sure we can actually sell our stuff where we want to. When you do this well, our new products hit the market faster, and we avoid those nightmare recalls or hefty fines. If you get it wrong, well, we're talking about market delays, lost revenue, and a serious hit to our reputation. The tricky part is that regulations are always changing, and what works in one country definitely won't work in another. But the reward? You get to see our innovations reach patients and customers worldwide, knowing you made it happen safely and legally.

Reporting Structure

Key Stakeholders

Internal:

External:

Organisational Impact

Scope: Your work directly impacts our ability to launch and maintain products in key international markets. Get it right, and we're first to market, making money and helping people. Get it wrong, and we're looking at significant financial penalties, product withdrawals, and a damaged brand. Honestly, you're a gatekeeper for market access and a guardian of our reputation.

Performance Metrics

Quantitative Metrics

  1. Metric: First-Pass Approval Rate for Submissions
  2. Desc: This is about how often our regulatory submissions get approved without needing significant additional information or changes on the first go.
  3. Target: Achieve >85% first-pass approval rate on all major submissions.
  4. Freq: Quarterly, reviewed per submission type and region.
  5. Example: If your team submits 10 major applications this quarter and 9 are approved without major queries, that's a 90% first-pass rate. We're looking for consistent quality here.
  6. Metric: Average Agency Response Time Reduction
  7. Desc: How quickly we get our products approved often depends on the quality of our initial submission. This measures if we're making it easier for agencies to say 'yes' faster.
  8. Target: Reduce average agency response time by 10% for your product portfolio compared to the previous year.
  9. Freq: Annually, tracked against historical data.
  10. Example: If last year's average approval time was 120 days, we'd want to see that drop to around 108 days this year for your managed portfolio. It means less waiting, more selling.
  11. Metric: Regulatory Project Deadline Adherence
  12. Desc: This metric tracks how well your team sticks to the planned timelines for regulatory submissions and other key project milestones.
  13. Target: Ensure 95% of regulatory projects and submissions meet their internal deadlines.
  14. Freq: Monthly, reviewed against project plans.
  15. Example: If a submission was planned for 15 May, but it went out on 17 May, that's a miss. We need you to keep things on track, especially when other teams are relying on your dates.
  16. Metric: Team Productivity & Throughput
  17. Desc: This looks at how many submissions or regulatory projects your team successfully completes within a given period, balanced with quality.
  18. Target: Increase the number of successful submissions/approvals for your product portfolio by 10-15% year-on-year, without compromising quality.
  19. Freq: Annually, reviewed against business growth and new market entries.
  20. Example: If your team managed 20 new market entries last year, we'd expect to see around 22-23 this year, assuming similar complexity. It's about scaling our efforts.

Qualitative Metrics

  1. Metric: Strategic Regulatory Counsel
  2. Desc: You're not just a rule-book reader; you're a strategic advisor. This measures how often other teams come to you for proactive, strategic advice on product development or market entry.
  3. Evidence: You're regularly invited to early-stage product planning meetings. Product and R&D teams actively seek your input before making major design decisions. Your advice shapes significant business decisions, like market entry priorities or product feature sets. People say things like, 'We need to run this by [Your Name] first.'
  4. Metric: Team Development & Mentorship
  5. Desc: As a Director, you're responsible for growing your team. This looks at how well you're coaching and developing your direct reports.
  6. Evidence: Your direct reports show clear professional growth and take on more complex tasks. They feel supported and regularly ask for your guidance. Retention rates for your team are high, and you've successfully promoted at least one team member to a more senior role. You're seen as a fair and effective manager.
  7. Metric: Proactive Risk Mitigation
  8. Desc: This is about spotting potential regulatory issues before they become actual problems, and then putting a plan in place to deal with them.
  9. Evidence: You present regular updates on emerging regulatory trends and their potential impact to senior leadership. You've identified and successfully mitigated at least one significant regulatory risk that could have led to a product delay or recall. Internal audit findings related to your areas are minimal or non-existent, and any issues are addressed swiftly and thoroughly.
  10. Metric: Cross-Functional Influence & Collaboration
  11. Desc: Your role requires you to get different departments on board with regulatory requirements, even when it's inconvenient for them. This measures your ability to do that smoothly.
  12. Evidence: You're able to get Product, R&D, and Sales teams to adopt regulatory recommendations without major friction. You're seen as a partner, not a blocker. Other department leads actively seek your input and value your perspective in joint projects. You can get people to agree on a path forward even when initial opinions differ significantly.

Primary Traits

Supporting Traits

Primary Motivators

  1. Motivator: Solving Complex Global Puzzles
  2. Daily: You get a real buzz from unpicking a brand new, ambiguous international regulation and figuring out the most efficient, compliant pathway for our products. It's like a high-stakes game of chess, but with real-world impact.
  3. Motivator: Protecting the Business & Patients
  4. Daily: There's a deep satisfaction in knowing your work directly prevents product recalls, avoids massive fines, and ensures our products are safe for use. You're a guardian, really.
  5. Motivator: Enabling Market Access & Growth
  6. Daily: You love seeing our products successfully launch in new countries. Your efforts directly contribute to the company's growth and reach, which is incredibly rewarding.

Potential Demotivators

Let's be frank, this role isn't for everyone. You'll often feel like you're the 'department of no' because you have to shut down exciting but non-compliant ideas. You'll spend ages translating mind-numbingly dense legal documents into something actionable for engineers who just want to build. You'll also deal with the constant frustration of last-minute requests or finding out that Sales has over-promised a launch date in a country where we haven't even started the regulatory assessment. Sometimes, you'll feel like you're constantly pushing water uphill, especially when regulations change just before launch. If you need immediate, tangible results from every single piece of work, or if you get easily disheartened by bureaucracy and internal friction, you'll probably struggle here.

Common Frustrations

  1. Being brought into a product development cycle at the very end, only to discover a fundamental design flaw that violates regulations and forces a costly, last-minute redesign.
  2. The constant battle with the commercial team who sell features or promise delivery dates in new countries before you've even started to assess the regulatory pathway.
  3. Spending two years developing a product to meet a specific regulation, only for the health authority to publish new 'guidance' three months before launch that changes all the requirements.
  4. The internal reputation of being a roadblock or a cost centre, when your actual function is to enable long-term, sustainable market access by preventing catastrophic compliance failures.
  5. The thankless task of converting a 300-page, legally dense regulatory document into a 3-page summary of actionable tasks for engineers who just want to know what to build.
  6. Submitting a multi-million pound product application and then waiting 6, 12, or even 24 months for a response from a government agency with zero visibility into the process or timeline.

What Role Doesn't Offer

  1. A predictable, unchanging work environment – regulations are a moving target.
  2. Complete autonomy without needing to influence others – collaboration and persuasion are constant.
  3. A role where you're always popular – you'll often have to deliver unwelcome news.
  4. A direct path to creating products – your impact is indirect, through ensuring compliance.

ADHD Positives

  1. The constant need to switch between different regulations, product lines, and urgent issues can actually be a real strength here, keeping things fresh and engaging.
  2. Hyperfocus can be incredibly useful when you need to deep-dive into a complex regulatory document or submission, spotting details others might miss.
  3. Your ability to think quickly and adapt to sudden regulatory changes or agency queries can be a huge asset in a fast-moving environment.

ADHD Challenges and Accommodations

  1. Managing multiple long-term projects and deadlines can be tough. We can help with structured project management tools (like Jira) and regular, short check-ins to keep things on track.
  2. The sheer volume of detailed documentation can be overwhelming. We can explore tools for automated document review and summary generation, and ensure you have support for administrative tasks.
  3. Maintaining focus during lengthy, detailed reviews might be challenging. We can build in breaks, vary tasks, and use collaborative review sessions to keep engagement high.

Dyslexia Positives

  1. Often, individuals with dyslexia excel at 'big picture' thinking and identifying patterns, which is brilliant for spotting overarching regulatory trends and strategic pathways.
  2. Strong verbal communication skills can be a huge advantage when presenting complex regulatory information to non-technical audiences or negotiating with agencies.
  3. Your ability to simplify complex concepts and find alternative ways to explain things can be invaluable when translating 'Reg-lish' for other departments.

Dyslexia Challenges and Accommodations

  1. Proofreading dense regulatory documents can be particularly challenging. We strongly encourage the use of advanced grammar and spell-checking software, text-to-speech tools, and peer review for critical documents.
  2. Organising and structuring large amounts of written information might take more effort. We can provide templates, structured document management systems (like Veeva Vault), and support for outlining complex reports.
  3. Reading and interpreting highly technical or legalistic language can be time-consuming. Access to regulatory intelligence platforms with good search and summary functions will be key, along with opportunities for verbal briefings.

Autism Positives

  1. Your exceptional attention to detail and ability to spot inconsistencies, especially in highly structured regulatory documents, is a massive advantage.
  2. A strong preference for logic, rules, and clear processes aligns perfectly with the compliance nature of this role.
  3. Your ability to focus deeply on specific, complex regulatory frameworks can lead to becoming a true subject matter expert, which is highly valued.

Autism Challenges and Accommodations

  1. Navigating complex social dynamics and unspoken expectations with diverse internal and external stakeholders can be difficult. We can provide clear communication guidelines, offer coaching on specific stakeholder interactions, and ensure meeting agendas are always explicit.
  2. Unexpected changes in regulatory guidance or project priorities can be unsettling. We aim for transparency in communication about changes and provide structured processes for adapting to new information.
  3. Sensory sensitivities in an open-plan office might be an issue. We offer noise-cancelling headphones, flexible working arrangements (including remote options), and quiet zones for focused work.

Sensory Considerations

Our main office is a fairly standard open-plan environment, so you'll hear typical office chatter, keyboard clicks, and occasional phone calls. That said, we do have dedicated quiet zones and meeting rooms for focused work or calls. Visually, it's a modern office with standard lighting. Socially, you'll be interacting with many different teams, so expect a good amount of collaboration, both in person and virtually.

Flexibility Notes

We're pretty flexible here. We offer hybrid working, so you won't be in the office five days a week unless you want to be. We also understand that life happens, so we're open to discussing adjusted hours or other arrangements if they help you do your best work.

Key Responsibilities

Experience Levels Responsibilities

  1. Level: Lead International Regulatory Strategy Director (L4)
  2. Responsibilities: Define and refine the regional regulatory strategy for a specific product family or geographical market (e.g., APAC, LATAM). This means figuring out the best way to get our products approved and keeping them compliant in those areas, not just following a pre-set path.
  3. Accountable for the successful execution of all regulatory activities within your assigned portfolio. If a submission is late or gets rejected, the buck stops with you. You'll need to figure out what went wrong and fix it.
  4. Build and lead a team of Regulatory Affairs Specialists and Senior Specialists. This involves everything from hiring, performance reviews, to daily guidance and making sure they're developing their careers. You're their manager, mentor, and problem-solver.
  5. Influence senior stakeholders across Product Development, R&D, and Commercial teams to ensure regulatory requirements are embedded early in the product lifecycle. You'll be the voice of regulatory compliance in those strategic discussions, often pushing back on ideas that look good on paper but are a nightmare for compliance.
  6. Architect complex regulatory submissions for novel or high-risk products, ensuring they meet all international agency requirements. This isn't just compiling documents; it's about crafting the narrative and technical arguments that get us approval.
  7. Develop and implement proactive horizon scanning processes to identify emerging regulatory changes that could impact our business. You'll need to anticipate problems, not just react to them, and then translate those potential changes into actionable plans for the business.
  8. Represent the company in discussions with health authorities and Notified Bodies on significant regulatory matters. This could involve leading pre-submission meetings, responding to complex deficiency letters, or negotiating timelines. You're the face of our regulatory efforts.
  9. Supervision: You'll operate with a high degree of autonomy on day-to-day execution and strategic direction within your domain. We'll have monthly strategic alignment meetings with your Senior Manager, but you're expected to drive your own work and your team's output. You're the expert here, so we trust your judgment.
  10. Decision: You have full decision-making authority within your assigned product portfolio or region. This includes budget allocation up to £250K for external consultants or tools, hiring and firing decisions for your direct reports, and determining the regulatory pathway for new products. You'll consult with your Senior Manager on significant deviations from global strategy or any budget spend above £250K. Any decisions impacting other departments' P&L or requiring changes to the global QMS will need alignment with relevant department heads.
  11. Success: Your success will be measured by your ability to consistently achieve high first-pass approval rates, reduce time-to-market for your portfolio through smart strategy, and develop a high-performing, engaged regulatory team. Ultimately, it's about enabling compliant market access and protecting the business from regulatory risks.

Decision-Making Authority

Save 15-25 hours weekly: Supercharge your Regulatory Strategy with AI

Let's be honest, the sheer volume of regulatory documents, constant updates, and submission complexities can be overwhelming. What if you could cut through the noise, automate the tedious bits, and focus on the strategic work that really matters? Good news: you can. We're actively exploring and implementing AI tools to make your life easier and your work more impactful.

ID:

Tool: Automated Dossier Compilation

Benefit: Forget manually copying and pasting across thousands of pages. AI tools can scan your technical files, lab reports, and design specifications, then automatically populate large sections of standardised submission dossiers (like STED or eCTD). This ensures consistency and drastically cuts down on manual data entry errors, freeing up your team for more critical review.

ID:

Tool: Regulatory Change Radar

Benefit: Imagine an AI that constantly monitors global regulatory databases, news sites, and government publications. It then automatically summarises relevant changes for your specific product portfolio and flags high-impact updates that need your immediate attention. No more endless manual searches; just the critical intel you need, delivered straight to you.

ID:

Tool: Predictive Agency Query Tool

Benefit: What if an AI could predict the questions regulators will ask? By analysing our company's historical submissions and agency feedback, an LLM can forecast the top 5-10 likely questions or requests for information (RTQs) from a regulator for a new submission. This lets your team proactively address concerns, leading to faster approvals and fewer back-and-forths.

ID: ✍️

Tool: Technical-to-Business Translator

Benefit: You know how hard it is to explain complex regulatory challenges to executive leadership or commercial teams. This AI assistant drafts plain-language summaries of those issues, creating clear, concise briefing notes that cut through the jargon. It's like having a dedicated comms expert for your regulatory insights, saving you hours of drafting time.

Roughly 15-25 hours per week for you and your team, letting you focus on strategic leadership. Weekly time savings potential
Expect to use 2-3 core AI-powered tools daily, with others for specific projects. Typical tool investment
Explore AI Productivity for International Regulatory Strategy Director →

12-15 specific tools & techniques with implementation guides

Competency Requirements

Foundation Skills (Transferable)

These are the bedrock skills that let you operate effectively as a leader in a complex regulatory environment. They're not just 'nice-to-haves'; they're essential for getting things done and building a strong team.

Functional Skills (Role-Specific Technical)

These are the specific methodologies, technical tools, and industry knowledge you'll need to apply day-to-day to lead our international regulatory strategy.

Technical Competencies

Digital Tools

Industry Knowledge

Regulatory Compliance Regulations

Essential Prerequisites

Career Pathway Context

When you join us, we'll expect you to hit the ground running with a strong foundation in international regulatory affairs. This isn't a role where you'll be learning the basics of submissions or regulatory frameworks. Instead, we're looking for someone who can immediately step in, take ownership of a product portfolio or region, and start shaping our strategy. If you've been a Senior Specialist who's led projects end-to-end and started to mentor others, you're probably in a good spot.

Qualifications & Credentials

Emerging Foundation Skills

Advancing Technical Skills

Future Skills Closing Note

The regulatory landscape isn't static, and neither are the tools we use. Your ability to embrace these emerging skills and advance your technical capabilities will be a key differentiator, not just for your career, but for our company's future success in a rapidly changing global market. We're here to support that growth.

Education Requirements

Experience Requirements

You'll need at least 8-12 years of progressive experience in regulatory affairs, specifically within the medical device, pharmaceutical, or IVD industries. A significant portion of this experience (at least 5 years) must be focused on international markets and complex submissions. We're looking for someone who has led major regulatory projects, managed a portfolio of products, and ideally, has some experience directly managing or heavily mentoring a team of regulatory professionals. This isn't your first rodeo; you've seen a few regulatory cycles and know how to navigate them.

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 develop here—deep regulatory expertise, strategic thinking, team leadership, and cross-functional influence—are highly transferable. You could move into other highly regulated industries like pharmaceuticals, biotechnology, or even certain areas of financial services. The core challenge of navigating complex rules and ensuring compliance remains, just with different specifics.

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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