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Life-Sciences LCI

Life Sciences LCI

Upcoming Session

These virtual meetings are held during the Month. Click More Information above to see additional details for the currently scheduled meeting.

Special Event

Claudia Campbell presented to the Pharmaceutical Industry Project Management Group (PIPMG) on March 30, 2023, on the topic: "Project Management for Medical Devices and the Application of Agile Methodologies to Device Development".

Learn More about Life Sciences in NJ

Rutgers iJOBS

PMINJ’s Life Sciences LCI collaborates with the Rutgers University “iJOBS” program (Interdisciplinary Jobs for Biomedical Students (About | Rutgers School of Graduate Studies) to create awareness of life sciences PM career pathways, opportunities, skills and more for Ph.D. and post-doctoral biomedical students.

Links to student blogs on our recent events:

Volunteer Photo Gallery

Mission

To create a forum for project management professionals with an interest in the Life Sciences industry* to:
  • Network, collaborate, and share experiences from managing and/or working on Life Science project teams.
  • Discuss and learn about topics and activities specific to Life Science projects, such as validated projects, quality assurance issues, and project execution within a highly regulated environment.
  • Educate and share knowledge about the Life Sciences industry with the larger project management community.
  • Act as champions in support of required project activities related to compliance with FDA or other healthcare-related regulations.
  • To mentor, develop, and foster growth of the next generation of Life Science project managers.
  • Leverage best practices, tools & techniques from other industries, such as Agile.

*The Life Sciences industry is intended to include pharmaceutical, medical device, biotechnology, and healthcare/medical organizations.

The LCI Core Team is planning speaker presentations and other activities during the year; details will be posted here as they become available. Please feel free to make suggestions or propose topics which may interest you.

Scope

What state is home to 12 of the world’s 20 largest pharmaceutical, medical technology and diagnostics companies, over 400 biotechnology companies, the world’s largest clinical research organizations and has the world’s highest concentration of scientists and engineers in the world?

With nearly 3,200 facilities operating across all sectors and $30.1 B estimated annual expenditures the New Jersey life sciences industry directly employs over 112,000 people, second only to California (with a population 30x larger).

That’s a lot of projects to be managed!

PMINJ has formed the Life Science LCI to serve as a forum for project management professionals with an interest in the Life Sciences industry (pharmaceutical, medical devices, biotechnology, and healthcare / medical organizations) to network, collaborate, and share knowledge and experience.

The Life Sciences LCI will work in cooperation with the PMINJ Chapter to provide additional value to PMINJ members and people in the community with a focus on and/or interest in project management within Life Science organizations.

Email List

The LifeSciences@pminj.org email list carries the Life Sciences LCI announcements, and also allows members of the list to share career opportunities, events etc. Only members of the list may email to the list.

PMINJ chapter members can subscribe / unsubscribe to the Life Sciences email list via the chapter website. To check or change your subscription status:

  1. Click the Login menu entry at the top right.
  2. Enter your PMI preferred email address and your PMINJ password (same as used for online registration) and click Login (or use the Forgot Password link to create a new password).
  3. On the next screen, click Customer Information Area.
  4. On the Customers Pages, click Customer Information and history ...
  5. Towards the middle of the page, Review your "Current Mailing List Memberships" and click the button if you need to change this status.
  6. The change will be effective immediately.

Note also that:

  • The email address used is the one registered at PMI.ORG. If you need to change your email address, login to www.pmi.org and make the change there. Note that the NJ chapter receives a data feed from PMI periodically, so it may take up to four (4) days for the email address change to be effective at PMINJ.
  • New PMINJ members start with Forgot Password.
  • Do NOT reply to a Life Sciences email with an unsubscribe request - that sends your request to every member of the list!

Title: Insights from the June 2025 Gen AI Hackathon Author: Bhakti Kundu, PMINJ member, Life Sciences Marketing Team member

PMINJ’s Life Sciences LCI, along with our fellow CoPs from the Belgium and Germany Chapters and support from PMI’s Thought Leadership Team, for the first time ever ran a hackathon on June 5th entitled “Harnessing GenAI for Project Management in Life Sciences”. There were 70+ participants (I had the pleasure of being one!) from 14 countries representing 82 organizations in the mix. Our goal was to exchange ideas and seek answers to many challenges project managers are facing today in our Life Sciences industry. It was truly a pleasure to participate in this event, and I want to share my experience and hopefully motivate you to participate in such future events.

A hackathon of this scale aimed to achieve the following:

  • Exposure to Tools & Techniques:
    Participants were able to experiment with various tools such as Large Language Models and practice techniques like prompt engineering to seek more accurate and contextual answers.
  • Networking and Collaboration:
    The Planning team cleverly distributed participants into random groups as part of the teaming and problem solving. These group assignments fostered collaboration and networking among us as participants, leading to lasting friendships and future collaborations.
  • Experiential Learning:
    Hands-on opportunities allowed us as participants to interact with experts, which enhanced our learning experience.
  • Fun and Engagement
    The playful nature of the hackathon, helped the team to engage deeply. As there were time limits, teams needed to huddle together and as a result members will be able to retain knowledge gained in this exercise.

Generative AI is evolving at an unprecedented pace and it is extremely important to keep up with this pace as a user of this fascinating technology. Project managers and project coordinators are already taking advantage of enterprise GenAI based tools available to become more productive, especially regarding meeting summaries and action items. Product managers can complete requirements gathering faster by using and modifying meeting summaries and action items into product features. Software engineering teams can produce detailed designs and write code faster based on those well-documented features. The same productivity applies to engineers engaged in Quality engineering and automation, as testing requirements can be a byproduct of these well-documented features. When product transfers to production, site reliability engineers (SRE) can apply GenAI in IT operations to describe a problem and potential solution(s) to apply, thereby enriching the runbook. In software engineering, GenAI brings a lot of engineering excellence and project managers can harness the same, not only to bring productivity and efficiency to development but also to the business outcomes to satisfy business stakeholders at scale and at speed.

As Project Managers keep pace with the evolution of GenAI in the marketplace, the future will present a lot of opportunities for all of us to be part of something beautiful that we are building in our workplace. Regardless of your role - Project Manager, engineer etc., - let’s embrace hackathons in our workplace or beyond to spread the knowledge and build communities to help each other thrive.

How can we “Hack” and Harness the use of Generative AI for Project Management in the Life Sciences? By: PMI NJ, Germany and Belgium Life Sciences Hackathon Project Team

For the first time ever, three PMI® Chapters Communities of Practice (CoPs) focused on life sciences ( NJ , Germany , Belgium ) collaborated and joined forces with PMI's Thought Leadership team and corporate supporters to deliver a truly global and multi-disciplinary event on June 5th, 2025.

Our virtual "Harnessing GenAI for Project Management in Life Sciences" Hackathon brought together over 75 project management and GenAI enthusiasts from the pharmaceutical, biotechnology, medical devices sectors to actively share, learn, and collaborate about how to use GenAI to manage product development projects.

(Hack alert - In keeping with our GenAI theme, this blog is written in part by AI with our team’s human-in-the-loop changes!)

The event underscored the growing interest in GenAI’s potential to transform project pipeline management (PPM) in the life sciences. Participants were encouraged to reflect on their attitudes and experiences along their GenAI adoption journeys - whether as trailblazers or as those seeking guidance - and to use the event as an opportunity to benchmark progress, learn from peers, and grow collectively to translate GenAI’s transformative promise into practical, actionable use cases tailored to our sectors’ unique constraints.

Our opening plenary featured a recap of our registrants’ characteristics – geographies (mostly Europe and the Americas), our primary work roles (program/project manager) and the primary product lifecycle phases we work in (development). In regards to GenAI – most of us are users and our attitudes about it are mostly optimistic.

PMI Thought Leadership then inspired our participants with an overview of valuable insights drawn from their recent global research into the evolving role of GenAI in project management, sharing advancements reshaping traditional workflows that enable PMs to drive greater efficiency and innovation.

Our breakout sessions opened for dynamic and interactive discussions centered on three guiding questions:

  • What are you doing now?
  • What’s working?
  • What are your challenges?

Discussions emphasized competency development, highlighting critical skills project managers need to cultivate as GenAI becomes more prominent, such as AI integration, data analysis, and strategic decision-making. Best practices from discussions on challenges, opportunities and benefits were compiled, underscoring the importance of leadership buy-in, cross-functional collaboration, and robust infrastructure while addressing blockers like insufficient training and organizational readiness.

Our hackathon concluded with actionable next steps, including sharing more detailed insights through a variety of media (e.g., articles, videos, etc.) and fostering ongoing engagement within the "AI Hackathon Alumni - PMI Life Sciences Community" LinkedIn group.

A heartfelt thank you goes out to our team, supporters, and contributors who made this event possible. Much more to come – stay tuned!

Kamil Mroz, Claudia Campbell-Matland, Joann O'Connor, Sunny Hung, Benoit Schmitt, Joe Stalder, David Dalessandro, John Bufe, Jonathan Rice, Risa Inagaki, Reinhold Roessler, Eric Gustot, Emma Jaikaran, Bart Briers, Philippe Bernard, Archana Narasanna, Brian Majors, Christophe de Vleesschouwe, Emil Andersson, Ian Summers, Rupal Bhandari, Francesca Donofrio, Aliki Courmanopoulos, Aurora Gualtieri, Juliana Correa, Keren Deront, Kyela Bishop, Michael Bianchi, Samuel Pownall, Sergio Jardim, Shauna Mensah, Taiwo Abraham , Edivandro Conforto , Al Zeitoun

Title: Insights from the June 2025 Gen AI Hackathon Author: Bhakti Kundu, PMINJ member, Life Sciences Marketing Team member

PMINJ’s Life Sciences LCI, along with our fellow CoPs from the Belgium and Germany Chapters and support from PMI’s Thought Leadership Team, for the first time ever ran a hackathon on June 5th entitled “Harnessing GenAI for Project Management in Life Sciences”. There were 70+ participants (I had the pleasure of being one!) from 14 countries representing 82 organizations in the mix. Our goal was to exchange ideas and seek answers to many challenges project managers are facing today in our Life Sciences industry. It was truly a pleasure to participate in this event, and I want to share my experience and hopefully motivate you to participate in such future events.

A hackathon of this scale aimed to achieve the following:

  • Exposure to Tools & Techniques:
    Participants were able to experiment with various tools such as Large Language Models and practice techniques like prompt engineering to seek more accurate and contextual answers.
  • Networking and Collaboration:
    The Planning team cleverly distributed participants into random groups as part of the teaming and problem solving. These group assignments fostered collaboration and networking among us as participants, leading to lasting friendships and future collaborations.
  • Experiential Learning:
    Hands-on opportunities allowed us as participants to interact with experts, which enhanced our learning experience.
  • Fun and Engagement
    The playful nature of the hackathon, helped the team to engage deeply. As there were time limits, teams needed to huddle together and as a result members will be able to retain knowledge gained in this exercise.

Generative AI is evolving at an unprecedented pace and it is extremely important to keep up with this pace as a user of this fascinating technology. Project managers and project coordinators are already taking advantage of enterprise GenAI based tools available to become more productive, especially regarding meeting summaries and action items. Product managers can complete requirements gathering faster by using and modifying meeting summaries and action items into product features. Software engineering teams can produce detailed designs and write code faster based on those well-documented features. The same productivity applies to engineers engaged in Quality engineering and automation, as testing requirements can be a byproduct of these well-documented features. When product transfers to production, site reliability engineers (SRE) can apply GenAI in IT operations to describe a problem and potential solution(s) to apply, thereby enriching the runbook. In software engineering, GenAI brings a lot of engineering excellence and project managers can harness the same, not only to bring productivity and efficiency to development but also to the business outcomes to satisfy business stakeholders at scale and at speed.

As Project Managers keep pace with the evolution of GenAI in the marketplace, the future will present a lot of opportunities for all of us to be part of something beautiful that we are building in our workplace. Regardless of your role - Project Manager, engineer etc., - let’s embrace hackathons in our workplace or beyond to spread the knowledge and build communities to help each other thrive.

How can we “Hack” and Harness the use of Generative AI for Project Management in the Life Sciences? By: PMI NJ, Germany and Belgium Life Sciences Hackathon Project Team

For the first time ever, three PMI® Chapters Communities of Practice (CoPs) focused on life sciences ( NJ , Germany , Belgium ) collaborated and joined forces with PMI's Thought Leadership team and corporate supporters to deliver a truly global and multi-disciplinary event on June 5th, 2025.

Our virtual "Harnessing GenAI for Project Management in Life Sciences" Hackathon brought together over 75 project management and GenAI enthusiasts from the pharmaceutical, biotechnology, medical devices sectors to actively share, learn, and collaborate about how to use GenAI to manage product development projects.

(Hack alert - In keeping with our GenAI theme, this blog is written in part by AI with our team’s human-in-the-loop changes!)

The event underscored the growing interest in GenAI’s potential to transform project pipeline management (PPM) in the life sciences. Participants were encouraged to reflect on their attitudes and experiences along their GenAI adoption journeys - whether as trailblazers or as those seeking guidance - and to use the event as an opportunity to benchmark progress, learn from peers, and grow collectively to translate GenAI’s transformative promise into practical, actionable use cases tailored to our sectors’ unique constraints.

Our opening plenary featured a recap of our registrants’ characteristics – geographies (mostly Europe and the Americas), our primary work roles (program/project manager) and the primary product lifecycle phases we work in (development). In regards to GenAI – most of us are users and our attitudes about it are mostly optimistic.

PMI Thought Leadership then inspired our participants with an overview of valuable insights drawn from their recent global research into the evolving role of GenAI in project management, sharing advancements reshaping traditional workflows that enable PMs to drive greater efficiency and innovation.

Our breakout sessions opened for dynamic and interactive discussions centered on three guiding questions:

  • What are you doing now?
  • What’s working?
  • What are your challenges?

Discussions emphasized competency development, highlighting critical skills project managers need to cultivate as GenAI becomes more prominent, such as AI integration, data analysis, and strategic decision-making. Best practices from discussions on challenges, opportunities and benefits were compiled, underscoring the importance of leadership buy-in, cross-functional collaboration, and robust infrastructure while addressing blockers like insufficient training and organizational readiness.

Our hackathon concluded with actionable next steps, including sharing more detailed insights through a variety of media (e.g., articles, videos, etc.) and fostering ongoing engagement within the "AI Hackathon Alumni - PMI Life Sciences Community" LinkedIn group.

A heartfelt thank you goes out to our team, supporters, and contributors who made this event possible. Much more to come – stay tuned!

Kamil Mroz, Claudia Campbell-Matland, Joann O'Connor, Sunny Hung, Benoit Schmitt, Joe Stalder, David Dalessandro, John Bufe, Jonathan Rice, Risa Inagaki, Reinhold Roessler, Eric Gustot, Emma Jaikaran, Bart Briers, Philippe Bernard, Archana Narasanna, Brian Majors, Christophe de Vleesschouwe, Emil Andersson, Ian Summers, Rupal Bhandari, Francesca Donofrio, Aliki Courmanopoulos, Aurora Gualtieri, Juliana Correa, Keren Deront, Kyela Bishop, Michael Bianchi, Samuel Pownall, Sergio Jardim, Shauna Mensah, Taiwo Abraham , Edivandro Conforto , Al Zeitoun

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