Tips For Regulatory Affairs CV
Tips For Regulatory Affairs CV
Tips For Regulatory Affairs CV
Peter Hogg
09/02/2016
Share this post
In the highly competitive job market for regulatory affairs professionals, having a well
crafted CV is critical to secure a position at a pharmaceutical company, contract
research organisation, consultancy or other life sciences company. Your CV represents
your elevator pitch. When human resources or a hiring manager reviews your
application, you have one minute of their time to explain who you are and why you
would be a terrific fit for their open regulatory affairs associate role.
The main goal of your CV is to get an employer interested in your skills and experience
to gain an interview. You must ensure that there is a purpose for everything included on
your CV, and that the content is directly tailored to the target role and company.
The following sections will provide a handful of tips to help you to improve your CV for a
regulatory affairs associate position.
3.Put time and thought into describing each past professional role.
Most regulatory affairs professionals have similar job responsibilities, such as preparing
premarket submissions, determining regulatory strategies, and ensuring compliance for
international regulatory regions. While these items represent valuable experience, they
are also vague; more details specific to your role should be included.
Instead of simply stating responsibilities, frame your previous experience in terms of
achievements, such as on regulatory approval in the US for 2 new products or led team
to achieve CE mark for new medical device. This shows the recruiter and hiring
manager your impact to the overall business objectives, not just your ability to conduct
work.
When describing previous experience, be brief and to the point. Make every word count
and add value to your CV.
4. Tailor your CV to every job specification.
Do not simply have one resume that you submit to all job applications. Depending on
the target role, the information that you include in your CV should change. Review the
job description in detail and summarise your role in terms of the relevant experience
needed for that position. Be sure to include key words, as recruiters will likely use
automated search functions to quickly sort through CVs. That being said, do not just
copy and paste job specifications into your CV: they are generic and tend to be wordy,
and doing so reflects poorly on you.
Ensuring your CV gets you an interview for a regulatory affairs associate position can
be difficult. Following the tips listed above will help you to improve your chances of
getting past the first glance of the CV and into the interview chair