• Question: How do you plan to spread the word about your work when you have completed it?

    Asked by Iris the Great to Angela, Claire, Ian, Robert, Sarah on 10 Nov 2014.
    • Photo: Ian Cade

      Ian Cade answered on 10 Nov 2014:


      Usually a via presentations at conferences and publications in journals, my most recent contribution can be found here (its really a fairly continuous process with no obvious ‘completion event’):

      Chemistry – A European Journal, Volume 20, Issue 40, pages 12874–12880, September 26, 2014

      DOI: 10.1002/chem.201403614

    • Photo: Angela Stokes

      Angela Stokes answered on 10 Nov 2014:


      Hi Iris the Great
      In pharmaceutical medicine and specifically in Regulatory Affairs the news about our successes is spread for us. Our biggest success is always getting a new medicine licensed. When this happens the company publicises it through media sources so we don’t have to do anything. The company also publicises good clinical trial results through posters, conferences and papers in journals – Regulatory Affairs doesn’t often get involved in writing these documents but sometimes checks them for accuracy.

    • Photo: Sarah Harris

      Sarah Harris answered on 13 Nov 2014:


      My work is an ongoing process too – the Future Morph website always needs updating! Usually updates on the work is spread through the twitter handle (www.twitter.com/Future_Morph) or through the newsletter. It’ll also be put up on the main Science Council website, which is where the news about other projects I’m working on goes!

      my colleagues and I sometimes attend careers events too, to spread the word in person

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