Beyond the Device

Episode 34: From Energy to MedTech: Russell Payne's Story of Impact

43 min · 2. juni 2026
episode Episode 34: From Energy to MedTech: Russell Payne's Story of Impact cover

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Support the Roy Castle Lung Cancer Foundation in memory of Russell Payne: https://roycastle.org/ways-to-give/donations/ [https://gbr01.safelinks.protection.outlook.com/?url=https%3A%2F%2Froycastle.org%2Fways-to-give%2Fdonations%2F&data=05%7C02%7C%7C1f9f7c968974484f1e9808debfc2623c%7C697b10c31fa74360bf1672660a265dd7%7C0%7C0%7C639159038784137779%7CUnknown%7CTWFpbGZsb3d8eyJFbXB0eU1hcGkiOnRydWUsIlYiOiIwLjAuMDAwMCIsIlAiOiJXaW4zMiIsIkFOIjoiTWFpbCIsIldUIjoyfQ%3D%3D%7C0%7C%7C%7C&sdata=mb%2F1traQKoQGV%2FL%2F5egXxNeAizZdSD9yyGjQserbm5I%3D&reserved=0] In this episode of Beyond the Device, hosts Duncan Cameron and Nathan Puxty sit down with Russell Payne to explore the defining moments that shaped his remarkable career and outlook on life. Russell shares his journey from a self-described distracted student to earning a PhD, building and scaling a successful energy consultancy, and ultimately transitioning into the world of MedTech. Along the way, he reflects on the lessons learned from entrepreneurship, leadership, innovation, and the desire to create meaningful impact through technology. This conversation goes beyond job titles and achievements, offering an honest look at the experiences, challenges, and motivations that influenced Russell's path. It's a thoughtful discussion about resilience, purpose, helping others, and finding opportunities where you least expect them. Hosted by Duncan Cameron & Nathan Puxty.

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35 episodes

episode Episode 34: From Energy to MedTech: Russell Payne's Story of Impact artwork

Episode 34: From Energy to MedTech: Russell Payne's Story of Impact

Support the Roy Castle Lung Cancer Foundation in memory of Russell Payne: https://roycastle.org/ways-to-give/donations/ [https://gbr01.safelinks.protection.outlook.com/?url=https%3A%2F%2Froycastle.org%2Fways-to-give%2Fdonations%2F&data=05%7C02%7C%7C1f9f7c968974484f1e9808debfc2623c%7C697b10c31fa74360bf1672660a265dd7%7C0%7C0%7C639159038784137779%7CUnknown%7CTWFpbGZsb3d8eyJFbXB0eU1hcGkiOnRydWUsIlYiOiIwLjAuMDAwMCIsIlAiOiJXaW4zMiIsIkFOIjoiTWFpbCIsIldUIjoyfQ%3D%3D%7C0%7C%7C%7C&sdata=mb%2F1traQKoQGV%2FL%2F5egXxNeAizZdSD9yyGjQserbm5I%3D&reserved=0] In this episode of Beyond the Device, hosts Duncan Cameron and Nathan Puxty sit down with Russell Payne to explore the defining moments that shaped his remarkable career and outlook on life. Russell shares his journey from a self-described distracted student to earning a PhD, building and scaling a successful energy consultancy, and ultimately transitioning into the world of MedTech. Along the way, he reflects on the lessons learned from entrepreneurship, leadership, innovation, and the desire to create meaningful impact through technology. This conversation goes beyond job titles and achievements, offering an honest look at the experiences, challenges, and motivations that influenced Russell's path. It's a thoughtful discussion about resilience, purpose, helping others, and finding opportunities where you least expect them. Hosted by Duncan Cameron & Nathan Puxty.

2. juni 202643 min
episode Episode 33: From the Mines to MedTech CEO artwork

Episode 33: From the Mines to MedTech CEO

* Andrew Mullen’s story is built on work ethic, curiosity, and a mindset that refuses to stay still. Growing up in a coal mining community, value was simple: you worked hard or you didn’t matter. That environment shaped his early drive, but not his destination. From the mines to the Royal Navy, and eventually into MedTech, his path wasn’t planned, it was taken one opportunity at a time.  The defining moment came later. Standing in a chaotic radiotherapy department, surrounded by patients waiting for life-changing treatment, he realised something fundamental: Fixing the machine wasn’t enough. That moment shifted everything. From being a technically strong engineer, to someone focused on improving systems, scaling impact, and ultimately helping more people.  From there, Andrew deliberately pushed himself beyond his comfort zone, learning the commercial, operational, and leadership sides of the industry. Along the way, imposter syndrome was constant, but so was the decision to keep showing up anyway. Now, as a multi-time CEO, his edge isn’t just technical knowledge, it’s perspective. Staying calm, seeing the bigger picture, and understanding how all the pieces fit together. The core message is simple: Your background shapes you, but it doesn’t define you. What matters is how you respond, how you learn, and whether you’re willing to step into things before you feel ready.

5. maj 202636 min
episode Episode 32: Taking ownership, with Paul Fletcher-Dyer artwork

Episode 32: Taking ownership, with Paul Fletcher-Dyer

Paul Fletcher-Dyer didn’t plan a career in medtech, he found it by following what felt natural. From early lab work to global QA/RA leadership, his path has been shaped by one defining lesson. Early in his career, Paul experienced a moment where he did everything right, but still carried the blame for a failed outcome. It knocked his confidence for over a year and forced him to rethink how he works. That experience now underpins everything he does. He leads with ownership, open conversations, and a clear belief that bottling things up is where problems start.  Today, operating in the fast-moving world of AI in healthcare, Paul sees the same theme playing out at scale: rapid innovation, slow regulation, and the need for people who can take responsibility in the grey areas. This episode is about resilience, accountability, and saying things out loud before they build up.

29. apr. 202647 min
episode Episode 31: Navigating self-doubt and earning your place – Andrew Rogers artwork

Episode 31: Navigating self-doubt and earning your place – Andrew Rogers

In this episode of Beyond the Device, Andrew Rogers shares a career shaped less by certainty and more by resilience.   From struggling at school and “winging it” into his first role, to building a 30+ year career in QA/RA, Andrew opens up about a constant undercurrent of imposter syndrome and self-doubt. Despite this, it’s that very mindset that’s driven him to work harder and consistently deliver. This episode covers: * Non-linear career paths and finding your way without a clear plan * Turning self-doubt into a driver rather than a blocker * The importance of environment, support, and perspective A grounded reminder that you don’t need complete confidence to build a successful career, just the willingness to keep going and do your best. “Don’t limit yourself to what you think in your head… you can do more than that.”

13. apr. 202645 min
episode Episode 30: If you can't avoid it, enjoy it. – Lucy Jung artwork

Episode 30: If you can't avoid it, enjoy it. – Lucy Jung

Lucy Jung’s story is one of reflection, resilience, and purpose.   Growing up across South Korea and China, she was exposed early to different cultures, ways of thinking, and a core principle that would stay with her, focus on value, not just outcomes.   Creativity led her into design engineering, and eventually into medtech, where she saw an opportunity to combine problem-solving with real human impact.   But the defining shift came in her early twenties.   After being diagnosed with a brain tumour and facing major surgery, Lucy experienced life from the other side, not as a designer or researcher, but as a patient.   That moment forced reflection. On what actually matters. On how fragile things can be. And on the gap between research and real-world impact, where even a 1% improvement in daily life can mean everything.   It also built resilience.   Through uncertainty, recovery, and ongoing health challenges, Lucy developed a mindset grounded in perspective, focusing on what can be controlled, finding moments of lightness even in difficult situations, captured in a simple idea she still lives by: “If you cant' avoid it, enjoy it.”   And from that came clarity of purpose.   What began as a university project in Parkinson’s became something much bigger, a commitment to take meaningful ideas out of academia and into people’s lives. Not just chasing breakthrough innovation, but improving the day-to-day reality for those living with long-term conditions.   In this episode, we explore: * How reflection helps you stay aligned with what actually matters * Why resilience is built through perspective, not just endurance * How becoming a patient reshaped Lucy’s direction entirely * The responsibility of building in healthcare, and why value must come first * And how small, human-centred improvements can have life-changing impact   A conversation that challenges you to slow down, reflect, and build something that genuinely matters.

8. apr. 202649 min