A Call to Lead @LifeScience ORG

Namir Hassan, Zelluna

37 min · 13 de may de 2026
Portada del episodio Namir Hassan, Zelluna

Descripción

Why do people with a sense of service make better leaders? How do you walk into the boardroom – on the cusp of clinical trials – and tell them the strategy is set to fail? And what does it mean to go from CSO to CEO on the brink of a pivot? Today I’m joined by Namir Hassan, CEO of Zelluna based in Oslo, Norway. Zelluna is developing next generation off the shelf cell therapies to address huge unmet needs like solid tumours in oncology. About LifeScience ORG It’s no secret that Europe is a global leader in generating translational science. We’re grateful at LifeScience ORG to have a community of over 400 life science CEOs – leaders driving change in biotech, medtech, techBio and healthcare. The conversations inside our community – stories of conviction, navigating challenges, and making bold decisions – inspire us every week. To hear the stories, lessons, and experiences of our life science leaders, listen to A Call to Lead @ LifeScience ORG, available on all good podcasting platforms. Chapters 1:32 A personal connection to cancer 4:12 From scientist to CEO: answering the call 4:25 Service as a leadership philosophy 6:58 Leading through a high-stakes pivot 15:25 Stepping into the unknown: leading outside your expertise 19:50 The challenges facing biotech leaders today 21:49 Activity is not progress 24:25 The biotech ecosystem in Oslo 27:51 Why solid tumors are so hard to treat 32:15 What the ecosystem needs to address solid cancer 34:58 A call for steady, accountable leadership

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22 episodios

episode Marc Gitzinger, BioVersys artwork

Marc Gitzinger, BioVersys

Why is self-awareness the secret ingredient to good leadership? How do you let go of a critical early team member? And what does it take to found a company during your PhD? Today I’m joined by Marc Gitzinger, CEO of BioVersys [https://www.bioversys.com/], a biotech based in Basel, Switzerland. BioVersys is a leader in the anti-infective space, developing new antibiotics for very highly drug-resistant infections. About LifeScience ORG It’s no secret that Europe is a global leader in generating translational science. We’re grateful at LifeScience ORG to have a community of over 400 life science CEOs – leaders driving change in biotech, medtech, techBio and healthcare. The conversations inside our community – stories of conviction, navigating challenges, and making bold decisions – inspire us every week. To hear the stories, lessons, and experiences of our life science leaders, listen to A Call to Lead @ LifeScience ORG, available on all good podcasting platforms. Chapters 01:16 — From the Lab to the Boardroom 02:51 — The Naivety That Gets You Started 04:08 — When the Board Asks the Impossible 09:12 — Managing Up: Working With Your Board 11:42 — Try Before You Buy: Choosing Independent Directors 15:25 — Three Experts, One Decision 17:05 — A Culture of Calculated Risk 19:05 — A Hub Unlike Any Other 20:40 — The Antibiotic Paradox 25:14 — Stigma, Silence, and Resistant Infections 35:15 — The Mirror Test

27 de may de 202638 min
episode Namir Hassan, Zelluna artwork

Namir Hassan, Zelluna

Why do people with a sense of service make better leaders? How do you walk into the boardroom – on the cusp of clinical trials – and tell them the strategy is set to fail? And what does it mean to go from CSO to CEO on the brink of a pivot? Today I’m joined by Namir Hassan, CEO of Zelluna based in Oslo, Norway. Zelluna is developing next generation off the shelf cell therapies to address huge unmet needs like solid tumours in oncology. About LifeScience ORG It’s no secret that Europe is a global leader in generating translational science. We’re grateful at LifeScience ORG to have a community of over 400 life science CEOs – leaders driving change in biotech, medtech, techBio and healthcare. The conversations inside our community – stories of conviction, navigating challenges, and making bold decisions – inspire us every week. To hear the stories, lessons, and experiences of our life science leaders, listen to A Call to Lead @ LifeScience ORG, available on all good podcasting platforms. Chapters 1:32 A personal connection to cancer 4:12 From scientist to CEO: answering the call 4:25 Service as a leadership philosophy 6:58 Leading through a high-stakes pivot 15:25 Stepping into the unknown: leading outside your expertise 19:50 The challenges facing biotech leaders today 21:49 Activity is not progress 24:25 The biotech ecosystem in Oslo 27:51 Why solid tumors are so hard to treat 32:15 What the ecosystem needs to address solid cancer 34:58 A call for steady, accountable leadership

13 de may de 202637 min
episode Reagan Jarvis, Anocca artwork

Reagan Jarvis, Anocca

What does it take to follow the science halfway round the world? How do you persuade a team of brilliant scientists to go from asking questions to building solutions? And why is “If you’re explaining, you’re losing” some of the worst advice in biotech? Today I’m joined by Reagan Jarvis, CEO of Anocca. Anocca is a T-Cell biology biotech based near Stockholm, Sweden, and they’re building a platform to decipher T-cell targets and targeting constructs to develop personalised and precise T-cell therapies. About LifeScience ORG It’s no secret that Europe is a global leader in generating translational science. We’re grateful at LifeScience ORG to have a community of over 400 life science CEOs – leaders driving change in biotech, medtech, techBio and healthcare. The conversations inside our community – stories of conviction, navigating challenges, and making bold decisions – inspire us every week. To hear the stories, lessons, and experiences of our life science leaders, listen to A Call to Lead @ LifeScience ORG, available on all good podcasting platforms. Chapters 01:35 — Following the Science Across the World 03:04 — From Postdoc Frustration to Founding a Company 04:37 — Taking the CEO Role 06:02 — Redirecting Scientists Toward Execution 10:59 — Communicating Differentiation in a Complex Field 13:53 — Lessons in Tone and Positioning 18:31 — Building Biotech in Europe 22:29 — Decoding T-Cell Biology and the Path to Personalised Therapies 32:39 — Leadership vs. Management

6 de may de 202636 min
episode Yogev Debbi, Mana Bio artwork

Yogev Debbi, Mana Bio

How do you run a company that is – quite literally – in a warzone? Why should you define your culture before building the company? And what is the secret to a co-founder relationship that’s lasted longer than most marriages? Today I’m joined by Yogev Debbi, CEO and co-founder of Mana Bio based in Tel Aviv, Israel. Mana is an AI based drug delivery startup, focusing on gene therapy including DNA and RNA-based therapeutics, and vaccines. About LifeScience ORG It’s no secret that Europe is a global leader in generating translational science. We’re grateful at LifeScience ORG to have a community of over 400 life science CEOs – leaders driving change in biotech, medtech, techBio and healthcare. The conversations inside our community – stories of conviction, navigating challenges, and making bold decisions – inspire us every week. To hear the stories, lessons, and experiences of our life science leaders, listen to A Call to Lead @ LifeScience ORG, available on all good podcasting platforms. Chapters 1:37 – From Software to Life Science: Finding Purpose Beyond Profit 3:41 – Building a Founding Team: Hiring Scientists When You're Not One 16:42 – The Co-Founder Relationship: Trust, Transparency, and Two Decades Together 19:17 – Defining Culture Before You Have a Company 21:05 – Using Investors as a Filter: Reverse Due Diligence During Ideation 32:38 – Leading Through Crisis: Resilience in an Active Conflict Zone 37:55 – The Gene Delivery Challenge: Why the Space Shuttle Matters More Than the Astronaut 39:41 – AI-Driven Drug Discovery: Redefining What a Failed Experiment Means 45:18 – The Tech-Bio Convergence: Bridging Two Worlds Within One Team

30 de abr de 202650 min
episode Jean-Pierre Latere, EsoBiotec artwork

Jean-Pierre Latere, EsoBiotec

What do you do when a family member gets a life-changing diagnosis? How do you convince investors to back the impossible? And why should you ask every expert to kill your idea? I’m joined by JP Latere, CEO of Esobiotec. Based in Belgium, Esobiotec pioneered in-vivo cell therapy and was acquired by AstraZeneca in a billion-dollar deal in 2025. Of course, we’ll talk more about the deal (and the science) at the end of the episode. About LifeScience ORG It’s no secret that Europe is a global leader in generating translational science. We’re grateful at LifeScience ORG to have a community of over 400 life science CEOs – leaders driving change in biotech, medtech, techBio and healthcare. The conversations inside our community – stories of conviction, navigating challenges, and making bold decisions – inspire us every week. To hear the stories, lessons, and experiences of our life science leaders, listen to A Call to Lead @ LifeScience ORG, available on all good podcasting platforms. Chapters 0:00 Introduction 2:35 When Cancer Gets Personal 5:47 No More Options 7:48 The Manufacturing Crisis 12:18 A Crazy Idea Worth Exploring 12:57 Betting on the Impossible 17:16 How to Kill an Idea 28:19 The China Pivot 34:06 Good Data Screams 38:54 Cell Therapy for Everyone 42:03 The Patient Is the Ultimate Shareholder

22 de abr de 202643 min