ThePostdocWay's Podcast

ThePostdocWay

ThePostdocWay was created to provide an interactive space for social exchange between postdoctoral scholars. Our mission is to foster a sense of community by addressing issues related to the 'postdoc experience' and providing practical solutions. This objective is facilitated by engaging in original discussions focused on career development and exploration.

Episodes

  1. Episode 13_Dr. David Giltner

    11/10/2013

    Episode 13_Dr. David Giltner

    David M. Giltner, Ph.D. is a physicist by training, and a product manager at Zolo Technologies, a company that develops laser-based combustion monitoring systems for industrial furnaces.  He spent most of his graduate career thinking he would follow the traditional scientist career path into academia. It was during his final year in grad school that he decided the lifestyle and career of a professor was just not for him.  Two months after defending his dissertation, he moved to California with a three month consulting contract from a silicon valley laser company as his only career prospect. In the 17 years since then, he has held a wide range of positions developing laser-based products for optical communications, materials processing, remote sensing, and lab instrumentation applications.  In that time, not once has he regretted his decision to make the leap from the 'traditional' science career path to the world of product development. He remembers the challenge of selling himself as a scientist in an engineer’s world, however, so in 2010 he published “Turning Science into Things People Need.” This book contains interviews with other scientists who successfully made the transition from science research into industry.  It is a very useful career reference for any scientist who is considering a similar move and wants to understand what to expect and how to best position themselves to create a rewarding career. This Spotlight Conversation was conducted and recorded by Dr. Brian Postdoc from ThePostdocWay on October 2013.

    54 min
  2. Episode 10_Beryl Lieff Benderly

    10/05/2013

    Episode 10_Beryl Lieff Benderly

    Prize-winning freelance journalist Beryl Lieff Benderly contributes both the monthly “Taken for Granted” column and frequent blog posts on science labor force and early-career issues and blogs to the Science magazine website. Her hundreds of articles have appeared in Miller-McCune, Scientific American, Scientific American Mind, Prism, Slate, Ladies Home Journal, Smithsonian and the New York Times and LA Times book reviews, among many other prominent publications. The author of 8 books, she has appeared on CNN, the “Today Show,” and several NPR stations and has taught science and health writing at the University of Maryland and in workshops co-sponsored by the International Center for Journalists and universities in Mexico, in Panama and Chile and the U.S. National Institutes of Health. Elected a Fellow of American Association for the Advancement of Science, she is treasurer of the National Association of Science Writers. Her 10 national writing prizes were awarded by IEEE-USA, the American Association of University Professors, the American Psychological Association and other organizations and cover topics including biomedical engineering, the scientific labor market, cancer genetics and linguistics. She prepared for her writing career by long ago earning an M.A. in anthropology at the University of Pennsylvania as a Woodrow Wilson Fellow and later dropping out of doctoral work at Washington University (St. Louis). This episode was recorded September 23 and conducted by Dr. Brian Postdoc for ThePostdocWay Spotlight Conversation Series.

    55 min
  3. Episode 8_Dr. Samuel Wertheimer

    08/19/2013

    Episode 8_Dr. Samuel Wertheimer

    Crowdsourcing Science: Dr. Samuel Wertheimer is Managing Director of Poliwogg, LLC, a newly formed company that seeks to finance future healthcare companies through crowdfunding. In brief, crowdfunding involves raising money for projects from private investors via online platforms such as Kickstarter or Indiegogo. However, in the words of Dr. Wertheimer, “What none of those companies can offer is an equity share in a company…“[Poliwogg] will enable individuals to purchase equity in innovation. Dr. Wertheimer started his scientific career at the bench following the attainment of his master’s degree in epidemiology and his doctorate in biomedical sciences. However, concerns about supporting himself and his family on a postdoc salary made him realize that the academic life was not for him. As Dr. Wertheimer notes, “Academic science is a fantastic career if you’re in the top 5% of grant recipients. Otherwise, it’s a brutal life.” Dissatisfaction with academia led him to a local law firm. There, he learned about patent law and how biotech intellectual property claims were prosecuted. During this time, Dr. Wertheimer also took an interest in the financial services industry, learning how biotech start-ups raised venture capital and get funded. He eventually joined OrbiMed Advisors and enabled this biotech investment group to raise and invest over $1.5 billion. Currently at Poliwogg, Dr. Wertheimer will soon be helping biotech start-ups utilize a novel way of raising capital- by working with individual investors who will buy equity shares of those start-ups. In this interview, Dr. Wertheimer shares his 20 year journey away from the bench, to the courtroom, and then to the boardroom- and all without having a J.D. or MBA. He also notes how, despite his work seeming far removed from the world of beakers and culture flasks, “I use a great deal more science today than I ever did when I was a bench scientist.” Dr. Wertheimer is also a keynote speaker at the upcoming 2013 Bioscience Vision Summit in Madison, Wisconsin. Dr. Wertheimer has taken some unexpected paths to stand at the intersections of business and science, financial services and social media. This conversation was recorded by Dr. Halina Postdoc and edited by Dr. Brian Postdoc @ThePostdocWay in August 2013.

    33 min
  4. Episode 7_Dr. Mark Staudt

    07/07/2013

    Episode 7_Dr. Mark Staudt

    Peering into the World of Technology Transfer – Where Business, Law, and Science Meet. Our guest this week, Mark Staudt, is a Licensing Associate at the Wisconsin Alumni Research Foundation (WARF) located on the University of Wisconsin-Madison campus. Often termed Technology Transfer, this field involves working with professors and other campus inventors to determine the best commercial path forward for their technology. Frequently this involves some type of intellectual property protection, which we help to secure most often in the form of a patent. Like many in the field of technology transfer, Mark followed a tortuous path to arrive at his current position. It began at the University of Texas with degrees in Chemical Engineering and the Plan II humanities program. After a short stint as an engineer in industry with BASF, it wound back to academia at the University of Wisconsin for a PhD in Biomolecular chemistry. Looking for opportunities away from the bench, he next took an internship at WARF that initially introduced him to this field where he has finally found a home – first working at Rice University’s Office of Technology Transfer, then rejoining the WARF licensing team back in Madison. As you can imagine, such a varied background leads to an interesting story. In this episode, Mark shares some of his thoughts on his current job, and how despite the many seemingly convoluted turns, he’s managed to find a great fit for himself in technology transfer. This conversation was conducted and recorded in June 2013 by Dr. Brian Postdoc @ThePostdocWay.

    55 min

About

ThePostdocWay was created to provide an interactive space for social exchange between postdoctoral scholars. Our mission is to foster a sense of community by addressing issues related to the 'postdoc experience' and providing practical solutions. This objective is facilitated by engaging in original discussions focused on career development and exploration.