To celebrate International Women's Day, we decided to create a spotlight series on some inspirational women in our ON community. Next up we have Rachel Dennison (ON 12-16), Chief of Staff at Oxford Medical Products.
What are you doing now for work?
I am the Chief of Staff at Oxford Medical Products, a biotech start-up company who have developed a non-pharmacological treatment for overweight and obesity called Sirona, as well as a new system for delivering drugs orally rather than as injections. My role is at the intersection of science and business, helping to commercialise the technology that has been developed by our fantastic team of scientists and engineers.
What does a typical day entail?
The best thing about the Chief of Staff role and start-ups is that there is no typical day, every day is different. The company is currently raising a round of investment, so at the moment my days are spent building pitch decks, pitching to investors and attending conferences. The product will begin its final clinical trial for weight loss this year, so I am also busy helping to design and set up that trial in both the UK and US.
How have you got to where you are today?
After leaving Norwich school I studied neuroscience at Nottingham University and undertook my master’s year at the Spaulding Rehabilitation Hospital, Harvard Medical School, where I worked predominantly on neuroregeneration and spinal cord injury. At this point I knew I loved science but I didn’t want my whole career to be in the lab. After that, I got a business internship at Complement Therapeutics, a biotech start-up in London who are developing a gene therapy for a disease of the eye. This was the first time I got to merge business and science and is what drove me to study an MPhil in Bioscience Enterprise at Cambridge University, which is a course focused on the commercialisation of scientific research and building science-based start-ups. Some friends and I then started building our own start-up company called Nimo Biotech, where we developed a saliva-based glucose monitor for diabetics and we won the Cambridge University start-up pitch competition. This solidified my want to be involved in the start-ups, so when I saw the role advertised for Chief of Staff at Oxford Medical Products, I jumped at it.
What was your fondest memory of your time at Norwich School?
Singing Jerusalem at the end of term.
How do you think NS helped you get where you are today?
Mr Large’s biology lesson on the brain is what first sparked my interest in neuroscience, and Mr Croston’s patience and guidance when I changed my mind at least 15 times on what university course I wanted to study, was also greatly appreciated and incredibly helpful.
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