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Facing an intensely competitive global oncology market, the leadership team of a global biotech company required a strategy to inform efficient and coordinated decision-making regarding its rapidly maturing portfolio.
At the time, total revenues for the global oncology market were expected to exceed $150 billion in 2020 and grow to over $240 billion by 2025. Meanwhile, the frequency of launches for many oncology therapeutics had increased over the last 10 years, driven by an improved understanding of disease biology and higher levels of competition. Still, few companies achieved their sales projections in the ever-tighter market.
Within the portfolio, the biotech had a growing pipeline of oncology products spanning multiple tumor types, mechanisms of action, and potential indications. The leadership team aimed to launch and commercialize at least two new products in the coming years. However, because the company was growing its early pipeline while simultaneously advancing assets into later stages of development and commercialization, the leadership team expressed concerns about seamlessly executing against both objectives. As such, they sought to evolve their existing strategic planning capabilities and governance in order to make critical portfolio prioritization decisions.
In this context, the leadership team enlisted Guidehouse’s extensive experience supporting global companies to assess and make recommendations for optimizing the biotech’s product development and commercialization (PD&C) process – from preclinical work through development, launch, and beyond.
Guidehouse conducted a rigorous and objective strategic assessment of the biotech’s existing PD&C process. Based on the results, the team prepared recommendations to evolve the current process into a fit-for-purpose, future-proof, and scalable PD&C model to enable and inform critical decision-making, while preserving rapid and quality execution excellence.
Guidehouse performed an organizational diagnostic to understand existing processes, governance structures, and capabilities in order to identify and assess critical business challenges. Team structures, roles and responsibilities, key operating processes, and the governance model were evaluated through over 25 stakeholder interviews across development and commercialization functions from the biotech, leading to several insights.
First, the organization, with a historically manageable pipeline, made product investment decisions individually. With a growing and maturing portfolio, appropriately managing investment allocation across a larger number of pipeline assets and brands would be important for the organization.
Second, the company lacked structure in decision-making processes. Different governance committees often met to discuss the same topics and make the same types of decisions with regard to investments, project strategy, and related issues, and sometimes made key decisions during “water cooler” meetings. This informal structure resulted in misalignment within the organization and an inefficient use of resources across it, among other obstacles. Product teams over-relied on the undefined governance structures to devise and manage the execution of compound strategies, which also would be unsustainable at scale. By formalizing governance structures, decision-making processes, and developing strategic planning materials, the product teams would be more integrated and empowered to strategically develop compound plans, get endorsement from governance, and then execute independently.
Leveraging these critical insights combined with detailed assessment and analysis, Guidehouse developed an integrated PD&C process in order to:
Guidehouse also performed robust benchmarking analysis of oncology companies of all sizes and oncology divisions within large pharmaceutical companies to ascertain industry best practices for PD&C and associated governance principles.
Based on the above insights and in-house biotech expertise, the end result was an integrated and deployable PD&C process that included a clear governance structure, planning strategy, and implementation support.
“Guidehouse provided great expertise and benchmarks in supporting the design of a PD&C process, allowing the team to develop a process targeted to our needs,” said the biotech’s vice president of commercialization.
This solution was designed to enable the biotech to manage, sustain, and continue to grow its maturing portfolio. Highlights of the solution’s key elements include:
The evolved PD&C process will future proof the organization as its portfolio continues to expand and mature. Equipped with this new process, governance structures, and capabilities, the biotech’s team is better equipped and prepared to make complex, coordinated, and informed investment decisions, strategically plan PD&C at the product and portfolio level, and continue executing on key activities with speed and quality. These advances have enabled the organization to be more agile and competitive in the fast-evolving oncology marketplace.
“Guidehouse helped design a fit-for-purpose PD&C process that allowed greater synergy between clinical development and commercialization functions to ensure greater value for the company,” said the biotech’s COO.
Maya Desai, Director
Guidehouse is a global consultancy providing advisory, digital, and managed services to the commercial and public sectors. Purpose-built to serve the national security, financial services, healthcare, energy, and infrastructure industries, the firm collaborates with leaders to outwit complexity and achieve transformational changes that meaningfully shape the future.