We hear it all the time in biotech goal setting: “We can’t set goals until the Board signs off on our corporate strategy.”
The problem? That board meeting often doesn’t happen until February. By then, you’ve lost two of your twelve months and momentum.
At Danforth Advisors, we’ve worked with more than 1,500 life science companies. One of the most common missteps we see is delaying biotech goal setting until everything is “finalized”. This hesitation leads to operational drift and signals to your team that alignment and accountability are negotiable. They aren’t.
Start Early. Adjust Later.
Even if your corporate strategy isn’t finalized yet, you can, and should, begin laying the groundwork for effective goal setting in biotech well before the calendar flips to January.
“You can always adjust. You can always modify. But if you wait to begin until everything is finalized, you’ve already fallen behind.” Danforth Advisors HR Experts
A Rolling Approach to Biotech Goal Setting
Begin in December: Host departmental and individual goal-setting sessions using current KPIs, performance metrics, and known priorities. This helps create momentum while keeping teams focused.
Use a Rolling Framework: When corporate goals are finalized post-board meeting, refine existing goals- don’t restart the process. This prevents duplication of effort and supports better alignment.
Train Managers to Guide the Process: Not everyone is naturally skilled at facilitating effective goal-setting conversations. And in biotech, where teams are lean and leaders wear many hats, that matters. Invest in manager enablement so that goal conversations are structured, consistent, and clear.
“A lot of the conversations we see around goal setting are vague. You want clarity on outcomes, not just tasks. Managers need to know how to distinguish between the two.” – Danforth Advisors HR Experts
Best Practices for Biotech Goal Setting
Use SMART Goals: Make them Specific, Measurable, Achievable, Relevant, and Time-bound. In biotech, metrics matter- especially when tied to funding, product development, and hiring plans.
Limit Company-Wide Goals to 3–5: Especially at the early stage, less is more. Trying to pursue too many priorities dilutes focus. Danforth advisors consistently see better execution when companies narrow down to a handful of core, high-impact goals.
Distinguish Goals from Tasks: A goal is a measurable outcome (e.g., “Complete IND submission by Q3”). A task is a step toward that goal (e.g., “Draft protocol outline”). Confusing the two can muddy accountability and derail timelines.
Cascade and Align: Once corporate goals are in place, ensure every department and employee understands how their work contributes to the larger mission. Alignment isn’t automatic- it’s built through communication and iteration.
What Happens After You Set Goals?
Effective biotech goal setting doesn’t stop once objectives are written down. Make it a living process:
- Revisit them monthly or quarterly
- Identify gaps, changing priorities, or resource constraints
- Adjust without starting from scratch
- Review progress transparently with leadership and staff
Need Help Setting Goals in Biotech?
At Danforth Advisors, we help biotech companies operationalize clarity-turning strategic priorities into measurable, achievable goals at every level. Don’t let the calendar or boardroom delay your momentum. Reach out today.