Welcome to Next Phase Recruitment! Please see below our current jobs that match your search criteria. For a broader job search please visit the home page or call us on 01403 216216 to discuss career options in other areas of Life Science and Technology.
Welcome to Next Phase Recruitment! Please use the above link to see our current jobs that match your search criteria. For a broader job search please visit the home page or call us on 01403 216216 to discuss career options in other areas of Life Science and Technology.
CDMO Project Manager
CDMO Project Managers coordinate outsourced manufacturing and development activities for clients of Contract Development and Manufacturing Organizations. They ensure milestones, budgets, and quality standards are achieved across multiple external stakeholders.
Key activities:
Acting as the main client liaison – Managing communication, expectations, and reporting throughout project lifecycles.
Coordinating internal cross-functional teams – Including QA, regulatory, process development, and logistics.
Managing timelines and deliverables – Ensuring tech transfers, scale-up, validation, and release activities stay on track.
Overseeing documentation and compliance – Ensuring GMP, GDP, and contractual obligations are consistently met.
Resolving issues and facilitating decision-making – Managing deviations, change controls, and contract negotiations when needed.
This role demands a strong understanding of CMC, supply chain operations, and client relationship management in the biopharma sector.
Worthing
Worthing is a large seaside town located in West Sussex in South East England. The cities of Brighton and Chichester are close by and London is only 50 miles away. Worthing is a great place to live and work with good schools and transport links as well as a pier, sports facilities, a theatre, cinemas and a wide variety of shops, restaurants and bars. Worthing also benefits from being located at the foot of the South Downs, the UK’s most recent National Park, which offers fabulous scenery, marked trails for walking, horse riding and mountain biking. Worthing was first inhabited in the Bronze Age, became a farmstead in the Roman era and remained a small agricultural fishing village for centuries after that. Thanks to Princess Amelia, who decided to visit Worthing in 1798 to help her recuperate from TB, Worthing became a fashionable destination for wealthy members of London’s Society to try out the beneficial effects of bathing in the sea. Tourism is still a major employer in Worthing together with pharmaceuticals, medical devices production and financial services.