Welcome Guest ( Log In | Register )

Outline · [ Standard ] · Linear+

Science BIotech is not really good as government said?, Biotechnology graduate is hard to find?

views
     
adrian1984
post Sep 13 2011, 07:26 PM

Getting Started
**
Junior Member
133 posts

Joined: Jul 2010


QUOTE(tester @ Jun 3 2011, 11:10 PM)
Actually pay is pretty low for postdocs in the US if you compare with here (Australia), which is still low. (Unless, of course, you mean private industry) Even a plumber can make more money than us, seriously.

As for PCR for 50 times, we've all been through that at some point of our lab career. If you think about it, the technical aspect of science is mostly troubleshooting, and keep trying until you 'perfect' the method, although there are tasks that can be extremely challenging e.g. I am keen on developing a new surgical method (for animal model) which at this stage is still in its infancy.

Still, the most interesting aspect about it is not the techniques themselves, but how you come up with solutions to your problems. This is where creativity and novelty kick in, and the experience is extremely satisfying when you can prove your approach works.

Anyway I never said marketing is not good. It was my opinion and clearly stated that I  disagreed with your opinion. Therefore, it was merely my opinion that I think science is so much more interesting and satisfying than marketing. Period.
*
Need any help in PCR??? icon_rolleyes.gif
adrian1984
post Oct 1 2011, 08:35 AM

Getting Started
**
Junior Member
133 posts

Joined: Jul 2010


QUOTE(Michael J. @ Sep 20 2011, 11:55 AM)
Hmm.

I'm just wondering, what are the general challenges biotech graduates are currently facing now when applying for jobs? So far from the posts, what I've gathered are:

(i)  Not enough research posts
(ii)  Few known biotech companies in Malaysia
(iii) Money not enough (i.e. low pay)
(iv) Companies not hiring because not "specialized" degree/relevant skill-sets

Any thing else? Please do add to the list, if any.

As far as I know, there are 364 biotech companies in Malaysia, and another 3 more MNCs will be added to that list by 2012. Those listed on BiotechCorp's website are only the 188 companies with 'BioNexus' status, and are mostly pioneering companies, rather than mature ones. If you use that list as a basis of finding biotech-related jobs, then the chances for disappointment is comparatively higher.

This is my personal experience in the Malaysian biotech industry:

After graduating from Monash in 2006, I was initially hired by a phytopharma company. The job was very different from what I specialized in (developmental genetics), and so I decided to leave the company at the end of my 3-month probation period. Partly, it was due to a job offer I received from a Dutch-Malaysian company to be their plant breeder/seed technologist. As of October 2010, I've joined another company involved with the biotech industry as an intelligence officer. Just for information sake, my salary has made the following progression: RM1,800 => RM2,200 - RM 3,000 => RM3,300. It is low, but that's just my taxable salary. My remuneration package (which is largely non-taxable) makes my total income a lot more higher, eg. guaranteed "hardship" pay of RM10,000 or minimum 6-months salaray a year; free housing and utility; non-taxable subsidies amounting to RM200-RM300 a month etc. In addition, for a person who is classified as a "knowledge worker", there are tax rebates to enjoy. The nett result is my real income is closer to RM4,000 - RM5,000 a month.
Admittedly, being more business-oriented, the level of fundamental research for the 364-odd companies are lower. Also, companies moving from SME-status to mature status tend to be very picky and particular about the kind of skill-sets and training local graduates posses. I'm not sure how many graduates are aware about the Biotechnology Entreprenuership Special Training Program (BeST), but just as well to note it here. It is a 6-month intense training program aimed at preparing graduates for the local biotech industry needs. Usually, graduates are attached with an industry partner, which may be local or foreign (including overseas training), and most often, trainees gain job offers after completing the training stint at those companies/agencies. Since 2007 till end 2010, 1,040 graduates have opted to go through the program, with 650 of them securing jobs, while the rest them going on to develop start-ups within and outside Malaysia, or continuing with further studies.
I recall coming across someone mentioning that biotech is a "specialized" field. I would like to clarify that "biotech" is not actually a field of its own, but rather a conglomeration of various fields. And yes, a "biotech" graduate can hardly be considered a specialist in any one field. But I would add that a biotech graduate should also be more capable of looking at the bigger picture, of how to link different fields together in a synergistic fashion. For instance, a boiler engineer would likely know how to build stack fermentors, calibrate those fermentors etc., but would likely know little about optimising cell activity, input/output efficiency, biocontrol and metabolic rates etc. Likewise, a chemist might have a better understanding about chemical reactions and synthesization, but likely know little about mechanical assembly etc. The lack of knowledge in the other field does not affect the specific role of those workers, but it does affect the overall work efficiency and productivity of the business entity. This is were the "biotechnologist" comes in: as a coordinator and synergiser of those overlapping fields, a sort of "go-between". Biotechnology is an applied science after all.
I would like to add the comments from some biotech companies about our local graduates. These are MNCs and some local players; most of them admit that local graduates do have good knowledge of the sciences, but lack applicable skills or are too academic instead of industry-poised. Personally, I've been involved with the training of local biotech graduates when they came for BeST training in my previous company, and from first-hand experience, I can vouche for the legitimacy of these comments. Most of the graduates I've trained start-off with the wrong impression about biotechnology. As I've mentioned before, biotechnology is an applied science (i.e. research AND development), but most seem to have the idea that it is a fundamental science (i.e. all about research). Maybe it is also the fault of the universities that produced the graduates, but almost every graduate I've encountered wants to do fundamental research only, rather than finding ways of commercializing research findings. As for "Biotech not as good as government said", I must add this: Malaysia has achieved in less that a decade what other countries have been working on for 30 years or more. Even today, a very large component of US and EU biotech companies are still start-ups, with very few percentage of mature companies; and the biotech industry there started 50-60 years ago. Biotech in India started in the 1980s, and only today are these companies attaining some level of maturity and profitability. Yes, admittedly, certain quarters have over-hyped the biotech industry in Malaysia, but it does not mean the industry is all gloom and doom. The industry is growing at a rate of between 15%-20% per annum (depending on sector), with most of the growth being in healthcare biotech and industrial biotech. It is one of the country's fastest growing economic area, and is likely to overtake other sectors in the very near future.
*
All I can say is that the local university did not prepare biotech graduates for the entrepreneurship. Being a freelance tech support, I do find that most of the graduates are lacking of research skills as well. This problem only arise due to the lack of quality training from the universities.

 

Change to:
| Lo-Fi Version
0.0197sec    0.43    6 queries    GZIP Disabled
Time is now: 26th November 2025 - 08:14 AM