Denemek ALTIN - Özgür
Data and digital is a force to reckon with when it comes to India
Express Pharma
|November 2024
In a recent interview, Suneela Thatte, VP and Head - Healthcare R&D for India, Merck KGaA Darmstadt discussed the evolution and strategic significance of the company's Global Capability Center (GCC) in India, established in 2020. She highlighted that while the GCC was initially set up for cost savings in drug development, the focus has shifted to harnessing India's vast talent pool, particularly in the scientific and medical fields, in an interview with Viveka Roychowdhury

India seems to have become a hub for pharma GCCs. Merck too set up its GCC in India in 2020. Was the strategy any different, given that it started a couple of years later than other pharma GCCs?
We see GCCs coming to India mainly for talent today. In all companies, Merck included, our initial thought process was to take some activities to India that allow us to save some costs as drug development is a very, very costly affair.
With a long gestation period.
Yes, exactly. You have to also account for the fact that you know not all drugs that you develop are going to make it. Essentially, the whole thought process was, let's kind of create this as a saving case whereby we then plough that money back into our R&D and we can then have more shots at the goalpost, with more drugs in development.
But very quickly the organisation realised that it's not just about the savings. There is huge untapped talent here, especially in the scientific and medical field. Therefore, the strategy needs to encompass a more holistic strategy whereby we get the hub to be part of the strategy.
The R&D strategy has to be front and center to the hub and vice versa. We thought that we have to look at it from the point of view of going beyond the traditional "GCC rules."
Therefore we started building more centers of excellence. I would say that this journey happened fairly quickly for us and we realised early on in the game, that if we have to really get disproportionate value out of the hub here, then we have to move very quickly into more technical, more strategic, more decision making rules and we are on that journey.
Have we reached our destination? Not quite. but I think we are moving in the right direction. We have created some centers of excellence already.
Bu hikaye Express Pharma dergisinin November 2024 baskısından alınmıştır.
Binlerce özenle seçilmiş premium hikayeye ve 9.000'den fazla dergi ve gazeteye erişmek için Magzter GOLD'a abone olun.
Zaten abone misiniz? Oturum aç
Express Pharma'den DAHA FAZLA HİKAYE

Express Pharma
Flexotherm Heating Tapes & Cords
Typical Applications of Heating Tapes and Cords in Industrial Solvent Handling
1 mins
October 2025

Express Pharma
DRIVING INDIA'S INNOVATION EDGE
Pharma leaders come together to highlight Bengaluru's R&D strength, tech ecosystem, and talent pool to power India Pharma Inc's shift from generics to innovation and global leadership
16 mins
October 2025

Express Pharma
Al compass: Transforming pharma commercialisation
As the world evolves at a rapid pace, pharma companies are embracing smarter approaches, leveraging Al across nearly every aspect of commercialisation, from market forecasting and personalised marketing to dynamic pricing and beyond. In this article, Neha Aathavale takes the pulse of the industry to explore who is taking note and how companies are beginning to put Al into action in their commercial operations
7 mins
October 2025

Express Pharma
PRIME NEO: New age doors from Gandhi Automation
Gandhi Automations presents the multi-composites, high-performance door PRIME NEO for clean environments. Complete Washable, Greater Sealing and Pressure Resistant.
1 mins
October 2025

Express Pharma
Unani Medicine: At crossroads of tradition and modernity
Manufacturers, academic institutions and research councils are working together to elevate Unani medicine through clinical validation and policy alignment with international standards, finds Swati Rana
7 mins
October 2025

Express Pharma
Single-Use Technologies in Biologics Manufacturing: Benefits, Challenges, and Growing Demand
The biopharmaceutical industry is increasingly adopting single-use technology (SUT) to achieve flexibility, cost efficiency, and faster time-to-market. Compared with stainless steel systems, SUT reduces capital investment, eliminates cleaning and sterilization steps, lowers contamination risk, and shortens production timelines.
1 min
October 2025

Express Pharma
Sustainable packaging with Romaco and Liveo Research
Recycable blister packs
3 mins
October 2025

Express Pharma
With India soon to be three times the population of the EU, it makes perfect sense to have manufacturing here
As part of Sweden's Focus Asia programme, a high-level SME delegation recently visited India to strengthen bilateral ties and explore collaborations across sectors including pharma, biotech and others. Building on the momentum of the \"Time for Sweden\" event, the visit underscored Sweden's commitment to innovation, sustainability, and co-creation with India. Among the delegation was Emil Alexander Byström, CEO of SpinChem AB, who in an interaction with Kalyani Sharma shared his insights on how advanced Swedish technologies like biocatalysis and the company's patented Rotating Bed Reactor (RBR) can accelerate India's pharma and biotech innovation journey while supporting sustainable growth.
3 mins
October 2025

Express Pharma
Cell therapy's next chapter: Industry embraces in-vivo innovation
Nikhil C Bhanumathi, Principal Clinical Lead, Thermo Fisher Scientific highlights that cell therapy is entering a bold new phase in 2025 as the industry shifts from complex, lab-based ex vivo CAR-T to faster, more accessible in vivo CAR-T innovations. This approach promises to expand access, lower costs, and potentially tackle solid tumors and autoimmune diseases
4 mins
October 2025

Express Pharma
Research misconduct ...can delay meaningful and reliable discoveries
Dr Gráinne McNamara, Research Integrity/Publication Ethics Manager, S. Karger AG explores how research misconduct, peer review fraud slow down pharma research. Of particular concern to India is the fact that India-based researchers constitute 5 per cent of articles in life sciences retracted between 1976-2023. India-based researchers also have one of the highest rates of retraction relative to the overall publication output. Over an email exchange with Viveka Roychowdhury, she details how publishers are now deploying AI tools, some of which contributed to the problem in the first place, to detect and avert fraudulent research submissions
6 mins
October 2025
Listen
Translate
Change font size