Employee-owned: what does it mean?

As an employee-owned (EO) business, all our colleagues have a stake in our future. We don’t have external shareholders; instead our colleagues are stakeholders who each benefit from a distribution of our company profits.

Why did Scitech choose to become employee-owned?

In 2012, we became a 100% employee-owned company. This ensures that we will always retain the values that are so important to us and, as we grow, it is our customers and employees that continue to benefit.

What benefits does this bring to Scitech employees?

As well as benefiting financially from the distribution of profits they receive, research shows that members of employee-owned businesses are more engaged, more fulfilled, and less stressed.

As an EO we are self-governing which means we can be flexible and make business decisions quickly that can benefit customers and colleagues. , This enabled us to bring forward a part payment of the 2022 profit distribution to our colleagues to assist with the cost of living crisis. This is in addition to several health and wellbeing initiatives we continue to develop for our mutual benefit.

How does Scitech’s employee-owned status benefit its clients?

At Scitech, our reputation is built on talented people who deliver on our promises to our clients. We take great care and pride in every aspect of our work with everyone contributing as part of a team. As employee owners, colleagues feel more motivated, and driven to succeed to deliver for our customers.

These benefits are also reflected in research which shows that employee-owned companies have demonstrated they can achieve higher productivity, greater levels of innovation and are more resilient to economic turbulence.

Annual charity donation to Shooting Star Children’s Hospices takes Scitech’s total to £74,000

In January, we visited Shooting Star Chase Children’s Hospices to make our annual charity donation, this year with a cheque for £3,600. This year’s donation, together with our Christmas raffle cheque takes our cumulative total raised to an impressive £74,000!

We first chose to raise money for the local children’s hospice when a colleague saw the invaluable support it provided to a friend’s child. Each year since, we have been donating a percentage of our profits and taking part in charity events. This year’s fundraising efforts included taking part in the hospice’s annual Sunrise Walk in Guildford, annual Christmas raffle, holding a Christmas Jumper Day, hosting a charity donation tower, and saw staff sell handmade items including freshly pressed apple juice and handmade shopping bags.

For 2023, we already have a team of “Scitech Snowdonia Sunnies” to take on the Snowdonia Sunrise Walk challenge in March, plus a few of us will be booking onto the North Downs Ultra Challenge 50km walk in July. Our efforts are getting more adventurous!

Lewis White, Mechanical Engineering Team Leader and company charity Trustee, said: “We are very proud to be able to continue to support the work of Shooting Star Children’s Hospice. The care and support they provide to families in their greatest time of need is invaluable, and we are delighted to be able to help them in any way we can. We look forward to continuing our support partnership with to Shooting Star Children’s Hospices.”

Shooting Star Children’s Hospice is a leading children’s hospice charity that provides care and support to babies, children and young people with life-limiting conditions, and their families. It has been providing vital respite, palliative and end-of-life care for families across west London and Surrey since 1994-5.

Find out more about Shooting Star Children’s Hospice, or to make a donation.

Commitment to staff wellbeing: spinal health

We know the importance of positively supporting the health, safety and wellbeing of all Scitech staff and contractors. Our wellbeing strategy is key to fostering a supportive environment across our teams.

As part of our wellbeing activities, we recently partnered with Halsa Chiropractic & Physiotherapy practice to offer a talk on spinal health at Scitech House, our head office in Godalming. Colleagues were invited to book a posture assessment – analysing back health, top to toe posture and alignments at key points of the body using a spinal analysis machine.

The talk focussed on stress and the nervous system, the spine and posture – with tips and guidance for spinal health and wellbeing. Dr David Mutombo explained how the spine connects with every function and organ in the human body and, as a result, plays a crucial role in maintaining a healthy nervous system.

Emma Dawas, HR Manager at Scitech, said: “Dr Mutombo gave a fascinating talk, which was very interactive and was very well received by everyone who attended. I think we can all benefit from his advice and tips for a healthy spine and nervous system.

Scitech’s wellbeing strategy builds upon all the required regulatory health & safety and environmental requirements to provide a holistic approach to staff wellbeing. It is designed to support a range of life’s challenges both inside and outside the workplace and part of this approach include events, webinars and training that are of benefit to all colleagues.

Women in the workplace: why we launched our Women at Scitech group

Back in 2020, as the first COVID lockdown was announced, one of our Directors and his mentee were having a catch-up. At that time, she was the only female in our Cardiff office and we were aware the COVID pandemic had the potential to heighten the feeling of remoteness. During the mentoring session, it was recognised that this female engineer, who was a working mother, didn’t have the means to easily connect with others so the idea for a virtual women’s group emerged.

The idea was initially as a means to put our virtual arms around our colleague and bring her into the wider Scitech family but, when launched, the virtual group had evolved to become a support group that could unite all of Scitech’s female workforce and empower them to share experiences and ideas while provide support for each other.

Nurturing our female talent

Two years later, the group is an established feature in the Scitech events calendar with meetings held every quarter. Its purpose is to nurture our female talent, ensure that they are supported to pursue leadership roles, if that is the path they wish their career to take, and make sure that their unique health and well-being needs are met. It also offers an opportunity to get together to build friendships – meetings are now face-to-face with those who can’t be there in person also able to join virtually.

The group has tackled subjects such as how we ensure our female staff have access to women’s toilets on our construction sites and making sure there is appropriate clothing for women. Topics are varied and include women’s health, menopause, attracting women to engineering and construction careers, improving working life for women, unconscious bias in the workplace and gender bias in recruitment. This has resulted in positive changes to some of our family orientated polices and greater appreciation of what women might be looking for when applying for roles at Scitech.

Inspirational guest speakers

The latest meeting, held in December, featured a guest speaker. Natasha Westbury, a senior leader at HP, who was invited to share her experiences of working in the IT and telecommunications sectors – both of which are male orientated. She shared how she has benefitted from being part of a women’s network, and how it helped her to achieve success and provided support during the past 8 years working in senior roles.

Natasha shared how it was important to her that she selected an employer that had stated its ambition to gender parity; HP became the first Fortune 100 Tech company to commit to Gender Parity in Leadership in May 2021. Currently more than 30% of HP’s leaders are women (which is nearly double the industry’s benchmark). Natasha adds that her career hasn’t always been easy being female and juggling the demands of working in these environments.

Speaking at the Women at Scitech meeting, Natasha said: “I am proud to say that, in 2022, I work for a company that openly understands that business performance improves when we attract, retain, and develop women. We still have a way to go to facilitate gender inclusion to ensure equal opportunity in the workplace, which is why I am passionate about contributing to discussion of these issues”.

Natasha believes that encouraging and supporting women to pursue their career goals and leadership aspirations in a community enables change, and is a responsibility that everyone should uphold.

Emma Dawas, HR Manager at Scitech, said: “We would like to thank Natasha for generously giving her time to share her experiences and provide such an inspirational talk to our staff. We are proud to have several women on our leadership board at Scitech and hope to further increase this as we support our female staff to progress and reach senior roles.

“Through our Women at Scitech group, and our wider diversity and inclusion work, we will continue to support and nurture our female staff. We look forward to inviting other female role models to share their experience and further build the network for our staff.”

Spotlight on Jack O’Toole, Mechanical Equipment Engineer

When Jack O’Toole began his BSc Industrial Product Design course at Aston University, in Birmingham, he didn’t envisage a career with a specialist design and construction company operating in the pharmaceutical or life science sectors. But seven years on, he wouldn’t want to work in any other sector.

“I always saw myself being part of a design and engineering group but I didn’t plan on niching into this area,” he explains. “It just didn’t occur to me at that point but I’m pleased it’s the path I have followed.”

The value of student placements

Jack’s first insight into pharmaceutical manufacturing came when he secured a three-month placement with Scitech during a summer breaks from university. This saw him work under the mentorship of Lewis White, Scitech’s Mechanical Engineering Team Leader.

“I was given the opportunity to support the team with some site-based work, which was a fantastic experience. One stand-out project for me was supporting Guys’ and St Thomas’ Hospital with the development of a radiopharmacy and installation of ‘hot cell’ lines for handling diagnostic radio-isotopes. I was able to oversee the specialist equipment contractor to solve equipment issues. I must have done a good job as I was offered a permanent role to start at the end of my degree.”

Masters degree sponsorship

Jack returned to Scitech as a Graduate Mechanical Engineer and received sponsorship to complete his MSc Mechanical Engineering. “I knew I wanted to complete a Masters degree and was really fortunate that Scitech provided funding and supported me by ensuring that I had adequate study time.

“Scitech is fantastic at supporting its staff with training, whether it is through official courses, CPD opportunities or mentorship. I am now working towards achieving Chartership with the Institute of Mechanical Engineers, which Lewis is supporting me to achieve.”

Career development opportunities

Jack adds: “Scitech is very good at ensuring that you can gain experience in other areas too. For example, I have mentoring once a week with the head of mechatronics. I have gained more skills through this and have been able to help with a project on site. That is further experience that I have gained. All I needed to do was ask and it was arranged.”

Looking at his career to date, Jack reflects on the opportunities that Scitech has provided and the projects that have taken him across Europe and to the United States of America.

“One of the attractive aspects of this role is that there is always a challenge. I have worked on a lot of radiopharmaceutical and cell & gene therapy projects, as these are areas where Scitech has significant expertise. With radiopharma you must understand and consider many different aspects – it’s not just process and physics. It covers every aspect from the safety of the operator, to the efficiency of the line, to the ergonomics affecting the workforce. Different companies and organisations have different requirements and challenges and so it always keeps it interesting.”

Promotion and career progression

Jack is now enjoying working as a project lead on a cell and gene therapy project, taking on more responsibility, and looking forward to leading on bigger and more complex projects as his career progresses.

“I feel lucky that I secured my initial internship with Scitech. It has set me off on a really interesting career path and I have been offered lots of opportunities that have allowed me to progress. The team is very supportive and so I know they are there if I need help or advice. It provides a safety net but at the same time provides the opportunity to show what you can do and progress. I would definitely urge anyone who is specialising in mechanical engineering to consider a career in this sector; it is really exciting and provides a lot of opportunities.”

● Discover what Mechanical Equipment Engineering career opportunities and job vacancies are available at Scitech.

Staff training: our commitment to upskilling our staff

So this month our staff were invited to attend a series of business skills and leadership and management training delivered by Bespoke Training Services (Wiltshire) Ltd, a company which specialises in tailored training courses designed to meet the specific needs of its clients.

Emma Dawas, HR Manager at Scitech, said: “We recognise the importance of maintaining high levels of competency in all skill sets and not just through technical abilities. In offering regular training, we can ensure that our staff feel confident, equipped and supported to deliver high quality work and safeguard against unnecessary stresses.

“We have been working with Bespoke Training for five years now and are always impressed by how Anne and the team personalise each session according to the needs of the individual team members attending to ensure everyone gets what they need from the session.”

The leadership and management training is just one of the many professional development workshops provided alongside lunch & learns, CPD sessions and access to training via our online training platform. We also encourage attendance at relevant conferences and seminars to ensure staff learning and insight within the sector is up-to-date.

Anne Messer, Managing Director at Bespoke Training Services, said: “It is so important for companies to recognise that training isn’t a checkbox exercise and that investing in people and people management is crucial to any business success. Scitech is very good at recognising this. I have enjoyed working with Scitech and its employees for many years, ensuring that they have the skills they need.”

To find out more about working for Scitech, explore our Careers section on our website.

Inspiring the next generation of engineers

Some of our staff took time out of their busy schedule last week to visit George Abbot School, in Guildford, Surrey, to share what it is like working for a specialist design and construction company servicing highly regulated industries including biotechnology, pharmaceutical, life sciences and radiopharmaceutical.

Farzad Mohebati, Senior Architect, Nadira Adjali, Principal Mechanical Building Services Engineer, Hazel Hatley, Process Engineer, and Emma Dawas, HR Manager visited the school for its Career Fair, in which local and national businesses were invited to share what career prospects are available across varying fields.

The team talked to students from years 9, 11, 12 and 13, about the types of subjects and qualifications that would be required for a career at Scitech and explained what opportunities such a career could offer. This was aided by a range of guides and material provided by the Chartered Institute of Building Services Engineers (CIBSE) aimed specifically at the year groups represented at the careers day.

Emma Dawas, HR Manager at Scitech, said: “It was a real pleasure to be back in a school taking part in events such as this, talking to students about career opportunities in Design, Engineering and Construction. The George Abbot students were highly engaged when talking to our experts in Process and Building Services Engineering and Architecture in particular. It was also really nice to exercise our Corporate Social Responsibility agenda and give something back to our local community.”

If you are interested in our team visiting your school, contact our Careers Office.

Visit our website for details of current job vacancies.

National Engineering Day: Scitech improving lives through engineering

At Scitech, we provide consultancy, design, construction, qualification and validation for high value manufacturing, research, emerging technologies, and highly regulated industries including biotechnology, pharmaceutical, life sciences and radiopharmaceutical. Our engineers are at the heart of what we do, working with and supporting our clients to upgrade existing facilities, debottlenecking and improving manufacturing capacity, developing new processes or designing a new facility.

The companies and organisations that we support are involved in drug discovery, diagnostics, and pharmaceutical manufacturing, all of which help to treat illnesses and keep people healthy. We also support other industries, such as the animal health sector – working with companies that develop and manufacture veterinary medicines – consumer health companies who manufacture vitamins and other healthcare products – all of which contribute to improving lives.

Designing a new facility

Through our work, we have supported many companies to scale up production, moving a product from small scale to large scale production whilst maintaining efficiency and safeguarding the integrity of the medicine. The rapid scaling of existing production processes is something that proved absolutely critical during the COVID-19 pandemic and is an ongoing need across the pharmaceutical sector. Often when scaling for commercial production, a company will require the design of a new facility, requiring the input of the full suite of specialist engineers spanning design, process engineers, mechanical engineers and those with expertise in building services, qualification and validation, for example.

We are currently supporting a biotechnology company with a large expansion project at its existing facility. The project involves significant new build and refurbishment on an operational site, with regulatory compliance drivers, including controlled environments and processes. Our engineers are supporting all stages of the project from procurement, through to construction, commissioning, and validation. The result will lead to significant increase in the manufacturing capacity of recombinant human albumin – a constituent of biologic therapeutic products that is used to optimise drug dosing and enhance therapeutic performance of active pharmaceutical agents.

Our engineers support projects such as this across the UK and Europe. Through our European team, we supported the development of a research and development (R&D) facility allowing clinical phase 3 cGMP production within an existing building. Our specialist engineers designed and built the new laboratory facility, ensuring that it was compliant with BSL3 and cGMP guidelines.

Developing new processes

While process engineers were integral to the multi-disciplinary teams mentioned in the examples above, we feel they deserve a closer look for the impact and value they can provide. Our expert process engineers are integral to the success of our projects and are consulted throughout the project life-cycle.

For example, we were approached by a biotechnology company to provide a front-end engineering study, including a feasibility study and an extended study for design optioneering, for a standalone large scale manufacturing facility that incorporated its innovative reaction vessel. Our engineers developed different iterations for the facility design considering different scales of bioreactors and downstream manufacturing process, process scheduling and options to implement the services and utilities to assist with the client’s investment strategy. This was to ensure the client could make the right choices based on their business needs and desired outcome.

Our process engineers lead workshops to define the fundamentals of process, engineering, biologics, and chemistry in a combined approach and formulate the requirements for the required facility. It led to the development of an overall programme and cost plans to estimate the full turnkey delivery of the commercial manufacturing facility inclusive of the design, User Requirement Specifications development, procurement, installation, commissioning, construction services.

Improving manufacturing capacity

At Scitech, many of our clients are looking to improve manufacturing capacity. Technology is constantly evolving and improving, and over time companies need to replace and upgrade existing equipment or will look to make improvements to existing production lines to maximise the output they can achieve. Often the need for capacity improvements is driven by commercial need and is essential to ensure that the medicines, devices and healthcare products are available for members of the public when they need them. We are proud to play a part in supporting companies to meet this demand.

For example, our engineers at our European office were approached to support an increase in manufacturing capacity at a secondary packaging plant that packaged ophthalmic prescription drugs. They supported the client with the development of user requirement specifications for 33 machines and provided final equipment evaluation and selection. The team developed the line layouts taking into account building restrictions before undertaking and documenting all qualification and validation according to required regulations. The result was the successful installation of five secondary packaging lines providing a total production capacity of 57 million packs per annum.

Specialist expertise

Many of our engineers hold specific expertise in niche areas, becoming subject matter experts in, for example, specific equipment installations and within certain fields. This is particularly the case with our radiopharmaceuticals subject matter experts who are widely recognised and respected in the industry. Their expertise has seen us provide consultancy on radiopharmaceutical facilities around the world and led to a large scale project with Guy’s and St Thomas’ NHS Foundation Trust and King’s College London which spanned 10 years.

During this project, our specialist team supported the trust to relocate its diagnostic scanning cameras from the basement scanning facility in St Thomas’ Hospital in London to a new scanning suite on the first floor. The team also converted the old scanning facility into a new radioisotope manufacturing facility for Research and Development (R&D) and for clinical manufacturing of isotopes for use by the new first floor diagnostic scanning facility.

The diagnostic scanning facility improves lives by providing early indications of cancer sites within the body. The radio-labelled isotope mimics glucose which the cancer needs to grow within the body. On introduction to the body the cancer site absorbs the radioactive glucose which is detected by the scanning camera, the image of which can see the radioisotope as a bright spot where cancer sites are present. This technique allows clinicians to establish the size and location of cancers. It is then possible to determine if a particular course of treatment has stabilised (same number of spots) or is reducing (fewer spots) a cancer, or indeed if a cancer has grown/worsened (more spots) which may necessitate a change in treatment or an increase in dose or intensity. The early detection and effective treatment of cancer clearly benefits society by reducing the amount, and duration, of unpleasant cancer treatment (for example chemotherapy).

The scanning facility uses radioisotopes made within the ground floor radioisotope manufacturing facility. For this project, we provided all design stages from feasibility design to detailed design of facility and utilities. We performed all specialist equipment integration, commissioning planning and support and performed all quality testing and associated document closure for the medicinal and nuclear regulations. The design stages included the development of the layout for the particle accelerator, its concrete bunker, the specialist radioisotope handling equipment and the associated support quality control laboratories to meet the hospital user requirements.

Qualification and validation

Our CQV business unit, with our team of validation engineers, has a vital role to play in assuring quality and validating processes, systems and equipment within laboratories and manufacturing facilities.

When taking a product from R&D to commercialisation time to market is critical. Our team can support companies from project inception and ensure assurity of audit compliance, all of which brings drugs to patients quicker.

In addition, we are uniquely positioned to be able to deploy an engineer or team very rapidly – something that is critical if a problem has developed on a production line meaning that manufacturing has had to stop. Our engineers are able to quickly respond and support the qualification and validation following the installation of new equipment or repairs meaning that any downtime is kept to a minimum. This means that any pause in the production of the vaccines, medicines and other therapeutics are kept to a minimum – something that is increasingly important during times when there are shortages of drugs.

We are proud of the contribution that our engineers, and all of our team members, provide to deliver quality results for our customers, helping to ensure that the laboratories and facilities operate as they should within the stringent regulations required.

Proud sponsors of ISPE UK Affiliate Annual Event 2022

Scitech is proud to announce that we are sponsoring the International Society for Pharmaceutical Engineering (ISPE) UK Affiliate annual conference, which will take place at the Royal Armouries Museum in Leeds on 10 November.

For the second consecutive year, we are platinum sponsors of the event which will see members and industry guests congregate for an exciting programme exploring topics such as the challenges of Annexe 1 with innovation in rapid H2O2 validation; carbon reduction engineering in the aesthetic Pharma Industry; and insights from the MHRA on challenges of the pandemic and future direction.

As long standing ISPE UK members, Scitech values the knowledge sharing and cross sector insight that the annual conference provides.

Colin Parks, Development & Strategy Director, said: “We are delighted to sponsor this year’s annual conference and award ceremony. As a specialist design, engineering and consultancy firm, delivering cutting edge, intelligent solutions for the pharmaceutical, biotechnology, life sciences and technology sectors, we value the work of ISPE. We are looking forward to connecting with colleagues, clients and industry partners at the event.”