Full-Time
Develops and delivers biopharmaceutical medicines
No salary listed
Senior
Company Historically Provides H1B Sponsorship
United States
Field-based role; may require travel within the United States.
Bristol Myers Squibb (BMS) develops and delivers medicines aimed at treating serious diseases, particularly in oncology, immunology, and cardiovascular health. The company conducts extensive research and development to create new drugs, which are then sold after receiving regulatory approval. BMS also produces generic drugs that are affordable alternatives to their innovative medicines, ensuring they meet the same quality and safety standards. What sets BMS apart from competitors is its dual focus on both innovative and generic medicines, as well as its commitment to sustainability and corporate responsibility. The company's goal is to improve patient outcomes by providing effective and affordable healthcare solutions while adhering to Environmental, Social, and Governance (ESG) standards.
Company Size
10,001+
Company Stage
IPO
Headquarters
New York City, New York
Founded
1887
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Flexible Work Hours
Hybrid Work Options
Professional Development Budget
Bristol Myers Squibb (BMS) this week appointed Chris Shibutani as executive vice president, chief strategy officer, effective immediately. Shibutani’s role is a new position on the BMS leadership team. The announcement was made on a LinkedIn post.Shibutani will lead the development and advancement of the company’s long-term strategic plan, collaborating across the enterprise to drive innovation and growth. He brings more than 25 years of experience in the financial services industry covering global pharmaceutical, biotechnology and medical device industries.Prior to BMS, Shibutani served as managing director in the global investment research division at Goldman Sachs. Previous roles include senior analyst positions at Hambrecht & Quist, Cowen, UBS, and J.P. Morgan.Before his career in finance, Shibutani was a physician trained in anesthesiology and critical care medicine at Massachusetts General Hospital and practiced at Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center
Bristol Myers Squibb highlights targeted protein degradation advances, including CELMoD agents and BCL6 Ligand-Directed Degrader, at EHA 2025 in Milan, Italy.
Viraj Narayanan, CEO at Cornerstone AI Daniel Lane, Head of RWD Strategy & Operations at Bristol Myers SquibbReal-world data (RWD) has become the pharmaceutical industry’s most promising yet challenging frontier. While companies have long recognized its potential to complement clinical trials and deepen patient outcome insights, many still struggle to fully realize its value.We’ve seen firsthand, from early discovery to market authorization to post-launch evidence generation, that extracting meaningful value from RWD requires more than just data acquisition. It demands a consistent, scalable, and repeatable approach to data quality, as well as a strategic roadmap that moves an organization from minimal use of RWD to a position of true leadership. This journey isn’t simple, but for those committed to navigating it, the competitive advantages are substantial. And, importantly, RWD holds the potential to help bring lifesaving and life-changing medications to market faster and safer than ever before.From Data Collection to MaturityPharma’s growing reliance on RWD has encouraged an influx of partnerships with data aggregators, medical institutions, and digital health platforms. Yet, not all companies are at the same level of maturity in using that data effectively
Bristol Myers Squibb has agreed to pay up to $11.1 billion to partner with Germany's BioNTech and develop the latter's next-generation cancer immunotherapy, which could take on rival Merck & Co's best-selling drug Keytruda.
BioNTech and Bristol Myers Squibb are teaming up to develop a new cancer drug, BNT327.