At PBM Pharmaceutical, we believe in healthcare as it should be, which is to empower people to live healthier through every stage of life.
People who pursue a career in the pharmaceutical industry really have the opportunity to make a difference. Whether you are stationed in a lab, office, or work as a professional Pharmaceutical Sales Rep, your main goal is to help other people live healthier lives.
There is good news for job seekers. The pharmaceutical and biotech industry is a major economic driver, generating approximately $1.3 trillion in revenue. Currently, U.S. the pharmaceutical and biotech firms employ over 2.74 million people, but with the need for rapid innovation, the demand for skilled professionals will continue to rise.
Opportunities in the pharma/biotech industry exist at every career level. Scientists with graduate degrees are in high demand, as are workers with science-related bachelor’s and associate degrees. Workers with no scientific background may find jobs in administration, finance, law, marketing, and sales. Even high school graduates may find work in production as capsule-filling-machine operators and tenders, fermenter and granulator machine operators, tablet testers, and quality-control workers. The industry is expected to add tens of thousands of Pharmaceutical Sales Reps in 2025 alone. The bottom line is that pharma/biotech is a major jobs provider in the U.S., and the employment outlook is good for well-qualified job seekers in this industry. Check out our Career page today for current opportunities available at Lynx Pharma.
PBM Pharmaceutical markets products that make possible improved versions of today’s therapeutic regimes as well as innovative treatments that would not be possible without these new techniques. Our therapeutics that we help physicians dispense are approved by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) to date are used to treat many diseases. Some use the human body’s own tools for fighting infections and correcting problems. Others are natural products of plants and animals. The large-scale manufacturing processes for producing therapeutic biological substances also rely on nature’s molecular production mechanisms.