Bioinformatics Scientist
New York / $480 - $600
INFO
$480 - $600
LOCATION
New York
Contract
Bioinformatics Scientist
Fully Remote
8-Month Contract (possible extension)
$60-$75/hr
Leverage your Bioinformatics and Data Science experience with one of the largest biotech/pharmaceutical companies in the world. The impact you will have on the innovations within this global company will be apparent in this opportunity. Are you ready for this opportunity?
THE COMPANY
This world-class biotech and pharmaceutical company is known for its innovation in health and lifestyle. This organization is committed to championing data and analytics their life-changing health solutions.
THE ROLE
- Maintain and develop single-cell processing pipelines to support business objectives through a scientific approach
- Utilize visualization tools to develop and support the interpretation of data and analysis
- Collaborate with data engineers and data science teams to facilitate insights from omics datasets
- Perform single-cell sequencing with AI/ML techniques and approaches
YOUR SKILLS AND EXPERIENCE
A successful Bioinformatics Engineer within this role will likely have the following skills and experience:
- A Ph.D OR a Master's degree with atleast 2 years' of relevant experience OR a bachelor's degree with 4 years' experience in Bioinformatics, Computational Biology, Computer Science, or Engineering
- Deep understanding in single-cell data analysis, data normalization and the following programming languages: Python and R
- Familiarity with nextflow tower and/or other workflow management systems to deploy bioinformatics pipelines and tools
- Experience with large-scale single cell genomics datasets, pipeline optimization, and performance tuning
HOW TO APPLY
Please register your interest by sending your resume to Fareeda Elsayed via the Apply link on this page.

SIMILAR
JOB RESULTS

How To Attract Data Scientists To Your Business (And How Not To) | Harnham Recruitment post
+
Whilst the role of Data Scientist is still considered one of the most desirable around, many businesses are finding that a shortage of strong, experienced talent is preventing them from growing their teams sufficiently. With a huge demand for such a small talent base, enterprises have begun to ask what they can do to ensure that they can secure the skillsets they need. If you’re looking at hiring a Data Scientist, there are a few key Do’s and Don’ts that you need to bear in mind:THE DO’SCreate A Clear Career PathIn most companies, a career path is defined. Usually you grow from junior to senior to manager etc. However, Data Scientists often like to become experts rather than moving up the traditional career ladder into people management roles. And, once a Data Scientists becomes an expert, they want to remain an expert. To do this, they need to keep up with the latest tools and data systems and continually improve. That’s why it’s important that you put in place a clear career path that suits the Data Scientists. In addition to the possibility of leading teams on projects, businesses should provide opportunities for financial progression that reflect growing skillsets in addition to increased responsibilities.Â
Let Them Be Inventive One of the biggest turn-offs for Data Scientists is lack of opportunities to try new techniques and technologies. Data Scientists can get bored easily if their tasks are not challenging enough. They want to work on a company’s most important and challenging functions and feel as though they are making an impact. If they are asked to spend their time on performing the same tasks all the time, they often feel under-utilised. Providing forward-looking projects, with innovative technologies, gives Data Scientists the opportunity to reinvent the way the company benefits from their Data.Provide Opportunities To Discover As part of their attitude of constant improvement, Data Scientists often feel that attending conferences or meet-ups helps them become better at their role. Not only are these a chance for them to meet with their peers and exchange their Data Science knowledge, they can also discover new algorithms and methodologies that could be of benefit to your business. Businesses that allow the time and budget for their team to attend these are seen as much more attractive prospects for potential employees in a competitive market.Â
Give them the freedom they needData Scientists are efficient workers who can both collaborate and work independently. Because of this, they expect their employers to trust that they will get the job done without feeling micro-managed. By offering flexible working, be it flexi-hours or working from home options, enterprises can make themselves a much more appealing place to work. THE DON’TSHire The Wrong SkillsetAs many companies begin to introduce Data teams into their business, they can often attempt to hire for the wrong job. Generally, this will be because they automatically jump to wanting to hire a Data Scientist, but actually need a different role placed first. For example; a company may be looking to hire a Machine Learning specialist, but their data pipeline hasn’t even been built yet. There are many talented candidates out there who want to work with the latest technology and solve problems in complex ways. But the reality is that a lot of businesses aren’t ready for their capabilities yet. Before hiring, asses what skillsets you really need and be specific in your search.Â
Undervalue Their Capabilities There are still a large number of organisations that do not value Data within their culture and Data professionals pick up on this incredibly quickly. If they feel that their work is under appreciated, and they know that there is high demand for what they do, they will not waste their time sticking around. Ask yourself how you see your Data team contributing to the company as a whole and make this clear within your organisation. Advanced Data Scientists don’t want to work on dashboarding so make sure that their work will have an impact and explain how you see this happening during the interview process. Additionally, be aware of other financial implications that their hire may have. It’s likely that they’ll need a supporting Data Engineer to work with and, if they don’t have access to one, they have another reason to look elsewhere. The Data Scientist market is a candidate-driven one and, as a result of this, businesses need to go the extra mile to ensure they get the best talent around. By offering a strong set of benefits, the opportunity to grow and progress, and an environment that values Data, enterprises can stand out amongst the crowd and attract the best Data Scientists on the market. If you’re looking for support with your Data Science hiring process, get in touch with one of our expert consultants who will be able to advise you on the best way forward.Â

Winning the war for data science talent | Harnham US Recruitment post
+
Data Science teams are hugely important to almost every growing business today. The ability to predict market trends, create new products and augment and automate processes will be a key differentiator in a changing economy, between businesses that thrive and businesses that struggle.As such, the Data Scientist is the hottest and most sought-after job title in today’s job market and competition has never been so fierce. Ultimately, competition is only going to get more and more intense for these talented individuals.So how do you win the war for Data Science talent? Over the course of this talk, we’re going to look at talent attraction and retention strategies, how to engage hard to reach talent, and how to create stringent and effective hiring processes that will differentiate your business from the competition.Is there a shortage of talent? The answer to this is both yes and no. Run a quick LinkedIn search for a Data Scientist in the Bay area and you’ll see a massive 35,783 returned results and 2,604 live roles, however a 2012 government study stated that undergrad stem degrees would need to increase by 34% in order to meet predicted demand for these skills.However at the same time, only 50% of individuals with a STEM degree are employed in a relevant field – this number is roughly 3x higher than other fields of study.32% of Comp Sci degree holders are not employed in an STEM role say that they are working in unrelated fields due to a lack of relevant job.The reality is that for the most part – many of you in this room today are speaking with the same candidates as one another and are looking for the exact same profile. At the same time, candidates are all applying to the same companies, with the same focus, again, for the same roles. The same companies are offering jobs to the same pool of candidates, who have 4 or 5 job offers in hand at any one time, meaning that 75-80% of job offers aren’t being accepted.A vicious cycle This is leading to the cycle that I see in the market, every single day.1) A large proportion of candidates are overlooked or excluded, giving the perception of a lack of opportunity2) Employers are struggling to fill their roles due to losing candidates to competitors, feeding the idea of a lack of available talent.What’s the Fix? The first step is looking beyond the standard candidate pool – if I were to ask all of you to think of your ideal data scientist, most would say, Masters or PhD in a quant field. Internship somewhere scrappy during the course of their degree. Publications, Patents and Research work. Few years of experience in a production capacity, Python, R, Strong ML background etc etc.Maybe it’s time to look beyond that – Organizations such as Galvanize and Metis have created intensive data science programs that are creating well rounded data scientists that most people will look beyond. Let’s change the focus of the degree criteria – some of the best coders that I’ve seen, have been self-taught and have a genuine passion for developing their skills.
So how do we find these people? There will always be a time and place for LinkedIn’s searching features, but the candidate pool runs so much wider than that. Luckily, you’re all at a conference, so I don’t need to pitch you on the importance of networking, but there are so many ways to find this talent. Never underestimate your own people, the best people, know the best people. Before you do anything at all, brief your team on what you’re looking for and open the floor to them for their referrals and recommendations.Next, create partnerships. Work closely with schools, bootcamps and research facilities to get you access to data science talent quickly and efficiently. You’ll also be able to get a fresh approach to those problems you’ve been looking at and may just stumble on some exciting solutions.Sponsor a competition. So many Data Scientists that I work with are fiercely competitive and love the idea to showcase their skillset. You’ll also get a natural interview process taking place, with the cream rising to the proverbial top. Lastly, keep up to date with the market – follow market moves, funding rounds and news stories to look in to redundancies or news stories that may make an individual more open to a move. Finally actively target companies that utilize similar tools, or work on transferrable problems. By no means am I saying headhunt your competitors staff, but why not look at areas that will utilize similar methodologies or algorithms, where someone will be able to come in and hit the ground running.Engaging with this talent – The power of why I’ll never forget the best piece of advice that I had received when it came to recruiting Data Scientists. It came from Vin Vashishta (who is definitely someone you need to be following) – Focus on the “why”.Your message needs to stand out, and you need to capture the imagination of your potential hire, especially if you’re not a traditional “halo” brand. Candidates in this space are mission driven, the what is nowhere near as important of the why. For example, candidates don’t care that you’re utilizing computer vision – but they do care that you’re using it to monitor and track the breathing patterns of infants in their sleep. It’s going to be the why that starts the conversation, the what will come after. Engaging with this talent – Growth & Development Next you need to be upfront about growth and development. Not every organization is going to change the world, not every start-up will achieve unicorn status. That’s ok. Not every scientist will become a CDO. Don’t make promises that can’t be kept and be clear about where and how you see this role and this person evolving.Engaging with this talent – Do away with lengthy processes I follow very closely the work of some exceptional people, and I love seeing Data Science applied to hiring processes. One such person who I follow is Emily Glassberg-Sands at Coursera. She wrote an article about how they had analyzed every area of their hiring processes and assessed where people were dropping out, and fixed those areas.Let me tell you now, you don’t need to have 5 screening calls, a take home test and an 8-hour interview day. In fact, simplifying this even further, you don’t need a take home test. Nowadays most people have a portfolio of code that they’ll be all too happy to share, so that you can see first-hand the work that they’ve done. If you want to understand how candidates approach and tackle a problem, run a whiteboard session, or a webex, where a candidate can feel like they’re already working with you, tackling a problem in unison.In any hiring process, you’re getting interviewed as much as you’re interviewing. Your process reflects who you are as a business, long and drawn out – means slow and clunky. There’s an organization whom I know of, who are doing a huge hiring drive, with an average turnaround time of 8-10 weeks per hire. As a result, candidates are getting half way through a process, getting messaged by another organization and are off the market a week later.Focus on what is a necessity, a stage focusing on technical capability, a stage focusing on role suitability and a stage focusing on cultural fit. All in all, three stages should be more than enough, and should take no longer than 10 days. Set expectations clearly at the beginning. Hiring is a time-consuming process and losing time interviewing a candidate whose expectations are not aligned with your own, is a waste of time, purely and simply. Have the difficult conversations as early as possible will save you time further down the line. Put bluntly, if/when you work with a recruiter, the vast majority of people ask us to find a candidate’s salary expectations, however most organizations when they recruit for themselves, they do not have that conversation until the very end of a process.Engaging with this talent – Closing candidates The most effective and efficient processes mean nothing if ultimately you can’t get a candidate across the line. This is where your recruiter – either internal or external is going to really earn their money. Understanding the push and pull factors in a decision is key to a successful hire. A high base salary means nothing if that isn’t the reason that a candidate is looking for a move.The key here is that when you’ve identified your hire, strip everything back to the bare bones. Go through the role again, the company again, understand any concerns that they may have and set up conversations with decision makers again if necessary. Close candidates on numbers at which they feel happy, but that also mean value for money for you – DON’T LOWBALL!!! I see all too often companies that can go higher, go in with a lower offer to try and get a discount on a hire, every now and again, you’ll get a positive resolution from this, but more often than not, you’ll scare off a candidate who has the potential to feel undervalued, and therefore warn other people in their network about a negative experience. Make offers that are fair, for both parties and explain how you got to those numbers.The closing process is the most in the whole recruitment cycle. A botched close will mean that you start back at square one and that all of the work that you’ve done starts back at zero.
Retaining this talent – Prepare for churn Unfortunately there is no secret sauce here. It’s going to happen. By the very nature of hiring scientists, you’re looking for people who are naturally inquisitive with a thirst and passion for learning and development. More often than not, you’ll form part of their development, as opposed to all of it.The average Data Scientist is currently switching role roughly every 2 years. Your job is to lift that number as high above the average as you can. The key here is to understand who your Scientists are as people, what’s important to them in their future, and help to meet as many of their goals as you can.Retaining this talent – Invest in your people The old saying rings true – “what if we invest in our people and they leave – but what if we don’t and they stay”. You need to give your scientists the freedom and the platform to be the vest version of themselves that they can be.Lastly, don’t wait too late to reward your top performers. A counter offer is always an offer too late. If someone is performing well, let them know that they’re appreciated with that promotion or raise that they deserve. Don’t wait for them to come to you with their 2 weeks notice. If you wait that long, you’re too late.Retaining this talent – People leave bosses I don’t believe this to be a fundamental truth. As I mentioned earlier, I firmly believe that the why is the most important thing in developing great scientists. As long as your mission is one that excites your people and that you’re constantly following your north star, getting closer and closer. Your scientists will be driven by that same mission.Ultimately your role as Managers, Directors, VP’s and Execs is to nurture the talent within your ranks, create an environment where your people can thrive, and where they know that they’ll continue to do so.Â

The Importance of Open Source in Bioinformatics | Harnham US Recruitment post
+
We learned quite a bit during the pandemic – people can be just as productive from their home office as at the office, food can be picked up or delivered with little to no contact, and large-scale health threats can be bring minds together to solve major issues in relation to those threats.
When a group can come together with all the necessary information openly accessible to all, open source becomes more than about open source computer software, but is a promise of open exchange and collaboration.
So, what does this tell us? That not only does open source have a role in the fight against current pathogens but those to come as well. Without making Data, tools, and software open to combat these issues in the Bioinformatics and Life Sciences fields, it could be much more difficult and take that much longer to solve these problems. But when information is shared openly, everyone benefits – collaborators, researchers, and community.
The Key to Open Source in Bioinformatics and Beyond
There are always lynchpins that hold new thoughts in place and open source is no different. Everyone benefits from the sharing of Data, research, tools, analysis, and more, but a key factor is the large-scale group of scientists both public and private working together. Add to this providers, government entities, health and other institutions, and when all is openly available everyone can see and contribute. Open collaboration is the best way to ensure that new information is collected, analyzed, and saved for future generations and current bioinformatics professionals to safeguard against future of health anomalies.
In an accessible environment, even those who aren’t experts will be able to review and analyze Data. And with the addition of biological researchers to consult and translate their findings, more and more projects will be able to help advance and address current and future issues related to human disease.
Why is Open Source important in Bioinformatics?
The future benefits of Open Source go well beyond its first incarnation as simply open source software in which anyone could modify the source code. But as a key to unlocking the importance of open source within the Bioinformatics and other ‘omics fields such as genomics, epigenomics, proteonimcs, and so on, the versatility and usefulness is as wide and varied as those who might participate for the betterment of mankind.
The benefits far outweigh the limitations, but here are three reasons to consider:
- Shared information open to all means faster response to solving problems in ‘omics DataTools are shared on cloud-based software allowing anyone anywhere in the world access to the same information.
- Training in programming and data processing as well as the ability to speak and understand the languages in terms of both biology and computational science are in high demand.
Are you ready to take the next step in your Data profession? Maybe you want to be on the front lines of stopping a pathogen in its wake before it becomes a global pandemic. Perhaps you want to study epigenetics and want to not only contribute your own research but learn from what has been done before. Whatever area within the Life Sciences and specifically, Bioinformatics, the field is growing, and opportunities abound.
If you’re interested in Computational Biology, Big Data, Bioinformatics, Genomics, or Data Science just to name a few, Harnham may have a role for you.
Check out our latest Life Science Analytics jobs or contact one of our expert consultants to learn more.
For our West Coast Team, contact us at (415) 614 - 4999 or send an email to sanfraninfo@harnham.com.
For our Arizona Team, contact us at (602) 562 7011 or send an email to phoenixinfo@harnham.com.
For our Mid-West and East Coast teams contact us at (212) 796-6070 or send an email to newyorkinfo@harnham.com.

CAN’T FIND THE RIGHT OPPORTUNITY?
STILL LOOKING?
If you can’t see what you’re looking for right now, send us your CV anyway – we’re always getting fresh new roles through the door.