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Key Takeaways from JPM 2026 (What We Heard + What It Means)

JPM 2026 made one thing clear: biotech is shifting from strategic storytelling to execution strategy. Across conversations with founders, operators, and investors, the focus was on building real, scalable plans that hold up under pressure, from phase-appropriate CMC strategy to regulatory readiness, quality infrastructure, and commercialization planning. With that in mind, here are the key themes we heard repeatedly throughout the week, and what they signal for teams building in 2026.

  1. The tone shifted from pitching to building. JPM felt more operator-driven this year. Fewer “big idea” conversations, and more discussions centered on execution, timelines, and real decision-making.
  2. Capital is moving again, but with intention. Funding isn’t flowing freely, but it is flowing to companies that show focus, readiness, and a clear path forward. The bar is higher, and diligence expectations are sharper.
  3. CMC is no longer a “later problem”. CMC strategy is increasingly being treated as a valuation driver, especially for complex modalities like fusion proteins, peptides, cell and gene therapies, and combination products. Teams are prioritizing CMC earlier because it directly impacts confidence, speed, and deal momentum.
  4. Phase-appropriate CMC plans are becoming a differentiator. Investors and partners are looking for CMC strategies that are coherent, scalable, and defensible, not just technically sound. The strongest plans support:
    • scale-up across indications
    • multiple commercial pathways
    • scrutiny during diligence, not just storytelling
  5. “Lean teams + aggressive timelines” is the new normal. A consistent pattern: small teams running multiple assets with ambitious milestones. Leaders are feeling pressure to do more with less, and to move faster without breaking quality or compliance.
  6. Quality systems are being pulled forward. Companies are accelerating work that used to wait until later stage, including quality infrastructure and operational readiness, because partners and regulators expect maturity earlier than they used to.
  7. Regulatory uncertainty is creating real anxiety. There was significant concern around the evolving U.S. regulatory landscape, and a strong demand for support with:
    • FDA engagement planning
    • qSub strategy and checklists
    • regulatory roadmaps that hold up under pressure
  8. Fractional leadership and integrated execution are now survival strategies. More companies acknowledged that “we’ll build it internally later” does not work anymore. There is growing demand for single-source accountability and integrated support across CMC, regulatory, and operational strategy.
  9. Not everyone feels the market rebound. While some optimism is returning, it was not universal. Several founders still described capital raising as unchanged from last year, with continued friction engaging investors.
  10. The bottom line: biotech is not for the faint of heart, the stakes are high, and it takes both thoughtful strategy and execution to survive. This year felt more grounded and more disciplined. The winners are building value through risk reduction, operational clarity, and execution strength.

The companies that will win in 2026 and beyond are not the loudest, they are the most prepared. Strong science still matters, but disciplined execution is what protects valuation, accelerates timelines, and creates optionality across development and commercial pathways. If your team is navigating lean resourcing, complex modalities, or heightened regulatory expectations, SynerG can help you build the integrated roadmap and operational foundation needed to move forward with clarity. From fractional leadership and end-to-end CMC planning to FDA engagement strategy and quality systems built to scale, we bring the expertise and accountability to help you execute what matters most.

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About the Author

Morgan Watson, MA, PMP

Morgan Watson is a dynamic product leader in life sciences, serving as the Director of Product Lifecycle Management at Syner-G. With over 15 years of experience in assay development, systems engineering, product development, and program management, she is known for helping clients achieve meaningful progress and driving practical, impactful solutions. Morgan’s strategic and personalized approach focuses on removing procedural barriers, enabling her clients to advance their scientific goals without being slowed down by inefficient processes and systems.

Beginning her career as an assay development scientist, Morgan gained fundamental technical insights that help bridge complex scientific concepts with actionable strategies. During her time at Roche, Morgan honed her expertise in molecular testing methods, including PCR systems and next-generation sequencing, leading to breakthrough advancements in diagnostics and medical devices. Her leadership at Miroculus facilitated the successful launch of a cutting-edge microfluidics-based sequencing device. At Impossible Foods, she played a key role in optimizing protein production and biomanufacturing.

Morgan, a certified PMP, is committed to program management excellence and regulatory readiness, empowering teams by designing scalable processes that accelerate development speed and streamline the path to market. Her emphasis on clarity and collaboration equips clients to reach their goals efficiently and effectively.

At Syner-G, Morgan values her team of project management experts and “recovering scientists” whose technical skills and innovative spirit drive lasting success for their clients. Together, they turn challenges into opportunities for continued growth and innovation, guiding clients through the complexities of product development with deep experience and strategic foresight.

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About the Author

Raymond Forslund, PhD, MBA

Ray has over fifteen years of experience in the industry working for both pharmaceutical and CRO/CMO companies. As a member of the Syner-G Executive Leadership team, he leads the CMC Development and Project Management business unit. His team is responsible for providing scientific solutions for drug development programs including identifying and managing CRO/CMO/CDMOs for Syner-G’s clients to support drug substance, drug product, and analytical development activities in biologics, small molecules, and peptides.

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