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GSK CEO Emma Walmsley says A.I. could improve Big Pharma’s most ‘profound’ challenge: R&D productivity


Good morning,

More from Fortune:  5 side hustles where you may earn over $20,000 per year—all while working from home Looking to make extra cash? This CD has a 5.15% APY right now Buying a house? Here’s how much to save This is how much money you need to earn annually to comfortably buy a $600,000 home 

GSK CEO Emma Walmsley was our guest this week on Fortune‘s Leadership Next podcast. She showed up in person at the Fortune offices in New York for the occasion, and the fascinating interview that followed proved again that in-person conversations are, well, just better than the largely remote ones we’ve been doing since the weekly podcast’s untimely launch in March of 2020. You can listen to the full interview on Apple or Spotify, but a few excerpts below.

On her view of corporate leadership:

“I violently reject the notion of CEOs as superheroes. I think by definition leadership is about helping others, collectively and individually, to do more together than we can ever do individually.”

On the relatively small number of women running large corporations (roughly 10% of the Fortune 500):

“I have always tried not to define my career by my gender first. But that doesn’t mean I’m not extremely thoughtful…about my responsibilities as a role model, and about the need to highlight what needs to change. We are a long, long way from being anywhere close to the kind of representation in leadership, whether that’s companies or governments or institutions, that better represents the societies that we serve.”

On the potential for A.I. to transform health care:

“I think there is a real opportunity for next gen technologies to improve the biggest challenge of the [pharmaceutical] sector, which is the productivity of R&D. It can take a decade, cost billions of dollars, on average has a 90% failure rate, to discover, develop and invent new medicines and vaccines. It’s the most profound challenge of our industry and also of society. When we talk about health care costs, the single biggest thing we can do is innovate more.”

And speaking of technology, the team at Fortune is gearing up for our annual Brainstorm Tech event, being held in Park City, Utah, for the first time on July 10-12. My Leadership Next co-host Michal Lev-Ram is hosting the event, and in addition to white water rafting, mountain biking, fly fishing and bob sledding, attendees will mingle with a diverse group of CEOs including Antonio Neri of Hewlett Packard Enterprise and Deborah Liu of Ancestry, as well as a flock of interesting founders, including Jeff Lawson of Twilio, Adam Neumann formerly of WeWork, Vivian Chu of Diligent Robotics, and Lisa Dyson of Air Protein. I’ll be interviewing the grandaddy of founders, Fred Smith of FedEx. Former Vice President Al Gore and Miami Mayor Francis Suarez also will be on hand. We are holding a few spots for loyal CEO Daily readers; if you are interested, shoot me a note, or go here to request an invitation.

Also this morning, be sure to read Emma Hinchliffe’s story on the new CEO of Slack, as well as Lance Lambert and Will Daniel’s story on why commercial real estate may cause the next banking blowup.

More news below.

Alan Murray
@alansmurray

alan.murray@fortune.com

This story was originally featured on Fortune.com

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This is how much money you need to earn annually to comfortably buy a $600,000 home 




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