Each grant and study section will be different. Whether a big or small grant it does not seem to make a difference the reviewers will critique your efforts, they may not like it, they may reject your ideas or they may love it. You have some small degree of control until the proposal leaves your hands or more correctly you click ‘submit’. You will need to differentiate your grant from the hundreds of others in many ways, but you cannot change who you are, your history so how you describe yourself and team will also have an impact. You could spend hundreds of hours on your proposal or just a day and the outcome might still be the same. This small book is a summary of my own personal experiences and will provide some advice that will help you learn how to do a better job of winning grants.
Sean Ekins is founder and CEO of Collaborations Pharmaceuticals, Inc. which is focused on using machine learning approaches for rare and neglected disease drug discovery. Sean graduated from the University of Aberdeen; receiving his M.Sc., Ph.D. in Clinical Pharmacology and D.Sc. in Science. He was a postdoctoral fellow at Lilly Research Laboratories, before working as a senior scientist at Pfizer and then Eli Lilly. He went on to join several startup companies at increasingly senior levels. Since 2005 he has been awarded numerous grants and since 2016 alone has won over 20 from NIH and DOD (STTR/SBIR grants, R21, UH2 and R01) totaling over $16.7M, as well as performing as a consultant on others. He has a passion for advancing new technologies for drug discovery and is a prolific collaborator. He has authored or co-authored >345 peer reviewed papers, book chapters, edited 5 books on different aspects of drug discovery research and use (and misuse) of AI. Coverage of such researchhas also appeared in the Economist, Financial Times and Washington Post.