Dutch life sciences organisations that perform consistently in 2026 will not be those that hire fastest, but those that hire with intent. As programmes accelerate and talent pools remain constrained, the advantage shifts to leaders who plan for pressure, not just for vacancies.
1. Start with delivery risk, not headcount
Focus on where delivery, compliance, or scale would break if capability became constrained, not where a role happens to be open. Validation, CQV, MSAT, automation, and tech transfer consistently carry outsized risk during acceleration phases.
2. Act before pressure becomes visible
High-performing teams move ahead of attrition. Validation ramps, audit windows, and tech transfers are predictable stress points, planning for them early protects timelines and compliance.
3. Design for flexibility, not headcount certainty
Dutch growth is uneven by nature. Contract and interim capability absorb peak demand without locking organisations into permanent structures before risk stabilises.
4. Eliminate single points of failure
Some expertise cannot be replaced quickly. Resilient organisations identify critical knowledge early and build overlap, coverage, or succession before exposure appears.
5. Optimise for continuity, not speed
Hiring success is measured by uninterrupted delivery. Teams that avoid last-minute decisions maintain control as programmes scale.
If 2026 workforce plans are already taking shape, now is the time to assess where delivery and compliance pressure will peak, not just where roles may open. Our team is here to share current market insight on how Dutch GMP teams are planning their talent mapping for the year.
Get in touch with our experts here to learn more how we can help.