- Based on 10 Jobtrees users who were a Regulatory Specialist in their career, on average, they have 4.17 years of experience and 3 jobs prior to this one. They have spent a significant amount of time in this job before moving on 5.1 years on average and earn $72K per year on average in this less senior role.
- 0% of Jobtrees users moved to another job with this same title in their next career step. The most common career steps after Regulatory Specialist are Writer, Development Specialist and Postdoctoral Associate.
- Find more insights below about this specific career path based on our Jobtrees users' experience.
Interactive Career Path Tool – Plan the path to your next job
All the insights below are based on Jobtrees users’ actual career paths, aggregated together, instantaneously, to show you the real and unique most common career progression for each role.
Explore the ways our users are moving between roles. Apply filters. Press all the buttons. You’ll be amazed at what you find out.
The roles above are the most common next steps in our users’ career paths.
Use the + button and watch the ‘branches grow’. It adds another level of potential career steps based on the most common paths taken by Jobtrees’ users.The roles below are the most common previous steps in our users’ career paths.
Use the + button and watch the ‘roots grow’. It adds another level of potential previous career steps based on the most common paths taken by Jobtrees’ users.Read insights on these paths here
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Understand more about the career path
How can I become a
- The most common career steps to get to Regulatory Specialist are Environmental Engineer, Research And Development Intern and Medical Writer based on actual career paths reported to Jobtrees.
- Environmental Engineer, the most common step before Regulatory Specialist, is a more senior role which is common to see in career paths. This is a natural and common career progression as titles aren't synonymous across companies so a more senior title doesn't always mean higher pay and larger scope. For Regulatory Specialist, this is an indication that you should focus more on the scope of the role than the specific title when thinking about building a path to Regulatory Specialist.
- While Environmental Engineer is the most common, there is no specific role leading to Regulatory Specialist that is an overwhelmingly common path.
- Another characteristic of the Regulatory Specialist career path is that experience within the same job family as this role isn't common and as a result likely not necessary.
- This shows there are many potential paths to becoming a Regulatory Specialist so focusing on translatable skills is likely more important than a specific role.
- While Environmental Engineer isn't from the same job family as Regulatory Specialist, Compliance/Regulation, it can help to have direct experience in this discipline shown by Research And Development Intern also being a common career path to Regulatory Specialist.
What should I know about the career path
- The most common degrees or certifications earned by Jobtrees users on the path to become Regulatory Specialist are Bachelor Of Arts (b.a.) In Chemistry, Bachelor Of Science (b.sc.) In Food Science, and Doctor Of Philosophy (ph.d.) In Biochemistry. There may be other specific certification requirements to land a job with this role, so please make sure to check local regulations as well.
- Regulatory Specialist is part of the Compliance/Regulation job family which has a limited number of unique role types (17) within that discipline. Choosing to pursue a role within this family likely will mean that you will need to look outside of your discipline to find new roles and so should focus on related skills as part of that search.
- Our data is limited for this role so it's possible there are other common career paths not highlighted here for Regulatory Specialist.