Webinar: Using ChatGPT for Biotech Communication
Van derden21/05/26
Technical updates become long documents that few people read. Important results are hard to summarize. Internal teams interpret the same data differently. And when communication is rushed, the nuance of the science can get lost.
Tools like ChatGPT can help with this. But most teams either avoid them completely or use them in ways that produce generic text that does not reflect the real science.
The goal is not to replace expertise.
The goal is to support how scientific knowledge is translated into clear communication.
What we often see in biotech teams:
- Developers spending hours rewriting the same explanations for different audiences
- Technical updates that are accurate but difficult for non-specialists to follow
- Important context is missing when the results are summarized
- AI tools used without structure, leading to vague or misleading output
- Communication becoming an afterthought instead of a strategic tool
The result is lost time and missed opportunities to explain the real value of your work.
In This 45-Minute Webinar, We Will Cover
Using ChatGPT to Explain Complex Science
How to turn dense technical explanations into clear summaries for different audiences without losing scientific accuracy.
Writing Technical Updates Faster
How AI can help structure experiment summaries, development updates, and internal documentation.
Supporting Collaboration Between Technical and Business Teams
How developers can use AI to translate technical insights into language that BD, marketing, and leadership can work with.
Prompting ChatGPT the Right Way for Scientific Topics
How to guide AI tools so they produce useful drafts instead of generic content.
Where AI Helps and Where It Should Not Be Used
How to maintain scientific integrity and avoid the common pitfalls when working with AI in regulated environments.
This session is for
- Developers and engineers in biotech and medtech
- Scientists working on product or platform development
- Technical team members who regularly explain results to non-technical stakeholders
- Innovation teams working at the interface of science and business
If you work in a technical role but often need to translate complex work into clear communication, this session will be directly relevant.
Please register via the website.
