The Associate Program Manager supports the development and execution complex, cross-functional preclinical program, working closely with internal stakeholders, senior leadership, and external partners. This role blends clinical scientific expertise (gained through clinical experience or foundational work) with program coordination and serves as a key partner to the Study Director and VP of the RDTC.
This role contributes to the planning, coordination, and delivery of key initiatives, including supporting grant-funded activities and associated reporting requirements. APMs are expected to interact with patient advocacy groups, rare disease families, researchers and biotechs. Operating with limited supervision, the Associate Program Manager helps define program requirements, identifies dependencies across teams and resources, and coordinates input to ensure alignment and successful execution. The role maintains visibility into program and initiative activities, including grant-related work, tracks timelines and deliverables, and helps ensure progress across cross-functional teams.
Responsibilities include developing and distributing program communications, responding to stakeholder inquiries, monitoring program progress and performance, and providing regular updates and reports to leadership or program sponsors. The position also coordinates internal and external communications with collaborators, including managing grant timelines, deliverables, and reporting deadlines, and ensures alignment among all stakeholders. The Associate Program Manager plays a key role in supporting high-quality program execution and compliance with grant requirements, while demonstrating increasing independence, accountability, and ownership over time.
About the RDTC
The Rare Disease Translational Center supports the mission of The Jackson Laboratory: to discover precise genomic solutions for disease and empower the global biomedical community to improve human health. The RDTC partners with foundations and teams of basic and clinical researchers to generate custom mouse models with clinically relevant mutations and advance therapeutic development for rare diseases.
Key Responsibilities and Essential Functions
Interact with patient advocacy groups, rare disease families, academic researchers and biotech companies and advise on scientific need and therapeutic strategies
Prioritize and set goals for accomplishing center’s objectives. Oversees project coordination, execution, and completion.
Provides advanced administrative support for data collection and reporting in conjunction with NIH requirements and program-specific goals
Works closely with the Office of Sponsored Programs to ensure timely, accurate and complete responses to NIH reporting requirements and requests for information; providing logistical support for special events, meetings, etc
Supports cross-functional research programs and across high-impact external collaborators by coordinating study activities, tracking timelines, reporting out on grant renewals and facilitating communication across scientific teams.
Partners closely with Study Directors and VP to facilitate smooth communication across all parties.
Contributes to project coordination and study execution.
Knowledge, Skills, and Abilities
Advanced degree in a Genetics related field (MS/PhD desired) or Bachelor's degree with a minimum of 5 years' experience leading large-scale projects.
At least 3 years of experience in a leadership role managing teams.
Patient-facing experience preferred (gained through clinical experience, experience on foundations, patient outreach, etc)
Excellent communication skills with the ability to present ideas clearly and concisely.
Strong analytical abilities to devise executable plans and integrate best practices.
Adaptability in a dynamic environment, with exceptional organizational skills and attention to detail.
Diplomatic leadership qualities to motivate cross-functional teams and foster cooperation.
Prior experience in project management with a proven track record of successful program execution.
Commitment to mentoring and developing staff to foster scientific talent.
Education: Masters/PhD or combination of education and experience
Experience: 5 years preferred/6 years required
Supervisory: 5 years preferred/6 years required
Pay Range: $85,987 - $143,962 pay depending on experience
About JAX:
The Jackson Laboratory is an independent, nonprofit biomedical research institution with a National Cancer Institute-designated Cancer Center and nearly 3,000 employees in locations across the United States (Maine, Connecticut, California), Japan and China. Its mission is to discover precise genomic solutions for disease and empower the global biomedical community in the shared quest to improve human health.
Founded in 1929, JAX applies over nine decades of expertise in genetics to increase understanding of human disease, advancing treatments and cures for cancer, neurological and immune disorders, diabetes, aging and heart disease. It models and interprets genomic complexity, integrates basic research with clinical application, educates current and future scientists, and provides critical data, tools and services to the global biomedical community. For more information, please visit www.jax.org.
EEO Statement:
The Jackson Laboratory provides equal employment opportunities to all employees and applicants for employment in all job classifications without regard to race, color, religion, age, mental disability, physical disability, medical condition, gender, sexual orientation, genetic information, ancestry, marital status, national origin, veteran status, and other classifications protected by applicable state and local non-discrimination laws.
Skills Required
- Master's or PhD in Genetics or related field
- Bachelor's degree with a minimum of 5 years' experience leading large-scale projects
- Minimum 6 years of relevant experience (experience: 5 years preferred/6 years required)
- Supervisory experience (5 years preferred, 6 years required)
- At least 3 years of experience in a leadership role managing teams
- Prior project management experience with proven program execution
- Experience with NIH grant reporting and working with Office of Sponsored Programs
- Experience interacting with patient advocacy groups, rare disease families, academic researchers, and biotech partners
- Patient-facing experience (clinical, foundations, patient outreach)
- Excellent written and verbal communication skills
- Strong analytical, organizational skills, and attention to detail
- Commitment to mentoring and developing staff
The Jackson Laboratory Compensation & Benefits Highlights
The following summarizes recurring compensation and benefits themes identified from responses generated by popular LLMs to common candidate questions about The Jackson Laboratory and has not been reviewed or approved by The Jackson Laboratory.
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Retirement Support — Retirement contributions up to 10% and employer‑paid life and disability insurance indicate robust long‑term financial support. The retirement program is positioned as a standout element of the total package.
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Healthcare Strength — Comprehensive medical, dental, and vision coverage, fertility benefits, FSAs, EAP access, and onsite fitness centers point to strong healthcare support. These offerings contribute to a well‑rounded, reliable benefits foundation.
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Pay Growth & Progression — Entry‑level operations roles advertise site‑specific starting pay with regularly scheduled increases. Publicly posted entry rates and promised regular increases can help satisfaction early on.
The Jackson Laboratory Insights
What We Do
Cancer. Diabetes. Alzheimer’s. Heart Disease. Parkinson’s. The Jackson Laboratory (JAX) leads the search to cure diseases rooted in our DNA. Founded in 1929, we are an NCI-designated Cancer Center since 1983 and an independent 501(c)3 nonprofit research organization with over 90 years of experience in genetics and genomics research. JAX blends the brightest minds with state-of-the-art resources to accelerate discovery. Areas of Discovery (75+ Principal Investigators, >250 Ph.D.s, M.D.s, and D.V.M.s): • Cancer: We are a National Cancer Institute designated Cancer Center focusing on cancer initiation, progression, prevention and therapies. • Developmental/reproductive biology: birth defects, Down syndrome, osteoporosis, fertility • Immunology: HIV-AIDS, anemia, autoimmunity, cancer immunology, immune disorders, lupus, transplant rejection • Metabolic diseases: atherosclerosis, cardiovascular disease, diabetes, high blood pressure, obesity, microbiome • Neurobiology: blindness, Parkinson’s, Alzheimer’s, deafness, epilepsy, glaucoma, macular degeneration, neurodegenerative diseases • Neurobehavioral disorders: autism, addiction, depression Supporting Global Research: • The JAX Mouse Repository and Scientific Services are among the premier resources available for biomedical research. Committed to Education: • Summer Student Program (undergrad & high school) • Teaching the Genome Generation Short Course • Ph.D. programs: U. Maine, Tufts University and U. Connecticut • Courses, Conferences and Workshops





