This is not a moment for incremental adjustments. It is a moment for integrated strategic transformation.
The companies managing this environment most effectively share four characteristics: they have closed the gap between policy intelligence and communications planning; they have elevated government affairs from a support function to a revenue-critical capability; they have built integrated scenario playbooks rather than reactive response trees; and they have invested in executive communication capability that operate simultaneously in Washington, in home capitals and in global capital markets.
The MFN–FDA convergence is not a temporary disruption. It is the new operating environment. Whether you are a U.S.-headquartered biotech navigating a Series C or a European pharma giant managing a bilateral deal with the White House, the strategic imperatives are converging.
RC Resolve works at exactly this intersection — bringing policy, public affairs, government affairs, regulatory intelligence, financial communications and issues management into the integrated capability this moment demands.
November is not a deadline. It’s a horizon. And the ground between here and there is already shifting.
– Bridget Walsh, Head of Policy, Public Affairs and Access, RC Resolve