Metadata
Title
Looking beyond the lab
Category
international
UUID
ca9159fa98e24090a0ed10b7792fe462
Source URL
https://www.york.ac.uk/students/work-volunteering-careers/careers-resources/scie...
Parent URL
https://www.york.ac.uk/students/work-volunteering-careers/careers-resources/scie...
Crawl Time
2026-03-20T07:36:56+00:00
Rendered Raw Markdown

Looking beyond the lab

Source: https://www.york.ac.uk/students/work-volunteering-careers/careers-resources/science-careers/outside-the-lab/ Parent: https://www.york.ac.uk/students/work-volunteering-careers/careers-resources/science-careers/

Many STEM graduates choose to follow careers paths outside science or use some of their scientific or technical skills, but in a non-lab based role.

Your degree will have developed a range of skills and knowledge that can be transferred to other career areas and many employers are interested in what you can bring to their sectors.

Generating ideas

Spend some time thinking about yourself:

Resources

Examples of alternative careers

Below are some of the popular areas of work where scientists can use their skills/knowledge. This is not an exhaustive list: it is just to give you some ideas - use our job sector pages to explore other options.

Legal services, patents and trademarks

Information management

Pharmaceutical industry

The Association of the British Pharmaceutical Industry's (ABPI) careers website is an excellent starting point for information about the wide range of opportunities in the industry and www.pharmiweb.com is a useful website for industry news and job vacancies.

Some key areas of work include:

Science education and communication

Covers a range of jobs that have the communication of scientific information and knowledge as their major function. Our sector pages include information on many of these areas.

Manufacturing and production

Work in this area can involve working with hi-tech environments with responsibility for areas such as:

Scientific policy and strategy

The work can involve gathering and synthesising information on scientific issues, drafting reports, identifying and analysing policy issues, and offering information and advice to a range of audiences.

Further options