From Translator to Storyteller: How to Shift Your Role in the Age of AI
Jun 3, 2025
From Translator to Storyteller: How to Shift Your Role in the Age of AI
You used to be the go-to person for making clinical data understandable.
You translated jargon. You distilled publications. You explained trial design to people who didn’t have time to read every line.
But now?
AI does that — and in seconds. Tools can summarize 80-page dossiers. Slide kits can be auto-generated. Even your bullet points can be auto-populated from a database.
So if your role has always been “translator of science,” where does that leave you?
Here’s the good news: translation was never the final goal. Storytelling is.
And in a world where machines can summarize but not synthesize, you have a chance — right now — to shift your role from translator to storyteller. Not just to stay relevant. But to lead.
Let’s walk through how that shift happens — and why it may be the smartest career investment you make.
Step One: Understand What’s Actually Changing
We’re not just in a content boom. We’re in a context crisis.
There’s more data, more noise, and more outputs than ever before. AI contributes to this — but so do shrinking timelines, global launches, and increasing scientific complexity. The result? A flood of information and a desperate shortage of meaning.
Clients don’t want more slides. They want the right story for the right stakeholder, in the right voice, with the right insights.
Translation answers: “What does this say?”
Storytelling answers: “Why should anyone care?”
If you’re just a translator, AI will outperform you.
But if you’re a strategic storyteller, you become the one person in the room who can turn a dense trial into a compelling launch narrative, a dry MoA into a moment of awe, or a biomarker update into a client pitch that wins the room.
That’s the new currency.
Step Two: Drop the “I’m Not Scientific” Identity
Many talented people in this industry — especially creatives, writers, and strategists — carry a quiet insecurity:
“I’m not really scientific.”
“I can write, but I don’t get the biology.”
“I know how to make things sound good, but I’m not sure I fully understand them.”
If that’s you, here’s a radical reframe:
You’re not “less than.” You’re exactly who’s needed.
Because storytelling doesn’t happen in petri dishes or protocols. It happens when someone like you learns just enough of the science to ask a better question. To challenge the way something is framed. To connect it to something human.
You don’t need to be fluent in every gene pathway or statistical endpoint. You need to understand just enough of the system to sense what matters. That’s what fuels creativity and strategy.
The best brand stories in pharma aren’t told by bench scientists. They’re told by professionals who take the time to get the science just enough to elevate the story.
That could be you — if you give yourself permission to learn, not as a chore, but as a tool for creative freedom.
Step Three: Redefine What “Value” Means
AI has changed how value is perceived.
In the past, value often looked like:
“I can write this faster than anyone.”
“I can clean up dense copy and simplify it.”
“I can take notes in meetings and build decks quickly.”
But now, those things are table stakes — or automatable.
Real value today looks like:
“I can take this MoA and turn it into a launch story physicians actually remember.”
“I can explain why this biomarker changes the treatment paradigm — in one slide.”
“I can bridge the clinical rationale and the emotional hook in a patient journey.”
“I know enough science to see when a message doesn’t align with the biology — and fix it.”
That’s storytelling. It’s creative. It’s scientific. It’s strategic.
And it’s not replaceable.
Step Four: Make the Shift — One Layer at a Time
If the idea of “becoming a storyteller” feels abstract, here’s a more grounded way to start:
1. Zoom out before you zoom in.
Before opening PowerPoint or ChatGPT, ask: What’s the one thing this audience needs to walk away with? What problem are we solving — emotionally or clinically?
2. Question the “why.”
Every fact or graph you encounter — ask why it matters. What does it change? What would happen if it weren’t true? This is how insight emerges.
3. Visualize the story arc.
Is there a before-and-after? A tension-and-resolution? A transformation? (Hint: most trial data has one — you just have to find it.)
4. Study the science just enough to see the story.
You don’t need to become a scientist. But understanding endpoints, trial designs, and mechanisms unlocks creative fluency. It’s the difference between decorating a house and designing it.
5. Make it human. Always.
Even the most technical messages are ultimately about humans — patients, physicians, families. Anchor there.
So Where Does That Leave You?
Right now, the people who will thrive in medical communications aren’t the fastest typists or most efficient slide-makers.
They’re the ones who know how to:
Think like a scientist just enough
Communicate like a strategist
Create like a storyteller
The gap isn’t talent. It’s translation to transformation — not of the data, but of yourself.
You’ve already got the instincts. The creativity. The curiosity. What’s missing — if anything — is the structured way to build the science fluency that lets your ideas fly higher.
Investing in Future-You
If you’re still reading, it’s because some part of you knows you’re ready for the next level. Not in title, but in confidence. In mastery. In future-proofing what you love to do — in a world that’s changing faster than ever.
That doesn’t mean enrolling in a two-year degree. It means finding the right learning journey — built for people like you, with creative minds and strategic brains — who just need a better on-ramp to the science that powers this field.
Whether you find that through self-study, mentorship, or a platform like the one we’re building at MedKnowl… the point is: invest in it.
Because you’re not just learning to survive.
You’re learning to lead.