Back to jobs
New

Director, Analytics

NYC HQ

Iterative Health is a healthcare technology and services company powering the acceleration of clinical research to transform patient outcomes. The Iterative Health Site Network is a premier network of 100+ clinical research sites across the US and Europe, accelerating the path to market for novel therapies. By combining deep expertise in clinical trials with cutting-edge AI, we empower research teams and study sponsors to expand and expedite access to novel therapeutics for patients in need.

Iterative Health is looking for a Director of Analytics to own how we define, measure, and improve performance across the business. This is a build role, you'll be establishing the metrics layer, forecasting infrastructure, and reporting systems that our operational and commercial leaders depend on to make good decisions. You’ll be helping our leaders define what good looks like and help them unlock growth. 

You'll partner closely with teams across site operations, activations, capacity planning, and commercial to turn complex data into clear, actionable insights. The work spans everything from KPI definition and dashboard development to forecasting and trial enrollment modeling, with a direct line to the decisions that drive growth.

This is a hands-on role. You'll write SQL, build dashboards, and work directly in the data alongside the people you support. Over time you'll grow a small team, but the expectation is that you're a practitioner first.

Responsibilities

Be the analytical partner operations and commercial leaders rely on

Your primary customers are our operational and commercial leaders. They're smart, data-savvy, and move fast. Your job is to make sure they have what they need to make good decisions — and to push back when the data tells a different story than the narrative.

  • Conduct deep-dive analyses on enrollment funnels, activation timelines, site performance, and commercial pipeline
  • Turn ambiguous business questions into structured analyses with clear, actionable outputs
  • Support leadership reviews and board materials with clean data storytelling
  • Enable team members across the business to pull and interpret their own data 
  • Build and maintain trial enrollment and capacity models, both theoretical and bottoms-up
  • Own trial enrollment forecasting, integrating site-level data, sponsor information with portfolio-level targets
  • Develop scenario analyses to evaluate trade-offs across trials, sites, and investment options
  • Support quarterly planning and headcount decisions with rigorous, clearly communicated data

Raise the analytics bar across the organization

You'll be setting the standard for how Iterative Health uses data. That means building the infrastructure and also shaping the culture around it.

  • Design and maintain dashboards in SQL and BI tools (Power BI, Looker, or equivalent)
  • Mentor teammates and cross-functional partners on analytical best practices
  • Champion data governance, documentation, and quality across the analytics function
  • Hire and develop a small analytics team as the function matures

Build the metrics layer from the ground up

Iterative Health has ambitious targets across patient enrollment, site activation, capacity growth, and commercial growth. Right now, the infrastructure to measure progress against those targets consistently and reliably is still being built. You'll own that build.

  • Define and standardize KPIs across site operations, activations, patient funnel performance, and commercial
  • Establish a single source of truth including trusted definitions, clean lineage, documented logic
  • Partner with Finance (who owns the Enterprise Data Warehouse) and the BI team to ensure clean upstream data and sound architecture
  • Replace manual spreadsheets and one-off analyses with reliable, self-serve reporting

 

What We're Looking For

Required

  • 10+ years in analytics, business intelligence, or a closely related function in a fast-moving environment
  • Expert-level SQL and comfort working directly with large, messy, real-world datasets
  • Strong experience with BI tools (Power BI, Looker, Tableau, or equivalent)
  • Proven track record of not just building KPI frameworks, dashboards, and automated reporting from scratch, but having strong business acumen and impact
  • Experience building forecasting or capacity models, not just reporting on actuals
  • Excellent communication you can explain a complex model to a non-technical operator and make it land
  • High ownership mindset you run problems to ground and don't wait to be asked and want to build the roadmap for a function

Strongly preferred

  • Experience in healthtech, clinical research, or life sciences, familiarity with clinical trials operations, enrollment funnels, or site networks is a real advantage
  • Experience with Salesforce or revenue/commercial analytics
  • Python or R for advanced modeling
  • Experience with modern data warehouses (Snowflake, BigQuery, Redshift)
  • Prior experience building or managing a small analytics team

New York pay range

$165,000 - $190,000 USD

At Iterative Health, we’re actively working towards creating an environment that is representative of the diversity of patients our technology serves. We are focused on building an equitable and inclusive culture, and by extension, hiring process. If you require any accommodations to make the application process or interviewing experience more accessible to you, please contact CandidateAccommodations@iterative.health.

Create a Job Alert

Interested in building your career at Iterative Health? Get future opportunities sent straight to your email.

Apply for this job

*

indicates a required field

Phone
Resume/CV*

Accepted file types: pdf, doc, docx, txt, rtf

Cover Letter

Accepted file types: pdf, doc, docx, txt, rtf



U.S. Standard Demographic Questions

We invite applicants to share their demographic background. If you choose to complete this survey, your responses may be used to identify areas of improvement in our hiring process.
Select...
Select...
Select...
Select...
Select...
Select...

Voluntary Self-Identification

For government reporting purposes, we ask candidates to respond to the below self-identification survey. Completion of the form is entirely voluntary. Whatever your decision, it will not be considered in the hiring process or thereafter. Any information that you do provide will be recorded and maintained in a confidential file.

As set forth in Iterative Health’s Equal Employment Opportunity policy, we do not discriminate on the basis of any protected group status under any applicable law.

Select...
Select...
Race & Ethnicity Definitions

If you believe you belong to any of the categories of protected veterans listed below, please indicate by making the appropriate selection. As a government contractor subject to the Vietnam Era Veterans Readjustment Assistance Act (VEVRAA), we request this information in order to measure the effectiveness of the outreach and positive recruitment efforts we undertake pursuant to VEVRAA. Classification of protected categories is as follows:

A "disabled veteran" is one of the following: a veteran of the U.S. military, ground, naval or air service who is entitled to compensation (or who but for the receipt of military retired pay would be entitled to compensation) under laws administered by the Secretary of Veterans Affairs; or a person who was discharged or released from active duty because of a service-connected disability.

A "recently separated veteran" means any veteran during the three-year period beginning on the date of such veteran's discharge or release from active duty in the U.S. military, ground, naval, or air service.

An "active duty wartime or campaign badge veteran" means a veteran who served on active duty in the U.S. military, ground, naval or air service during a war, or in a campaign or expedition for which a campaign badge has been authorized under the laws administered by the Department of Defense.

An "Armed forces service medal veteran" means a veteran who, while serving on active duty in the U.S. military, ground, naval or air service, participated in a United States military operation for which an Armed Forces service medal was awarded pursuant to Executive Order 12985.

Select...

Voluntary Self-Identification of Disability

Form CC-305
Page 1 of 1
OMB Control Number 1250-0005
Expires 04/30/2026

Why are you being asked to complete this form?

We are a federal contractor or subcontractor. The law requires us to provide equal employment opportunity to qualified people with disabilities. We have a goal of having at least 7% of our workers as people with disabilities. The law says we must measure our progress towards this goal. To do this, we must ask applicants and employees if they have a disability or have ever had one. People can become disabled, so we need to ask this question at least every five years.

Completing this form is voluntary, and we hope that you will choose to do so. Your answer is confidential. No one who makes hiring decisions will see it. Your decision to complete the form and your answer will not harm you in any way. If you want to learn more about the law or this form, visit the U.S. Department of Labor’s Office of Federal Contract Compliance Programs (OFCCP) website at www.dol.gov/ofccp.

How do you know if you have a disability?

A disability is a condition that substantially limits one or more of your “major life activities.” If you have or have ever had such a condition, you are a person with a disability. Disabilities include, but are not limited to:

  • Alcohol or other substance use disorder (not currently using drugs illegally)
  • Autoimmune disorder, for example, lupus, fibromyalgia, rheumatoid arthritis, HIV/AIDS
  • Blind or low vision
  • Cancer (past or present)
  • Cardiovascular or heart disease
  • Celiac disease
  • Cerebral palsy
  • Deaf or serious difficulty hearing
  • Diabetes
  • Disfigurement, for example, disfigurement caused by burns, wounds, accidents, or congenital disorders
  • Epilepsy or other seizure disorder
  • Gastrointestinal disorders, for example, Crohn's Disease, irritable bowel syndrome
  • Intellectual or developmental disability
  • Mental health conditions, for example, depression, bipolar disorder, anxiety disorder, schizophrenia, PTSD
  • Missing limbs or partially missing limbs
  • Mobility impairment, benefiting from the use of a wheelchair, scooter, walker, leg brace(s) and/or other supports
  • Nervous system condition, for example, migraine headaches, Parkinson’s disease, multiple sclerosis (MS)
  • Neurodivergence, for example, attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD), autism spectrum disorder, dyslexia, dyspraxia, other learning disabilities
  • Partial or complete paralysis (any cause)
  • Pulmonary or respiratory conditions, for example, tuberculosis, asthma, emphysema
  • Short stature (dwarfism)
  • Traumatic brain injury
Select...

PUBLIC BURDEN STATEMENT: According to the Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995 no persons are required to respond to a collection of information unless such collection displays a valid OMB control number. This survey should take about 5 minutes to complete.