Academia can be an exceptional career path but it can also be tough, especially for Early Career Researchers (ECRs). Having navigated the world of academia myself, I know first-hand what a difference it makes when departments and labs consciously create a supportive environment for ECRs and the damage done when they don’t.
Here are 15 actionable ways you can make your team a better, supportive, and more inspiring place for the next generation of researchers. Some are quick wins, others are going to require some work. All of them matter.
1. Invite ECRs to Give Seminar Talks (And Cover the Costs, Upfront)
ECRs need platforms to share their work and build their networks. Regularly invite them to present at seminar series. But don’t just offer them a slot; cover their travel (ideally up front!), accommodation, and, if possible, honoraria. Here’s a great example of how it can be done. Starting or changing your seminar format to one specifically for ECRs would be a huge boost and move us away from those same old boring conference talks.
2. Prioritise Dedicated Training Over Journal Clubs
Replace some traditional journal clubs with real training: data analysis workshops, grant writing bootcamps, public peer review sessions, presentation skill seminars, and meta-science discussions. ECRs are hungry for skills beyond technical lab work. Give them that and not only will your lab benefit from more rounded individuals but the ECRs will be better placed for alternative careers and academia.
3. Actively Encourage Collaboration
Encourage and facilitate collaborations within your lab, your department, and outside your institution. Networks are critical for scientific growth and career development.
Insular labs stagnate; collaborative ones thrive
4. Foster Public Speaking & Writing Opportunities
Push your ECRs to give talks (both academic and public-facing) and to write (opinion pieces, reviews, blogs, preLights, etc.). This builds their CVs and confidence, and opens up alternative career avenues. Make introductions, offer edits, and celebrate their successes.
5. Host Annual Career Development Days
Dedicate one full day each year to reviewing CVs, prepping for job or fellowship interviews, and working on grant applications together. Share your insider knowledge of funding opportunities, especially those small pots of money for independent ECR projects.
6. Relieve Unnecessary Pressure and Stand Up for ECRs
You may not be able to pay everyone more, but you absolutely can use your position to shield ECRs from unreasonable demands, departmental politics, or unnecessary admin. Don’t forget what it felt like at their career stage. Challenge institutional inertia on their behalf.
7. Treat ECRs as the Experts They Are
Most ECRs are postdocs or just a lucky break away from a permanent post themselves. Treat them as equals and experts, not just as helping hands. If you need reminding of what the postdoc experience can be, read more.
8. Listen—and Act—on What ECRs Say They Need
When ECRs say they need equipment, software, or support, believe them. Prioritise these needs and advocate for necessary resources. Their ability to thrive depends on it and so does your lab’s output.
9. Cover Upfront Costs Instead of Passing the Burden Down
Departments (not individuals) should absorb upfront costs, or you risk excluding those who can’t afford a financial hit. As a PI, advocate fiercely for this at department level. This isn’t just about bringing academia in line with normal businesses, it’s about equity and inclusion.
10. Make Your Space Safe and Inclusive, Always
Speak up against any abusive behaviours or toxic politics even if (especially if) it means calling out another PI. Silence protects abusers. ECRs should never have to navigate harassment, discrimination, or power games just to do their job.
11. Avoid Internal Competition and Value Individuality
Don’t pit ECRs against each other on the same projects. Take time to know each person’s goals and working style. Support those who want to stay in academia and those considering other paths, equally and openly. Avoid favouritism at all costs as it will slow progress, damage your labs culture and result in people leaving.
12. Design and Update Individual Training Plans
Every ECR deserves a clear, personalised training plan, reviewed annually. Training is more than just learning a technique, it’s about building independence, transferable skills, and professional confidence.
13. Take Leadership Courses Yourself
If you run a lab, commit to learning good management and leadership! Consider formal courses in leadership and people management (this should really be mandatory for all PIs and provided by institutions). You can’t know what you were never taught; investing in yourself helps your team too. We’re developing such courses so keep your eye out.
14. Preprint Your Lab’s Papers
Timely outputs are critical for ECRs applying for jobs, fellowships, and grants. Preprints can make all the difference, saving 6+ months. Make preprinting your default and encourage your team to get their work out there when it’s ready.
15. Model Integrity and Open Science
Lead by example: be transparent in your research, foster a culture of sharing, and have regular discussions about research integrity and communication. How you behave sets the standards for those you train and the next generation of PIs.
Bonus: Small Changes Really Do Matter
It’s easy to think that improving life for ECRs in your lab or department can’t change the system. It absolutely can. For those ECRs in a genuinely good environment, it’s transformative and your example sets new expectations for others. Change is slow, but it always starts somewhere.
If you’re a PI, lab head, or department leader, you might already be doing some of these things. If not, now’s the time to start. It matters more than you might realise for your ECRs, your science, and the future of academia.
If you found these suggestions useful, please share, and let’s build a better, kinder academic world together.
Ah, a question I ask myself almost daily. Now, don’t get me wrong I really do love my job — even if this particular career stage is one that I’m not exactly amazing at — but one of my areas of research is the academic culture. This means I spend more time than most thinking about how we do research and the culture in which we do it. In this post, I will outline some the key issues of working in academia.
Before we start, this is not designed to deter potential PhD applicants, but I do believe it is essential to be fully informed going into this career. It’s worth noting that, despite what I’m about to say, I am still currently in this career and I’m actively writing grants and fellowships to try and gain an independent position…whilst also being very open to leaving academia in the next year. I might also write a follow up about the positives of an academic career to provide some balance. So lets get into this.
Mental health
Underpinning (and all too often caused by) all of the below is poor mental health. This impacts just about every stage of academia but has most often been studied in PhD students, postdocs and junior faculty. There are no shortage of studies proving that this is a major issue. Personally I regularly get into arguements with PIs and (particularly sadly) people at earlier career stages who should know better over this. Too many refuse to acknowledge these issues and dismiss those who speak out as “trouble makers” or “malcontents” who must hate academia. For the record, speaking out and offering solutions is done because I love academia and what it could, and should, be.
Bullying / abuse / power-dynamics
“early career researcher (ECR)” — let us just sit with this one for a moment. Somebody not familiar with academia would probably be highly confused that a 35+ year old who’s been in the career for over 10 years, has a PhD and multiple years of postdoc experience would still be considered “early career”. It isn’t just absurd, it’s insulting. But this is symptomatic of a larger problem. By calling people “early career” and framing postdocs as “training positions”, it is easier to justify the low pay and overwork. From the outside, academia often looks like a liberal paradise. The reality however is that academia as a structure is incredibly conservative and reluctant to change. Hierarchy and power-dynamics are at the heart of this reticence to change.
Then there is the abundant bullying and abuse that occurs. This abuse is everything from gaslighting (which I’ve experienced myself) and micromanagement to sexual assault. There was a very high profile case recently involving David Sabatini and this is unfortunately barely the tip of the iceberg. There was a recent example on Twitter of a female PhD student who was instructing on a course. The student recieved highly sexist and abusive feedback — and this is a widespread problem that female academics face on course feedback/evaluations.
These things are perpetuated by those in power who consistently refuse to do anything about such behaviour because those big names bring in money and reputation…as if there aren’t hundreds of other perfectly talented people who couldn’t do the same if given the chance. Until there are consequences for such behaviour it will continue to force good people out of academia.
It’s 7-jobs in one
Don’t believe me?
1. Researcher
2. Teacher
3. Administrator
4. Project manager
5. Team manager
6. Public engagement officer / sci-commer
7. Writer
And you have to be good at them all — without any formal training in any aspect I should add!
Exploitation
Unfortunately (key word of this article!) the way that academia is structured, those who most benefit from the system are PIs. Those below that career stage are therefore frequently exploited as little more than cheap or even free labour. There’s no real professional development for PhDs or postdocs and no benefit to doing anything other than working all out to get as many “high impact” papers as possible with the 3 year contract.
And it doesn’t end when you leave a position to move onto your next. There is an unwritten expectation that you will continue to work on your previous project to help finish it which often means writing papers long into your new position. This isn’t covered by your new salary and can conflict with your new responsibilities. This means that you must finish off your previous work for free and in your own free time.
Exploitation is perhaps a harsh way of saying goodwill. But given the other issues I’m highlighting here it is perhaps clear as to why that goodwill is disappearing.
Long hours
One of the biggest benefits of academia is that you get a lot of flexibility as you’re in charge of your own time. Or that’s the myth anyway…Anybody who works with animals or (difficult) cell cultures will tell you that you run on experiment/organism time. This can mean very long days — just look on Twitter which always cycles back to competing on who works the most hours — but also working weekends or even nights. I’ve had periods where I worked 7 days a week or days where I was in the lab for 15+hours & days that turned into nights (anyone for a 3am time point?). In fact there are still certain experiments (read most) that for me mean very long days as there is no other way of doing such time points. This is easier if there’s a team who can share the workload, which thankfully I mostly have, but if you’re alone or working in a not so supportive team then say goodbye to any free time you once had.
Got a paper or grant due? Then you’re likely going to be writing that over the Christmas/holiday/birthday break and on any vacation you may take. Now this last one is optional, but far too many people (including me) fall into this trap. Or at least justify it as a “trap”. The reality is that far too many funders release grants and fellowships over such breaks — early Jan should not be a submission date for a career defining fellowship or grant and yet it so often is. This last point of course hurts female scientists the most as they often also have full time family commitments over that period.
Poor pay (relative to comparable expertise and education)
3 degrees, 7.5 years of education and a further 4 years of postdoc “training”. Yet I earn less than many who left undergrad for a career and I earn relatively little more than people without any education. We’re all in the same position here as postdocs. The academy makes many excuses for this low pay but, as you’ll see from elsewhere in this post, those excuses don’t hold up to any inspection. I wont talk too much on this as there is an excellent article touching on pay and “training” here. None of this is to say that the pay is bad relative to my childhood background — it’s more than anyone in my family will ever earn — but it is low given the training, education and expertise required. It is low given how much academia takes. It is low given that scientists got us out of a global pandemic.
For me the low pay impacts my living situation hugely. Being in London, the rental market is completely insane and out of control. Almost 50% of my take home wage each month goes on rent/bills and I do not live alone and I do not live somewhere particularly nice either. This also means that each month I must choose between socialising and putting money into my savings, you know for a future or holidays. Oh and I no longer pay into my pension either and I’m far from being the only postdoc in London without a pension. Academia is quite literally taking from my future.
Requirement to move/relocate
The low pay is further impacted by the short contracts. 3 years for a postdoc (max 5) is standard in the UK. This means all postdocs are under a constant pressure and huge instability. Life is effectively on hold for many during the postdoc years. Did I mention those postdoc years can easily last 8+ years (and the length is increasing)? A decade of ones life on hold, full of insecurity, low pay, limited career progression and basically no training. It’s an awful lot to ask of anyone. Not to mention that for female academics, the postdoc years are often the prime child bearing/rearing years. This makes having a family and successful academic career highly challenging. This is all made worse by funders who place an emphasis on moving between institutions. Personally, I’ve lived in 3 cities in the past 4.5 years alone. With each move comes starting your life over all again; new job that often means you need to rapidly learn a new subfield, new city, no/few existing friends in that new city.
Lack of formal training
If you’re in a PhD programme or have come out the other end then this will be overly familiar. There is a training fallacy in academia that exists at every stage. It is a system in which nobody is given appropriate (if any) training for their current or future role. It gets less enticing still if you wish to leave the PI-track and move into a non-Ac role as the academy still has no idea how to prepare people for this, despite it being the most common path.
Worse still, most promotions and fellowships are given based on papers published, luck and scientific ability. Yet as one moves up in academia the things that become important are your ability to manage a project, to manage and train people and effectively run a small business. None of this is assessed or even required to demonstrated before you’re put into positions requiring these skills. This results in a completely broken system where individual careerism is the most important thing — to most but certainly not all, there are some brilliant PIs out there.
One final point on the lack of training. This leads to huge gaps in knowledge of how we do science (metascience) and why things work the way they currently do. A good example is the publishing industry. Far too many scientists have a surprising lack of understanding as to the history of peer review and publishing. For example, most don’t know that the publishing system as it is was created post-WW2 by Robert Maxwell (father of Ghislane Maxwell, of Epstein infamy). Or that the academic publishing business sits somewhere between the music industry and movie industry in terms of the money involved — which I find mindblowing. If we don’t know why things are broken then no wonder people rely on “my experience” and ignore the evidence.
Funding & lack of jobs
Funding in academia is constantly fraught. No-government funds science appropriately, which in light of the COVID pandemic is particularly egregious. But there are also numerous problems with the way the funds are distributed and used.
For example, in the UK one of the major funders, the Welcome Trust, have recently revamped their funding schemes for early careers and introduced a 3-year post PhD limit for applications to one of their major fellowships. This decision makes a huge number of early career researchers ineligible and is difficult to square with how science works these days (requiring more time and more data to publish papers). Thankfully, most other funders in the UK have removed age-limits on their fellowships. But this kind of decision also creates a huge inequality in the system with lucky postdocs being awarded a fellowship to start their own lab over much more experienced postdocs and those who can actually demonstrate they could do the job of PI, rather than just publish some papers and write a fellowship. Personally, I think we’re going to see a lot more abuse from this too due to the nature of the kind of people who will be awarded these early fellowships before they’re ready but I’d love to be proven wrong.
Funding is also most often awarded to those coming from big name labs who have the resources to spare for preliminary data and have enough lab members that they can generate large (“high-impact”) papers. This is yet another element of “luck” that flows through the entire academic career. Those who are successful often don’t like this because they feel it takes away from their achievements and hard work. I’m not trying to do that but if so much of the academic career wasn’t down to luck then we wouldn’t be losing so many brilliant scientists.
The funding situation also means there are few permanent positions, particularly beyond the post-doc stage. Unfortunately, this impacts minorities, women and 1st-gen groups the most.
Lack of positivity / unappreciation
Ironic ending this piece by commenting on a lack of positivity so this will be the penultimate section instead. Other than bullying, this is perhaps the section most dependent upon the PI in question. Some bring amazing positivity and appreciation. For example, my current PI is very clear that he appreciates me — and this makes a huge difference on a day to day basis. There’s another PI in the department who is perhaps the nicest and most positive person I’ve ever met. However, others in the department are clear that they do not appreciate me and are actively disrespectful. This also has a big impact in my daily working environment. The problem is that too many are stuck on the notion that success in academia is papers. Anything else is a distraction or waste of time.
Now from a pure career perspective this is kind of true — we’re not really judged on much else. But from a moral, ethical and humanity view this is wrong. But it also means most efforts to actually improve a department or academia more widely are actively unappreciated. I work in a place where you’re value is largely just how many hours you work. It’s incredibly toxic and forces new hires into working long, unsustainable, hours. It also directly leads to abuse.
But let’s move away from my experience and look at the evidence. There are no shortage of people coming forward to state that they haven’t been given the recognition they should have, often in the form of being excluded as an author from papers. But it goes much further than this, particularly (again) for women and minorities. Female academics do the majority of the tasks that keep academia running, such as sitting on committees and those things that contribute to the culture of a department. However, these tasks are almost completely unrecognised and certainly not appreciated or valued in tenure applications or promotions. For minorities, DEI work often falls to them. This work can also come at the cost of research output for these groups, making them less competitive in a system that only values one thing.
Metrics, metrics, metrics
The competition for positions and grants has lead academia to focus on papers and citations as the primary indicators of success. This is influencing how research is conducted and presented, and makes it hard to complement traditional publishing with new ways to share knowledge. In effect, academia is still largely stuck in a pre-internet age. As more metrics are devised, academics find themselves under even more pressure. Far too many PIs push this pressure onto their lab members, creating some of the issues above. Many more don’t do this but suffer from the pressure — in a job that really shouldn’t have a whole lot of pressure or time sensitive stress. The worst bit of it all is that evidence continually shows, overwhelming, that the types of metrics we use are not effective. And with so many being based on a publishing system (Robert Maxwell remember) that is completely out of control and wholly unfit for purpose.
Ultimately, many of these issues boil down to egotistic narcissists, sorry I mean careerists, striving for personal gain above the advancement of knowledge or training of others. But we (or rather funders, PIs and institutions) are directly responsible for this and for just how broken the whole system is. Change is too slow and difficult, perhaps it’s time to burn it all down and build back something that actually works.
A (rather important) note to all of this. Many people in academia will offer advice but take care what advice/who you listen to. A) Many people are indoctrinated and don’t see any real problems with academia, B) many others will “play the game” and as they benefit from how things work don’t believe in change or that the issues are not that bad and C) far too many conflate experience with evidence. If the evidence does not support an individuals experience then that person should really re-think why that is. D) Those who’ve had bad experiences will struggle to give you a balanced opinion. Of course I have my own viewpoint and biases; I highlight the issues not to complain but because I love academia and what is could and should be.
The foundations of academia are outdated and broken. It is up to us to fix them. Photo by Mick Haupt on Unsplash
Originally posted in 2022 on a different blog, I’ve included this again here along with a recent related episode from the podcast. Sadly, things have not changed enough for me to need to update this in 2025.
I was recently quoted in a Nature news piece about the paucity of postdocs. However, the article couldn’t dive into what being “valued” actually entails so I thought I’d discuss this more. There’s also a 2025 episode of the Preprints in Motion podcast exploring this more too.
However, to start with, there is no one-fits-all answer. Some people should be in academia, some people should be in industry, some in medical writing, some in consulting etc… And, to avoid landing myself in any trouble I’d like to spell it out as clearly as I can; I am writing here based on *lots* of conversations with postdocs and PhDs. There will be things I feel too but this post is me writing in an expert capacity. It will also be generalised statements that some people will relate to whilst others may feel I’ve missed things — if that’s the case please add them in the comments or contact me and I can update as needed. Finally, please don’t attack me or label me as being “too negative”. I am simply stating things that are shared by many (who don’t always feel they can speak out) and that is backed by the current evidence.
What does “being valued” entail?
Being valued isn’t tied to a single thing and different people will need different things to feel valued by an employer or manager. Indeed, you can feel valued by one but not both of those. However, I would argue that the entire value package in academia, particularly at the postdoc level, is lacking and not at all “competitive”.
When people think value, one of the first things they associate with that is salary. Thankfully, this is one area most people accept is lacking in academia. And it is an academia problem, not a postdoc problem as every stage (except the inept senior management) is underpaid in academia. Salary also hits differently depending on where you live. In the UK, if you live outside of the golden triangle (London-Oxford-Cambridge) then a postdoc wage may be considered pretty good, especially when compared to working class wages that largely exist in the North. However, within that golden triangle the postdoc wage doesn’t stretch; as I’ve already written about elsewhere. The other component to salary is that we’ve spent 8+ years in education during which we don’t pay into our pensions, we don’t earn a real wage and we’re delaying life. The postdoc period then comes with a poor wage (undergraduates can get entry level graduate jobs at not much lower a starting salary) and often involves lots of moving which is expensive and further complicates settling down and doing the “adult” things. The average postdoc is paid around £6,000 less than the UK average wage¹. I always find it sad that society values science so little that governments are not incentivised to spend more on STEM, especially after the vital role bioscience played in the pandemic.
Value also comes in the form of recognition and reward for our efforts. This is one area in which academia fails spectacularly. Academics views papers (and first author papers at that) as a suitable reward. Papers are also the things used to judge us, which makes them a very twisted reward indeed. A reward would be a pay increase based on exceptional work (non-paper based) or even just a verbal recognition of a person’s efforts in departmental meetings. But the majority of tasks in academia are not recognised as they don’t lead to a paper; so how could you expect people to feel valued when you ignore the majority of their effort? The bigger problem here is that this disproportionately impacts women and minorities who are the ones who perform the bulk of community and unseen tasks. This doesn’t just come from management either, other postdocs seem remarkably keen to bring each other down — careerism is the absolute ruin of science (but more on that another time).
And on that note, the feeling of being respected is also intricately linked with feeling valued. Postdocs get distinctly less respect than a PI even though they may be no less experienced. It’s almost as if that step of fellowship/lectureship conveys “expert” and the rest of the postdoc pool are what? Not experts? This isn’t just academia either, in the “real world” postdocs are still not held in the same regard as a freshly minted PI. I think postdocs are often seen as a temporary pair of hands to do the bidding of the PI and little more². When papers are published, if you’re lucky enough to get media attention, it is the PI who almost exclusively gets that attention and recognition. It is the PI who is invited to conferences and seminars to talk about the work. Sure postdocs can present at a conference but we’re rarely actually invited to speak as a PI is. In the long term, it is the PI who benefits more than anyone else from those publications. Most postdocs will leave academia where papers really don’t matter that much, besides showing that you can write and as evidence of completing a project. Yet it is the postdocs who run themselves into the ground working long (unpaid) hours and weekends to get the papers done in the 3 year limits of grants.
Recognition and respect also interect with the wider support for postdocs. Traditionally, the postdoc period was supposed to be a training position although this is not only now outdated but I’m not sure there has ever been acceptable training. I’ve never worked at a place that has any tangible training plan in place and whenever I suggest such things I face remarkable resistence to the idea. To quote from a brilliant piece; “in labs throughout the country, including those on the cutting edge of research, mentorship practices still take their cue from the earliest European colleges, where a single, experienced, sage-like scholar served as mentor to a group of excited and engaged students. This literally medieval basis for mentorship in science is so entrenched that most research training programs at the graduate and postdoctoral levels take a hands-off approach to mentoring, leading to a wide variety of mentorship experiences for trainees, even within the same departments and programs”. There is a distinct lack of support for career development (something I’ve definitely experienced myself) with university level offerings varying hugely in quality and utility. PIs are sorely under-equipped for supporting people in positions outside of academia, though far too many are also incapable of supporting academic careers. The whole system needs to rethink the role of postdoc and to provide structured training from the university and PI-level for skills that will land non-academic careers. I honestly believe that the biggest barrier here is simply that if we acknowledge that a postdoc is not actually a training position then the salary would need to increase significantly.
Work-life balance. Nobody in academia should need me to write any more than that as we’re all well aware of how non-existent that can be. If an employer values you then they want you to look after yourself and take time away from work. Hell, even if they don’t care about you, if they care about your work output they will want the same thing. Academia fails miserably here and it does so under the gaslighting guise of “passion”. My PhD PI and current PI both frequently tell me to take holidays and are both hugely supportive. However, I’ve been in positions where I’ve been horribly overworked and I still witness a toxic culture of constant working. I really struggle with understanding where the pressure in academia comes from. The research is not so essential that it can justify the pressure. Academia moves slowly so the career progression can’t really justify the pressure either. Maybe it’s the short contracts and messed up way we “value” and judge success. Having a life in conjunction with being successful at work should be the norm but within academia this is absolutely not the case.
One of the things not directly mentioned in the Nature article is the improving and expanding biotech industry. This is discussed well across Twitter and in an excellent newsletter by Elliot Hershberg. The impact of this is that there is a genuine “competitive” environment that can pay postdocs better and give postdocs an actual careeer trajectory based on competence and ability rather than pure luck. The biotech industry has it’s own problems and is still largely concentrated in specific areas (Bay area in SF or around Cambridge in the UK as examples) which are very expensive areas to live in. But it represents a challenge to academia strong enough to be pulling away even senior academics and academia, as slow as it is, certainly won’t adapt in time to prevent the best leaving.
It’s really not that difficult. Postdocs want 1) better environment and pay commenserate with training, experience and education required (to have an acceptable quality of life compared to those who didn’t enter academia) 2) an environment of respect for postdocs which includes support for our careers (in or out of academia) and better appreciation of our efforts and 3) recognition for our work, beyond just papers.
There are some brilliant PIs out there who contradict everything I’ve said here and I don’t want this post to detract from them. But we need to aim at the lowest level so that nobody is lost or hurt by inadequate systems.
Who’s responsibility is this? Well, it’s the funders, the uni’s and the PI’s. Postdocs are never going to come together enough to stand up for each other — there’s too much competition and it’s too precarious a position. Funders need to take an active role in combating the abuses and toxicty. It is ultimately their responsibility and it is a responsibility that they have negleted for too long. Universities are businesses. They will always protect their bottom line and reputation — we’ve seen that time and time again even in extreme situations. So we cannot rely on university management to police themselves. But the government/funders could create an independent body to oversee academic misconduct and complaints of abuse. There is no shortage of brilliant people with brilliant ideas — those “field leading” PIs are replacable and noone should be given a job for life. That kind of security leads to complacency and a lack of accountability — and abuse. My biggest problem is always that, although systemic change is unlikely, there are no excuses for not making local environments better. This is the direct responsibility of PI’s (at a lab level) and heads of department (at a larger local level). I utterly hate seeing failures locally.
Ultimately, it is clear that the system is broken. People are crying out with stories illustrating just how bad things have gotten. People are also screaming out with solutions which must (& does) often feel like screaming into the void. As long as we continue to allow luck to be the main driver in academic careers and success we will not break free of the current system. If people are willing to accept that change is needed and willing to listen, instead of attack, then we can all work together to create a better future in academia.
The average UK wage is ~£38,131. The average postdoc wage is ~£32,000 (this isn’t as easy to accurately calculate as I thought it’d be but is based on “averages” from a variety of sources).
This is a great quote from an eLife piece; “If you don’t have your own lab, if you’re not producing last-author papers and getting grants, you are taken less seriously as a scientist. When people discuss their posters with me at conferences, they may look around a bit more, anxious not to miss the opportunity to talk to a ‘big fish’.”