GenVault
Michael Lebbin has a diverse work experience in the life sciences industry. Michael is currently the President of Pacific Science, LLC, a position they assumed in 2021. In 2022, they became the Co-Founder of GenVault, specializing in transport services. Additionally, they hold the role of Biologics Manager at Precision Stability Storage, LLC, also starting in 2022.
Prior to these roles, Michael Lebbin served as the Vice President / General Manager Transportation Division at Brooks Life Sciences from 2016 to 2020. From 1995 to 2020, they worked at Pacific Science/Air Liquide/Airgas as the General Manager, responsible for day-to-day operations and negotiations with life science equipment companies.
In 2006, they co-founded Novare LLC, which they were involved with until 2017. From 2000 to 2017, they served as the President/CEO/Founder of Pacific Bio-Material Management, Inc./Pacific Scientific Transport, where they provided leadership, set strategic direction, and developed strong business relationships.
Overall, Michael Lebbin has held various leadership positions and has a strong background in the life sciences industry, particularly in transportation and management.
Michael Lebbin obtained their High School Diploma from Evanston High School between 1979 and 1982. Following that, they pursued a Bachelor's Degree in Logistics, Materials, and Supply Chain Management at Michigan State University from 1982 to 1986.
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GenVault
GenVault is dedicated to stabilizing biosamples and to the integration of biosample transport, storage and retrieval, in a way that meshes seamlessly with day-to-day lab operations: thus simplifying sample sharing for customers in genomic medicine, discovery and identification. Today, we are empowering over 150 pharmaceutical companies, medicalcenters, academic institutions and law enforcement agencies, to more fully leverage the rapidly growing genomics industry. GenVault’s proprietary dry-state storage platform enables the extraction, preservation, recovery and distribution of DNA at room temperature. Currently work is proceeding on equivalent storage technologies for protein and RNA.The need for such sample management solutions is growing at an exponential rate, as more and more samples are collected worldwide for disease diagnosis, research, identification and criminal investigations