I would like to ask Outside Directors Honma, Komatsu, and Nishii. If you were to deliberately identify any areas where you believe Daiichi Sankyo has challenges or significant room for improvement, what would they be? Also, please share your expectations for the company moving forward.
Honma
As for our company’s strengths, I believe we should continue to refine our unwavering principles: valuing trust-based relationships with stakeholders, maintaining an open corporate culture, conducting business with care and integrity, and fostering an innovative culture that embraces new challenges. Additionally, our Purpose, Mission, Vision, Core Values, and Core Behaviors are outstanding, and I feel that our greatest strength lies in how all employees share, empathize with, and resonate with this collective “One DS Culture,” working together as one team with excellent teamwork. On the other hand, I also believe we should boldly and swiftly change what needs to be changed. We need to proactively promote the introduction of DX, AI, and other technologies throughout the entire pharmaceutical value chain. Furthermore, our company has set forth in our 2030 Vision a transformation from “Global Pharma Innovator with a competitive advantage in oncology” to “Innovative Global Healthcare Company.” This requires us to envision our future with a broad perspective that considers many stakeholders, while executing boldly and swiftly with focused, detailed implementation. As a leading company among Japanese pharmaceutical enterprises, I believe we need to strongly drive forward these initiatives.
Komatsu
Traditionally, pharmaceutical companies have operated on the basic model of “drug discovery → development → prescription through physicians,” where patients, even as end consumers, were not positioned as customers. However, in recent years, this structure is undergoing significant transformation due to factors such as the tightening of healthcare economics, advances in personalized medicine, the widespread adoption of digital technology, expanded patient participation, and changes in the regulatory environment. While drug discovery will remain our core business, we need to deepen Patient Centricity and consider building comprehensive healthcare platforms that include diagnosis, prevention, monitoring, and life support, as well as dialogue and co-creation with patients and society. This requires nationwide DX infrastructure development and institutional reforms as prerequisites. We should prepare to establish a pioneering position in anticipation of environmental changes in the near future. Additionally, to enhance our competitiveness in the global market, I expect each employee to cultivate both “mindset of competing globally” and the “confidence to succeed globally.”
Nishii
In my experience engaging with institutional investors and shareholders, key monitoring points include the progress and results of our R&D pipeline, investment status in new businesses and technologies, external collaborations and partnerships, ROI analysis, profitability and efficiency of core businesses, status of non-core assets, financial soundness, overall portfolio balance, and the balance between short-term profitability and long-term growth. At the same time, I believe that becoming a company supported by investors who place value on social outcomes, as well as individual shareholders, will be a significant force supporting our sustainable growth. I clearly recall receiving feedback from an institutional investor at the discussion meeting on sustainability last December, requesting that we clarify the connection and impact pathway between human capital investment and corporate value enhancement. Under our global management structure, our company is also focusing on activities to foster One DS Culture, and I hope we can address this theme in our next 5-year Business Plan.