Following tasks will be performed by the external service provider:
Lead, structure and document stakeholder consultations (QuIC, Member States, industry and other actors).
Analyse public and targeted consultation results and extract clear, policy-relevant findings.
Support the coordination and synthesis of the different quantum technology roadmap exercises.
Map and analyse quantum supply chains, in close cooperation with JRC, Chips JU and QuIC.
Provide analytical and drafting input to the Impact Assessment led internally by the Commission.
Support briefing and policy-preparation tasks across interservice processes and RSB milestones.
Very good knowledge of EU digital and industrial policy, with a strong interest in advanced technologies; demonstrated ability to rapidly acquire working knowledge of quantum technologies and their applications.
Proven experience in designing, organising, and analysing stakeholder consultations (public and/or targeted), ideally in an EU policy context.
Experience with policy analysis and impact assessment in the EU framework (e.g. IA guidelines, better regulation toolbox) is a strong asset.
Very good understanding of technology and innovation ecosystems, industrial supply chains, and their mapping or analysis.
Ability to structure and analyse both quantitative and qualitative data (e.g. survey results, written submissions, interviews) efficiently and fast.
Ability to give clear business and technical presentations to mixed audiences, including senior management and external stakeholders.
Ability to apply high-quality standards in drafting and in analytical work, including proper referencing and traceability of evidence.
Ability to cope with fast-evolving technologies and policy priorities in the field of quantum technologies and digital innovation.
Very good communication skills with both technical and non-technical audiences, including the ability to explain complex concepts in simple terms.
Strong analysis and problem-solving skills, with the capacity to propose pragmatic and well-reasoned options.
Capability to write clear, structured, and concise technical, analytical, and policy documents (notes, reports, staff working documents, briefings).
Ability to participate effectively in technical and policy meetings and contribute constructively to discussions.
At least 5 years of professional experience in policy analysis, technology policy, industrial policy, or related fields, preferably at EU or international level.
At least 3 years of experience in designing and/or analysing stakeholder consultations (public and/or targeted) for policy development or impact assessment.
Demonstrated experience in working with advanced or emerging technologies (e.g. quantum, microelectronics, high-performance computing, AI, cloud, cybersecurity) in a policy, strategy, or techno-economic context.
Proven experience in drafting high-quality analytical and policy documents (e.g. staff working documents, impact assessment contributions, roadmap/strategy reports, policy briefs).
Experience with supply chain mapping and/or ecosystem analyses (e.g. industrial value chains, critical raw materials, strategic dependencies) is a strong asset.
Experience of working with or within EU institutions, EU-funded programmes, or similar international organisations.
Practical experience with standard office and collaboration tools used in the Commission environment (e.g. Excel, PowerPoint, Word, SharePoint, Teams; experience with survey tools and basic data analysis tools is an asset).
No formal certification is strictly mandatory for the performance of the tasks. The following certifications and standards would be considered an asset:
Certification in project management (e.g. PRINCE2 Foundation, PM², PMP, or equivalent).
Certification or formal training in policy analysis, impact assessment, or evaluation.
Any relevant certification or recognised training in data analysis, statistics, or survey methodology.