Five years as a junior faculty member

In 2010, after one year as a junior faculty member, I wrote up that year in numbers, and in 2012, at three years as junior faculty, I wrote this. The last two years have been different, mostly due to having a small baby to look after (fewer conferences), but also due to a shift in the lab as it became established (less grant writing, more research paper writing). Now I have finished five years as junior faculty, so I can be quantitative about my entire tenure-track period:
265: the number of grants I have reviewed for various foundations
119: the number of articles I have reviewed for different journals85: the number of grants submitted (27 project grants, 33 fellowship applications and 17 grants as collaborator)
31: grants accepted (15 project grants, 11 fellowships and 5 grants as collaborator)
46: grants rejected (12 project grants, 22 fellowships and 12 as collaborator)
5: grants pending (tenure application and 4 fellowships)
€5.7 million: euros given to the lab in project grants
€4.1 million: euros spent in research46: invited talks
19: conferences
8: lectures97: article submissions and resubmissions
53: articles published or in press (31 primary papers, 15 reviews, 6 book chapters)
3: number of edited volumes22: number of lab members
12: PhD projects ongoing
1: Masters projects ongoing
19: number of full-time researchers in the lab
(34: number of ex-lab members)0: still the number of days I've spent doing experiments
So what is an average month for me? Well, I'll typically submit one grant, with nearly a 50% acceptance rate. I'll submit 1-2 papers, and have one accepted. I spend a fair bit of time reviewing - 4 grants and 2 papers per month, not counting favours for friends. I'll go give an invited talk or attend an international conference. My lab will spend ~€70,000 each month (not counting fellowships), and one new person will start or an old person will leave.
Next week I find out whether this is enough to get tenure at the University of Leuven.

Reader Comments (2)
Good luck!!
Wow, quite amazing to see it broken down that way. You would have to be up against an incredible level of competition to miss out, I think you will be practicing your language skills and enjoying the special beers in Belgium for years to come. Good luck