Jami Taylor

Jami Taylor is a managing director at Stanton Park Capital, a Boston-based investment bank. Her responsibilities include oversight of the firm’s healthcare practice.
Previously, Jami spent more than 7 years at Johnson & Johnson, working across Janssen R&D, Global Commercial Strategy, Global Government Affairs, and Global Public Health. Throughout her tenure there, Jami served as the J&J representative at major forums with international reach, including the Private Sector Delegation to the Global Fund to Fight AIDS, TB, and Malaria; the Partners Council at the Center for Global Development; the National Academies of Sciences, Engineering, and Medicine; and the Health Systems Leapfrogging Project of the World Economic Forum.
A recognized expert in innovative financing for global health and development, Jami secured a signature Blended Finance collaboration for J&J with Canada’s Department of Foreign Affairs, Trade, & Development in 2015, highlighted at the Global Financing for Development conference in Addis Ababa. In 2016, Jami co-founded Financing & Innovation in Global Health (FIGH), a platform to drive more efficient resource mobilization in global health R&D and delivery. In 2014, Jami was named a Cross-Sector Leadership Fellow at the Presidio Institute, a program created by the White House Office of Social Innovation and Civic Participation to advance the work of leaders addressing society’s most complex challenges.
Prior to joining Johnson & Johnson, Jami spent more than 10 years in alliance development, policy communications and grassroots mobilization. Her experience beyond industry includes work with the White House Office of Public Liaison, members of the U.S. Congress, and the U.S. Departments of Treasury, Commerce, and Health & Human Services to advance legislative and policy priorities on a nationwide scale. Jami is an alumna of the University of Virginia, Cornell University, Northwestern University and Harvard University. She resides in the greater Boston area with her husband and three children.