It is a good question. A few solutions to your problem have been developed
by trial and error.
You got a position, which means that your institution will pay you money on
a regular basis. That is good.
The worst thing you can do now is to engage in serious research on an important
subject within your field of expertise. That would be a dead end for your career.
Actual research simply devours too much time, which you will not have.
But since you have a salary, you can produce completely nonsensical "articles"
and pay certain kinds of journals to publish them, at a substantial fee, with a
guarantee of no peer review. When you present your list of these publications to
your granting body, they will give you more money. And so the cycle continues.
This model has been applied successfully, especially in Australia, at UNSW.
If you like to know how well it works in practice, you can inquire at the address
n.wildberger@unsw.
edu.au