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“It was at six o’clock one Saturday morning,” Koster said. “Just hours As early as 1985, working as the controller for an international manufacturing “The owner of that company was rock-solid honest,” she said.“He taught me a lot about business and became like a second father to me.” Her first father, “an incredibly tough, but fun and value-driven executive,” bucked the argument from other members of the family that a true Christian couldn’t be a businessperson. “He showed me it was possible to be a Christian in business,” Koster said.Her mother, sisters, husband, children, that early boss, Calvin’s first female business professor Shirley Roels—all of them, she added, “are, in a sense, doing my job now. I’m a conglomerate of Lured away from Boeing where, among other assignments, she created and directed a new model for international business development, Koster now oversees all non-engineering-related operations at Blue Origin. “At Boeing, I used to think, ‘What, on the face of the earth, could be a bigger and more interesting challenge for my skill set than international development?’” she said. “It seems maybe only something above the earth.” Blue Origin is one of a handful of private companies hoping to take over “It’s not the outcome we hoped for,” Koster said, “but we learned some In a company that describes itself as extremely competitive and having few rules, Koster uses as her guide the model of servant leadership. “That’s what all the formative people in my life—including people at Calvin—have modeled for me,” she said. “So though I didn’t go looking for this job, I’m sure that God has a reason for me to be here. It may simply be to practice servant leadership.” |
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