Associate Director of Sustainability, HelloFresh US
Why did you decide to come to Leeds? I chose Leeds because of the professors I met during the evaluation process. They convinced me that CU had a world-class MBA available locally if I was willing to put in the work. Since I was living in Golden at the time and wanted to stay local, I realized that a degree from CU would help me to integrate into the Boulder-Denver business community for the long-term.
How did your time at Leeds impact you as a person? ? It's hard to even begin expressing how deeply my experience at CU impacted me. A group of fellow MBA students and I founded the Net Impact chapter, an international nonprofit organization whose mission is to mobilize a new generation to use their careers to drive transformational change in their babyÖ±²¥apps and the world, in the fall of my first year (2000). We attended the national conference in Scottsdale, AZ without a lot of details beyond the Net Impact mission. I already had an MS from the babyÖ±²¥app School of Mines in Environmental Science and Engineering (1996), and had always felt there must be a way for business to fundamentally protect and preserve the environmental resources I had come to cherish as an environmental consultant. The Net Impact conference was a integral moment of realization for me, seeing how this idea was bigger than just me, and that I was in good company with my desire to connect responsible business practices with environmental sustainability.Ìý
I went on to become president of the CU Net Impact chapter and leadÌýthe founding team of the CU-Net Impact Case Competition. This experience has been one of the great gifts of my life, and I’m thrilled to see this student-run initiative maintain itself over the last fifteen years.
Any particular professors or mentors that influenced you while you were at Leeds? The two professors I worked most closely with were Wayne Boss and Jeff Luftig. My electives were focused on a combination of Operations-Statistics and Organizational Development, both of which have characterized my career in sustainability. Data science and organizational change make a strong combination!
Where has life taken you since you graduated Leeds? After graduating, I got involved in volunteering for sustainable business NGO's as part of my career strategy. Securing mission-based employment was a bit more challenging. It took about a year for me to find my way into what later became a ten-year career in boutique sustainability strategy consulting with Five Winds International, now part of Thinkstep, right here in Boulder. It provided a soup-to-nuts professional education in sustainability program development, and the use of the technical tools required for data-driven sustainability solutions as well as credible public reporting.Ìý
In 2016, this experience with Thinkstep combined with the ongoing NGO work I was doing to create a unique opportunity for me to become the Sustainability Director at Green Chef, and President of the Board of Directors for the International Society of Sustainability Professionals (ISSP), which was a volunteer position. Green Chef allowed me to start a sustainability program "from the ground up" for a rapidly growing start up, first building basic program elements and then strategic elements to guide future work. Following its acquisition by HelloFresh US this past March, I was greeted with the opportunity (and challenge) of scaling this business approach to meet the needs of the largest company in the meal kit category. It's been a fantastic journey and I'm excited to see it play out!Ìý
What is one piece of advice/best practice that has stuck with you throughout your career? Someone once told me to seek out the tasks and projects nobody wants to do and get good at them. I discovered that this not only makes one indispensable to an organization, but it also creates numerous unpredictable opportunities that surface from the work.
July 2019