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The supervisory board of KLM intends to nominate Marjan Rintel as the new president and CEO of the airline. Rintel is currently president and CEO of Dutch Railways, where she has worked since ...
Dutch airline KLM would love to fly far fewer people on the short hop between Amsterdam's Schiphol Airport and Brussels — it's even buying them train tickets. "If there are connections, if the ...
Marjan Rintel will soon join his team as CEO of KLM. Her extensive experience at KLM and of the Dutch transport industry makes her the best person to lead the company, drawing on the strengths of ...
Bastian himself admires KLM, the Dutch airline headed by CEO Marjan Rintel. The Netherlands wasn't a natural home for a major international hub, my colleague Phil Wahba writes in a Fortune story.
Marjan Rintel, CEO of KLM. (Courtesy of KLM) It's true in the airline business—and in any business. Sometimes the wind is at your back, sometimes it's all headwinds.
Thankfully, Marjan Rintel is no stranger to problem-solving. She spent 15 years in various operational and marketing positions across KLM before leaving to be President and CEO of Dutch Railways.
Marjan Rintel says collaboration is needed as rail should not be seen as a competitor Marjan Rintel: ‘If you’re serious on reaching your sustainability goals, the train is not a competitor.
Dutch railway chief Marjan Rintel has been appointed as the new chief executive of KLM, replacing Pieter Elbers who is leaving the company early. Rintel has been head of NS since 2014, prior to which ...
In 2005, Anne Rigail ran Air France’s hub control center at Paris Charles de Gaulle airport and her counterpart at KLM in Amsterdam back then was Marjan Rintel. The two airlines had joined ...
Rintel is also looking at the connection to Berlin, which currently takes six hours and 40 minutes by train. Track infrastructure upgrades on both sides of the border could eventually cut the train ...
Bastian himself admires KLM, the Dutch airline headed by CEO Marjan Rintel. The Netherlands wasn't a natural home for a major international hub, my colleague Phil Wahba writes in a Fortune story.