Missionary Kid · Special Operator · Entrepreneur.
Derek Anderson's story begins far from any stage. He grew up in Ecuador until the age of 16 — summiting Andean peaks above 20,000 feet, trekking days deep into remote stretches of the Amazon jungle, and accompanying his father into inner-city, third-world prisons. That upbringing forged an early comfort with hardship, a fluency across cultures, and a conviction that the hardest places are exactly where people need leadership the most.
He carried that into 23 years as a U.S. Air Force Pararescueman, culminating as a Chief Master Sergeant. He served in Rescue and Special Tactics Squadrons, taught as a formal instructor, embedded with other U.S. Special Operations teams on combat deployments, and trained alongside allied special operations forces in over 20 countries.
In 2018, Derek led the U.S. advisory role during the Thailand Cave Rescue — Operation Wild Boar — where 12 boys and their soccer coach were trapped deep inside a flooded cave system. What followed was an unprecedented international effort: 29 countries coordinated, over 5,000 personnel involved, and an underwater sedated rescue that had never been attempted. All 13 were brought out alive.
What does the impossible look like?
After the military, Derek channeled that same drive into business, founding LIV Nicotine Pouches — a synthetic-nicotine pouch company delivering high-grade, clean products across Latin America. From the Andes to special operations to the startup floor, the through-line is the same: build trust, make the call, and lead when the stakes are highest.
Now Derek brings those hard-won lessons to executive teams, entrepreneurs, and organizations that refuse to accept "good enough" when the stakes are high.
All 13 brought out alive. Derek (back row) with the rescued Wild Boars soccer team.