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    Home»HRCOC»Guillermo Washington: From Operational Discipline to Customer Insight
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    Guillermo Washington: From Operational Discipline to Customer Insight

    Nelson PereiraNelson Pereira2026-03-07
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    Keys to Building Truly Scalable Retail Organizations

    Guillermo Washington
    Co-Founder and COO, Mi Súper Mercado
    Vice President of Retail, The Hispanic Retail Chamber of Commerce

    “Growth in retail doesn’t depend only on opening more stores. It depends on building an organization capable of scaling without losing operational control or connection with the customer.” 


     

     

    Leadership Built from the Floor Up

    For more than thirty years, Guillermo Washington has built his career in the operational core of the supermarket business. His trajectory reflects a rare combination: deep knowledge of the sales floor and a strategic vision for scaling organizations.

    His career began at Walmart Mexico, where he worked for fifteen years and progressively advanced through several operational positions: assistant store manager, store manager, district manager, and director of operations.

    That journey culminated when he was appointed National Director of the Bodega Aurrera Express format.

    When he assumed that responsibility, the format had three stores. During his tenure it expanded to 400 locations under his supervision, consolidating itself as one of the most important proximity formats within the organization.

    He later served as CEO of a regional supermarket chain in Mexico before continuing his career in the United States, where he held positions such as Chief Operating Officer in several Hispanic supermarket chains.

    One of the most relevant moments in his career was his time as COO of El Rancho Supermercado, which at the time operated as a joint venture with Albertsons. The corporate governance structure allowed a high degree of autonomy in operational decision-making while maintaining clear accountability for results.

    Today Washington is Co-Founder and COO of Mi Súper Mercado, where he continues to apply a growth model based on operational discipline, strong team development, and deep customer understanding.


    Learning from Operations

    For Washington, the most important lesson from his early years in the industry still holds true today.

    “Employees are the foundation of the business. Investing time in training them, developing them, and treating them with ethics and respect is essential for achieving strong operational control and better customer service.”

    As his career evolved, so did his approach to the business. He moved from focusing primarily on daily operations to integrating a broader perspective that includes strategic planning, financial discipline, purchasing, marketing, human resources, and control of key performance indicators.

    That balance between execution and strategy is what, in his view, allows organizations to become truly sustainable.


    The Structural Challenge of Supermarket Retail

    In the current U.S. retail environment, Washington identifies a central challenge: leadership development.

    “The biggest challenge is having leaders who possess talent, market knowledge, and a real understanding of the customer.”

    In a sector characterized by tight margins and increasing competition, the quality of operational leadership becomes a decisive factor.

    Building strong teams, trusting internal talent, and granting autonomy with accountability are, in his view, strategic decisions that directly impact profitability.


    Growing Without Losing Control

    One of the greatest challenges in retail is maintaining operational consistency while a company expands its number of stores or markets.

    Washington believes the key lies in clear processes and replicable organizational structures.

    “Growth must be supported by operational discipline and organizational models that allow the business to be replicated without losing control.”

    To maintain that discipline, he closely tracks fundamental business indicators: sales, margins, purchasing, payroll, number of customers, expenses, EBITDA, price competitiveness, inventory levels, product freshness, and customer satisfaction.


    The Value Proposition in Hispanic Retail

    Within the highly competitive U.S. supermarket market, chains focused on Hispanic consumers have developed differentiated value propositions.

    For Washington, the essence of that proposition is simple, though demanding in execution.

    “We must offer good quality, excellent service, and the best prices in an environment where the customer feels comfortable and culturally connected.”

    That cultural connection, combined with operational discipline, allows retailers to build long-term relationships with consumers.


    Technology and Decision-Making

    Digital transformation has also redefined the way executives make decisions.

    For Washington, access to real-time information is now a key competitive advantage.

    Data analytics and new artificial intelligence tools allow retailers to analyze consumption patterns, optimize inventory, and improve operational efficiency.

    However, he emphasizes that technology must always be complemented by the judgment and experience of the operator.


    Innovating with Method

    In a sector where mistakes can quickly affect profitability, Washington believes in disciplined innovation.

    “Innovation should first be tested in a pilot store. If it works, it is replicated. If it doesn’t, it becomes a lesson.”

    This approach allows companies to experiment without putting the stability of the business at risk.


    Talent for the Future

    When asked which profiles will be most relevant for the future of the supermarket industry, Washington highlights attributes that go beyond technical knowledge.

    Attitude, discipline, strong values, business knowledge, and the ability to adapt to change are, in his view, the essential qualities of future leadership.


    Thinking About Scalability from Day One

    If he were starting a company from scratch today, Washington would have a clear priority: designing the organization with growth in mind from the beginning.

    “It is essential to build structures and processes that work for three stores just as well as they do for dozens of stores.”

    Scalability, he argues, is not built after a company has grown.

    It is designed from day one.


    Strategic Keys

    Scalability
    Building organizations capable of growing without losing operational control.

    Operational Discipline
    Strong processes, financial discipline, and consistent execution.

    Deep Customer Understanding
    Understanding consumer needs to deliver the best balance between quality, service, and price.


    Final Perspective

    Retail growth may be visible in the opening of new stores, but true success is measured in something less obvious: the ability of an organization to sustain that growth with discipline, efficiency, and proximity to the customer.

    In that equation — operations, culture, and leadership — Guillermo Washington has built his career.

    And, as he emphasizes, that is where the future of supermarket supermarket retail will ultimately be defined.

     

     

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    Nelson Pereira

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