Procurement Executive · MBA Candidate
Bridging two decades of global infrastructure experience with the discipline of strategic sourcing. Focused on building the commercial architecture that scales external innovation and accelerates speed-to-market.
Procurement at its highest expression is a discipline of intelligence, architecture, and relationships — not a cost center. These are the lenses through which I build enterprise value and develop the professionals of the next generation.
Moving procurement beyond tactical margin extraction. h.
Treating contracts as operational architecture, not legal compliance.
True leverage is rarely found in a standard RFP. Mapping market dynamics & agile partnerships for value creation.
Real strategic procurement demands more than analytical frameworks — it demands the intellectual humility to know where your model ends and operational reality begins. The gap between what a contract describes and what it actually delivers is precisely where organizations win or lose enterprise value.
My work sits at the intersection where enterprise strategy meets commercial execution — designing sourcing structures that integrate external founders and agile suppliers into the corporate ecosystem without crushing their speed or innovation.
I have built my career at the strategic end of procurement, where decisions carry systemic consequences, supplier relationships are stress-tested by operational crises, and the discipline of the function either defends enterprise value or quietly erodes it. Currently pursuing my MBA at Xavier University — not to accumulate credentials, but to codify pattern recognition into frameworks that outlast any individual engagement cycle.
"Procurement at its best is a strategic discipline. At its worst, it's a procurement order processing function. The difference is whether the practitioner is thinking about enterprise value or managing administrative compliance."
My background is rooted in the values instilled through a Mexican professional formation — discipline, relationship-building, long-term thinking, and the understanding that trust, once lost in a supply relationship, costs more to rebuild than any contract renegotiation saves. These are not soft attributes; they are strategic ones.
Throughout my career, I've benefited from professionals who took time to share knowledge, open doors, and offer honest counsel — without expecting anything in return. This mentorship program is my way of paying that forward.
I offer individual sessions at no cost, with no commercial intent, to students and professionals pursuing careers in strategic procurement, sourcing, and supply chain leadership. Sessions are focused, confidential, and goal-oriented.
"The most valuable investments I've made in my career were in other people's development. The return isn't measured in quarters — it compounds over decades."
Whether you're a procurement professional seeking peer dialogue, a student exploring strategic sourcing as a career, or an organization with a board engagement in mind — the door is open.