Region · Mexico City
Mexico City Executive Search
Country Manager Mexico, corporate, and operating leadership across the Mexico City metropolitan area and Estado de México.
Silvia Flores leads executive search in Mexico City — the country's corporate capital and, together with Estado de México, one of the largest operating regions in the country. Alder Koten's Mexico City office anchors the local team.
Where the practice focuses
- Mexico City metropolitan area and Estado de México
- Consumer goods, food and beverage, and FMCG headquarters
- Financial services and multinational country leadership
- Technology, media, and enterprise operations
- Industrial distribution and supply-chain regional hubs
- Alder Koten's Mexico City office anchors the local practice
The roles
Country Managers Mexico for multinational operations; corporate function leaders across HR, Finance, Legal, Marketing, and Sales; Plant Directors and VPs of Operations across the Estado de México industrial belt; and Supply Chain and Distribution Directors for headquarters-based operations.
How the search runs
Through The Dynamic Fit Method™ — Ability, Capability, Capacity — delivered via Alder Koten. Connects to the Country Manager Mexico, consumer goods, and food & beverage practices, and to the wider Mexico footprint.
Mexico City executive search — questions
- What kinds of roles concentrate in Mexico City?
- Country Manager Mexico and multinational country-leadership roles, corporate functions across HR, Finance, Legal, and Sales, and headquarters-based Commercial and Marketing leadership — plus operating roles across Estado de México industrial belts.
- Do you place operating leaders here too?
- Yes. The Estado de México industrial belt is significant for consumer goods, food and beverage, and industrial equipment — with Plant Directors, VPs of Operations, and Supply Chain leaders as core role sets.
- How does Mexico City connect to the rest of the practice?
- Alder Koten's Mexico City office anchors the local team; the region connects north to the Bajío and Monterrey and south to Puebla, and functions as the primary corporate headquarters for many multinationals in Mexico.