Tec graduate Pilar Guzmán is currently a restaurant entrepreneur in Miami, as well as a mentor for women seeking to start a business.
By Asael Villanueva | National News Desk - 01/27/2021

“I’m sitting waiting for the Zoom call... suddenly, the little window that opens says: ‘President-elect’,” describes Pilar Guzmán, who recently spoke with Joe Biden, now President of the United States.

Pilar, who’s originally from Veracruz, and a Tec graduate from the Monterrey campus, lives in Miami with her family. Together with her husband, she owns Half Moon Empanadas, a restaurant with 14 branches in Florida.

Her business activities and support for women have earned her recognition as one of the 25 most influential businesswomen in South Florida.

In 2020, she was contacted to serve on the Small Business and Entrepreneurs Advisory Council for the Biden campaign.

“The reality is that I’d never done anything political, but I felt that it was a moment in the history of this country in which it was important to make my voice heard,” Pilar shared in an interview with CONECTA.

 

Joe Biden, the President of the United States, posted the conversation with businesswoman Pilar Guzmán on his Twitter account on January 15, a video that has 1.2 million views.
Pilar en la videollamada con Joe Biden

 

What did she talk about with President Joe Biden?

“The first thing Biden says is, ’Tell me about yourself,’ and so, I start to tell him about our experience as business owners, about how difficult it’s been, and how we reinvented ourselves because of COVID,” said Pilar.

Her conversation with the president was part of the campaign that announced the US economic rescue plan, which includes support for small businesses.

As well as talking about her story as an entrepreneur, Pilar took advantage of the interaction to suggest that the support reach even the smallest businesses, since previous help was inaccessible for those businesses during the pandemic.

“Most Latino businesses in this country, and women’s businesses, are very small. So, he agreed and thanked me for the advice,” said Pilar.

 

 

 

During the pandemic: adapt or die

Half Moon Empanadas started their first restaurant in 2008, which is inspired by the Argentinian empanada culture and Latin American flavors.

The first few years were difficult, as the business was even on the verge of closing, but the restaurant picked up steam as the years went by. It now has several locations, one of them at Miami International Airport.

In March 2020, COVID-19 changed everything, explains the video that summarizes Pilar’s call with President Joe Biden. 

“This put the brakes on for everyone. It made us question what we’re doing wrong as people and as a society,” she added in the interview with CONECTA.

The response from this Mexican woman and her husband, as owners of Half Moon Empanadas, was not to sit back and do nothing.

“I decided to call on my community and the groups that I’ve worked with. I tried to sell to whoever would buy from me,” she said.

 

 

Half Moon Empanadas needed to learn new strategies to avoid closing down due to the COVID-19 pandemic.
Pilar con parte de su staff

 

While searching for new opportunities, she realized that the Miami government had begun to provide meals to the elderly so that they didn’t have to go out. Pilar offered to help. 

“The requirement was to sell complete meals, so we had to use the filling from the empanadas to adapt the product to the request,” said the businesswoman.

For the Tec graduate, this involved reinventing her business.

“We started by seeing what was needed in terms of nutrition, what was needed for county and state requirements. We even rented refrigerated trucks to take deliver the meals to people’s homes,” she explained.

Thanks to these actions, she managed to get her employees to return to work after businesses had been closed due to provisions for the pandemic.

 

Her career path: from Mexico to Florida

Pilar describes herself as a woman who fights for her dreams. Originally from the state of Veracruz, when she was younger, she decided to study a career in Business Administration at Tec de Monterrey, so she moved to the city of Monterrey to study there on campus.

“In my second semester, I discovered the student groups. I took part in administration symposiums, I was a foreign exchange student coordinator, and student president for my course.

“At the age of 18, that taught me I could do important things, and that intelligence comes in different forms,” she recalled.

After graduating in 2001, Pilar applied to Georgetown University in Washington D.C. to study a master’s degree in economic development. She received a scholarship from the Washington Center.

“I spent 2 years of my life at Georgetown, and it was one of the most competitive experiences of my life. It was difficult, but I learned to think globally, systematically, and to analyze things deeply,” she said.

It was in Washington where Pilar met her husband, who hails from Argentina, and together they moved to Miami, Florida.

 

Tec graduate Pilar Guzmán and her family.
Pilar Guzmán y su familia

 

An entrepreneur with a community vision

In Miami, Pilar began to get involved with the community, and became a mentor to female business owners, restaurants, and an advisor to various organizations. 

One of these foundations organized a trip to Harvard University for a course on leadership development.

It focused on how to help American communities to become more inclusive and more socially and economically developed.

“At that time, the current mayor of Miami traveled with us. There were 10 groups from 10 cities learning about successful cities and how to help Miami,” she said.

Later, due to the work she was seeking to do in Miami on behalf of women, she also visited Israel to learn about the entrepreneurial ecosystem in that country.

In the group she was traveling in was somebody who had worked for the administration of former President Barack Obama.

“They invited me to the council of entrepreneurs for Biden. There were more than 20 people, some of them entrepreneurs and politicians.

“I had the opportunity to sit down to chat with Kamala Harris and later with Biden’s daughter at some public events,” Pilar mentioned.

That was how the candidate’s team contacted her to invite her to talk with Biden.

 

 

Pilar’s role as businesswoman, and her support for the community and women, have led her to have contact with other public figures, such as the current Vice President of the United States, Kamala Harris.
Pilar Guzmán durante la llamada

 

Growing and maintaining a balance in life 

For Pilar, social work is part of her life, and she assures us that she will continue to promote entrepreneurship in her community.

“It’s something that comes from my heart. People ask me if I will enter politics. But I have my focus on my business, and I know that it’s going to be a national chain,” she said.

Before the pandemic, Pilar had already signed some contracts to take her branches to airports, such as Nashville and Denver, so she continues to work on that expansion.

Pilar says that in her daily life, her activities vary between being president of her company, mother, wife, and daughter. 

“It’s not easy, but I’ve known how to ask for help. My husband is part of the business. He manages the kitchen, the quality, and the development of new opportunities.

“He’s Argentinian, he was born in Buenos Aires, and went to Washington aged 8. We work together in this company,” she said.

Pilar’s children, aged 7 and 10, are her priority, and she seeks to balance the time she spends with them, her business, and her social work.

When asked what she’s looking for in life, she says to be happy, and to be focused on learning, evolving, and living.

She also assures us that all women can achieve their dreams and shouldn’t seek to define themselves by what society tells them to.

“Find your own definition as women. There are lots of opportunities. Your skin color doesn’t matter. You have to be able to work and to dream,” she concluded.

 

 

YOU’LL DEFINITELY WANT TO READ:

https://tec.mx/en/news/national/education/storming-capitol-tec-specialists-say-trump-blame

 

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