Dr Günther Helm’s has moved on from his current role as the CEO of Majid Al Futtaim’s grocery division. When businesses are caught between caution and change, some leaders steady the ship. Others rebuild it while still at sea. Over the past few years, Dr Günther Helm has done exactly that. With his farewell and as we wait to know more about his journey ahead, let’s look back his transformational leadership in MENA and how he has been instrumental in building some iconic businesses.
From Germany to Saudi Arabia and the UAE, Helm has built a reputation as one of retail’s most effective transformation leaders. Across more than two decades in the industry, including senior roles at Müller Holding, HOFER KG and ALDI South, he has repeatedly shown a rare ability to take large, complex organisations and make them faster, sharper and more customer-centric. At Müller Holding, he led one of Europe’s most notable turnaround stories, steering the 850-store business across seven countries to revenues of more than €5 billion while doubling EBIT in just two years.
When Cenomi Retail needed a reset in 2023, Helm was the executive brought in to lead it. He stepped into one of the region’s most closely watched retail businesses at a pivotal moment, tasked with driving transformation, operational discipline and a clearer growth agenda. His brief was not simply to improve performance, but to help redefine what the company could become. He sharpened the focus on cost optimisation, strengthened retail operations, pushed for stronger omnichannel capabilities and worked closely with brand partners to create a more resilient and future-ready business.
It was at Cenomi that Helm demonstrated what has now become his signature leadership style: calm in complexity, measured in tone, relentless in execution. He did not arrive with the volume of a marching band. He arrived with a blueprint.
That blueprint soon led him to Majid Al Futtaim, where he took over the retail business in 2024. Here, Helm was handed an even larger canvas: one of the region’s most influential retail groups, with Carrefour, private labels, omnichannel platforms and a rapidly changing consumer landscape all under his remit.
At Majid Al Futtaim Retail, Helm pushed the business towards its next chapter. He championed the expansion of discount retail formats, strengthened the private label portfolio, accelerated omnichannel growth and invested in long-term, sustainable development areas. Under his leadership, the business sharpened its focus not just on growth, but on relevance: becoming more digitally connected, more efficient and more aligned with the value-conscious consumer emerging across the region.
One of the clearest examples of that thinking was SAVA. Conceived as the UAE’s first homegrown modern discount retailer, SAVA arrived at a moment when value had become retail’s new currency. Helm did not simply oversee the launch; he piloted the project from idea to execution, helping shape a format built around affordable essentials, clean design and a smarter shopping experience. What began with the first stores in Deira and JBR quickly gathered momentum. Within just a few months, SAVA had grown to 13 stores across the UAE, turning from a new concept into one of the region’s most closely watched retail stories.
SAVA also revealed another of Helm’s strengths: his ability to spot where the market is heading before everyone else does. While many retailers were still speaking the language of premiumisation, he recognised that a new generation of consumers was looking for value without compromise. SAVA was not built as a stripped-down discount chain. It was built as a modern answer to a modern customer: sharper, cleaner, quicker and rooted in everyday affordability.
Beyond growth, Helm has also consistently linked business performance with broader purpose. He has been a strong advocate for local sourcing, sustainability and long-term value creation, earning Austria’s Grand Golden Cross of Merit for Sustainability. At Majid Al Futtaim, he backed initiatives that supported local producers and sustainable growth, proving that scale and responsibility need not sit at opposite ends of the retail aisle.
What Dr Günther Helm leaves behind is more than a list of roles or results. It is a pattern. A pattern of entering businesses at moments of uncertainty and leaving them more confident, more focused and more future-ready. In an era when retail leadership often arrives wrapped in noise and superlatives, Helm’s approach has been refreshingly different: less fireworks, more compass. And sometimes, in retail as in life, the quietest leaders leave the deepest footprints.