


Across Latin America, where youth unemployment and informality continue to shape entry into the labor market, digital training is emerging as an alternative pathway for building skills.
In Florencia, Caquetá, where distance from major urban centers also means fewer job opportunities, George Tapiero realized early on that his trajectory would not depend solely on a diploma. His turning point did not come in a classroom, but later, in front of a screen, through a process of self-directed learning that ultimately reshaped his professional profile.
He had followed the expected path. He studied ecological engineering in person, graduated, and took his first steps into the workforce. But what made the difference was his decision to train in environmental communication through online courses, certificate programs, and tutorials. It was not a formal career shift, but it did alter his position in the job market.
“Everything related to communications I learned online,” he explained. That learning led him to create his project, Guardián Amazónico, and to establish himself in a field where his original training alone would not have taken him as far.
His story is not an exception. It reflects a broader shift that is redefining the relationship between education and employment. Increasingly, young people are turning to digital learning to expand their opportunities in a context where traditional pathways are no longer enough.
The difficulty young people face in accessing formal employment is not new, but it has deepened. According to data from the United Nations system, people between 15 and 24 face unemployment rates nearly three times higher than adults in Latin America. More than half of those who do work are employed informally.
This landscape has changed how people enter the labor market. The transition into stable employment is slower, more uncertain, and often less tied to traditional educational routes. In that context, concrete and verifiable skills are beginning to carry more weight than degrees.
Digital education has gained ground precisely because it responds to that demand. Unlike conventional academic programs, it allows for the acquisition of specific competencies in less time and with a more practical focus. Certifications in areas such as digital marketing, data analysis, or cybersecurity do more than signal knowledge. They function as direct indicators for employers.
The shift is not that formal education has lost relevance, but that it is no longer sufficient. The labor market is reorganizing around what people can do, not only what they studied. This transformation requires a rethink of both individual career paths and educational systems.
The World Bank has warned that skills gaps are limiting income potential and affecting productivity in middle-income countries. In Latin America, this gap translates into fewer opportunities and a disconnect between what is taught and what the market demands.

The expansion of online training does not happen in isolation. It is accompanied by public policy and business decisions that recognize the value of these new credentials. In Colombia, the Ministry of Information and Communications Technologies has promoted free training programs in high-demand tech areas, offering certifications designed to improve employability.
Similar initiatives are underway across the region. In Panama, the Conecta Panamá program, led by Senacyt, has expanded access to digital skills training through online platforms, aiming to strengthen competitiveness and widen job opportunities.
Companies, for their part, have begun to adjust their hiring criteria. According to the World Economic Forum’s Future of Jobs 2025 report, employers in Latin America are prioritizing technological and digital skills, especially in sectors linked to services and the digital economy. In these fields, the ability to demonstrate competence can be as decisive as holding a university degree.
This shift points to a deeper transformation. The way knowledge is validated is changing. The emphasis is no longer placed solely on time spent in formal education, but on the ability to perform specific tasks and adapt to constantly evolving environments.
For young people, this means a different kind of investment. Less focused on long, linear trajectories, and more on the continuous acquisition of relevant skills. For companies, it implies recognizing nontraditional credentials and adopting more flexible hiring practices. For governments, it raises the challenge of aligning education systems with the pace of a dynamic economy.
In this context, stories like George Tapiero’s are no longer outliers. They are signals of an ongoing transition. The point is not to replace formal education, but to complement it with tools that respond to current labor market demands.
Continuous learning, constant updating, and the ability to demonstrate skills are becoming the new pillars of professional trajectories. The question is no longer whether digital learning belongs in education, but how it can be effectively integrated into a system that has, until now, moved at a different pace.
In the meantime, thousands of young people are finding in digital learning not just an alternative, but a concrete pathway into a labor market that increasingly values results over credentials.

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