A few weeks ago, I heard two versions of the same question.
In Mexico, it came as a WhatsApp voice note you can almost predict: “I’m about to graduate … what now?” It wasn’t entitlement. It was that quiet, practical fear of the gap between school and a first real job, the moment where potential meets paperwork, interviews, and the brutal silence of “we’ll get back to you.”
In London, it sounded similar: “I just arrived … where do I even start?” Same ambition. Same hunger. But no map, no context, no shortcuts.
Different countries. Same friction.
Latin America loves to talk about “talent” as if it were a mineral: something we have and just need to extract with more courses, more degrees, more content. But in 2026, the bottleneck isn’t knowledge. It’s mobility. And mobility isn’t an individual problem, it’s an infrastructure problem.
That’s why I…