You’ve posted the job.
Applications are flooding in from Colombia, Argentina, Mexico, Brazil.
The resumes look great. Strong English. Good experience. Competitive rates.
But here’s what keeps you up at night: How do you know if they’ll actually work out?
Technical skills are easy to verify. You can test code. Review writing samples. Check portfolios.
Soft skills are different.
They’re the thing that makes or breaks remote relationships. And they’re harder to spot through a screen.
This guide will show you exactly how to assess the soft skills.
The Soft Skills that Make Latin American Talent Exceptional
Let’s talk about what you’ll actually encounter.
Not stereotypes. Real patterns that show up again and again when North American and European companies build teams across Latin America.
They Build Relationships First
Many Latin American professionals come from relationship-driven cultures.
Trust matters. Loyalty matters.
Once you invest in the relationship, many will go to the wall for you. They’ll work late when needed. They’ll care about your business outcomes, not just their task list.
But you have to earn that.
One Slack message isn’t enough. Brief kickoff calls aren’t enough. You need to show you’re invested too.
Teamwork Runs Deep
Latin American work culture tends to emphasize the group over the individual.
This is gold for distributed teams that need real collaboration. Agile squads. Customer support pods. Cross-functional projects.
You’re not dealing with lone wolves who want to disappear into their code editor and never talk to anyone.
You’re working with people who want to contribute to something bigger.
Hierarchy Gets Respected
In many countries across the region, there’s strong respect for managers and senior people.
This shows up as politeness. Deference. Careful communication.
The upside? Your Latin American hires will rarely overstep or ignore your direction.
The downside? They might not push back when they should.
If a deadline is unrealistic, they might not say so directly. If they disagree with your approach, they might not challenge you in a meeting.
You have to explicitly invite disagreement. Ask for honest feedback. Create space for them to raise concerns.
Otherwise, you’ll miss important signals.
Adaptability is Built In
Remote work exploded across Latin America over the past few years.
Many professionals have gotten very good at adapting to new tools, new processes, new time zones, and new team structures.
They’re used to Slack, Zoom, Notion, Asana, whatever you throw at them.
Economic instability in countries like Argentina and Venezuela has also created a generation of workers who are incredibly resilient and resourceful.
They know how to solve problems with limited resources. They know how to stay productive through challenges.
That adaptability is a massive asset for remote teams.
How to actually assess these soft skills
Alright. Theory is fine.
But you need a playbook.
Here’s how to evaluate soft skills before you hire, not after you realize three months in that it’s not working.
Step one: define what you actually need
Before you even post the job, write down the 4–5 non-negotiable soft skills.
Be specific.
Don’t just write “good communication.” That’s meaningless.
Write: “Sends written updates twice a week without being asked. Flags blockers within 24 hours. Asks clarifying questions before starting work.”
Don’t write “autonomous.”
Write: “Can structure their own workday. Prioritizes tasks without daily check-ins. Makes decisions on small things without waiting for approval.”
This clarity will help you design better interview questions and spot red flags faster.
Use the application itself as a filter
Your application process should test soft skills before you ever schedule a call.
Add custom written questions
Ask 2–3 short-answer questions that reveal how someone thinks and communicates.
Examples:
“Tell me about a time you solved a problem for a client or manager without being asked. What did you do and why?”
Look for: specificity, clear structure, evidence of initiative.
“You’re working from Mexico for a US manager. Your internet goes out for four hours during a critical deadline. What do you do?”
Look for: realistic solutions (backup connection, phone hotspot, coworking space), proactive communication, problem-solving under constraints.
“Describe a project where you worked with someone in a different time zone. What was difficult and how did you handle it?”
Look for: awareness of async communication, use of tools, adjustment of habits.
Give a small async task
This is one of the most powerful filters.
Send a time-boxed assignment: fix a bug and record a Loom walkthrough. Draft a customer reply. Outline a marketing brief. Whatever fits the role.
Give them 24–48 hours.
You’re not evaluating perfection.
You’re evaluating:
Can they follow instructions?
Do they ask clarifying questions?
Do they communicate progress or just disappear until the deadline?
Do they deliver on time?
This tells you more about soft skills than any interview question.
For Latin American professionals (how to stand out to global employers)
If you’re reading this from Colombia, Mexico, Argentina, or anywhere in the region, here’s what you need to know.
US, UK, and Australian employers want to hire you. The market is there.
But you need to make your soft skills visible.
Make it obvious in English
Optimize your LinkedIn and portfolio with clear, specific accomplishments.
Don’t write: “Worked on remote teams.”
Write: “Led weekly stand-ups with a US-based engineering team. Owned client communications across four time zones. Delivered three product features on deadline while working fully remotely.”
Specifics sell.
Practice direct, concise communication
This is the hardest adjustment for many Latin American professionals.
You’re used to high-context communication. Western employers want low-context.
Instead of: “Maybe we can look at some other options and see what works better for the team.”
Try: “I recommend we do A instead of B because of X. What do you think?”
Build the habit:
Send short written updates twice a week.
Use bullet points and clear next steps.
Confirm your understanding in writing after calls.
Learn to disagree respectfully
Many of you were raised not to challenge managers openly.
US and UK employers want respectful pushback.
They want you to speak up when something won’t work.
Practice these scripts:
“I see it differently because… Would you be open to an alternative approach?”
“With the current scope, I’m worried this deadline might affect quality. Could we prioritize X and move Y to a second phase?”
This isn’t disrespectful. It’s professional.
Show reliability and self-management
Remote clients care about consistency.
The number one complaint on Reddit threads about Latin American contractors? Disappearing mid-project or missing deadlines.
Not lack of skill. Lack of communication.
Concrete actions:
Always confirm deadlines and deliverables in writing.
Communicate as soon as a blocker appears. Propose a new timeline and mitigation.
Use calendar blocks and task tools (Notion, Trello, ClickUp) to manage your own workday.
Share visibility. Let your manager see your progress.
Final Thoughts
Here’s the truth.
Latin America is full of talented people. The technical skills are there.
But soft skills are what turn a good hire into a long-term relationship.
And long-term relationships are what actually move your business forward.
Not switching contractors every six months. Not managing flaky freelancers. Not re-hiring for the same role over and over.
You want someone who shows up. Communicates clearly. Takes ownership. Builds trust.
That’s the game.
If you’re hiring in Latin America, assess soft skills as seriously as you assess technical skills.
If you’re looking for work in Latin America, develop those soft skills as intentionally as you develop your craft.
That’s how you win.
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