Most companies hire remote workers from Latin America the wrong way.
They look at resumes. Check English proficiency. Maybe do a technical test.
Then six months later they’re frustrated because the person isn’t working out.
Here’s what they missed: being qualified for a job and being ready for remote work are completely different things.
Let me show you what actually matters.
What remote-ready actually looks like
Forget the resume for a minute.
Remote-ready isn’t about credentials. It’s about how someone works when no one’s watching.
Look at their portfolio first
A portfolio tells you more than any interview ever will.
Not just what they made. How they explain it.
Do they show you the why behind projects? Do they walk you through their thinking? Can they explain what problem they solved and why it mattered?
Or is it just a bunch of screenshots with “I did this”?
Remote workers need to communicate context. If their portfolio is just a gallery with no story, that’s a problem.
Past remote experience (but not the kind you think)
Everyone worked remotely during COVID. That doesn’t count.
You want someone who’s worked with distributed teams before. Who’s collaborated across time zones. Who’s delivered projects when their manager was asleep.
Ask: “Walk me through a project where your team wasn’t in the same place. How did you communicate? How did you handle blockers?”
If they’ve never done it before, they’re going to struggle. Simple as that.
The willingness to figure things out
This is the big one.
Can they learn new tools without a training program? Do they Google things before asking for help? When something breaks, do they try to fix it first?
Remote work means solving problems on your own. A lot.
The best remote workers are self-directed learners. They don’t wait for someone to teach them. They figure it out.
The soft skills that actually matter
Technical skills get you hired. Soft skills determine if you succeed.
And most companies completely ignore this during hiring.
Ownership mindset
Here’s an easy test during interviews:
Ask someone to explain a past project. Listen to the language they use.
Do they say “I was told to do X” or do they say “We needed to solve X, so I did Y”?
Order-takers say “my manager wanted.” Owners say “the business needed.”
You want someone who thinks like a partner, not an employee waiting for instructions.
Communication without being asked
Good remote workers over-communicate. Not in an annoying way. In a “nobody has to wonder what I’m doing” way.
They send updates before you ask. They flag problems early. They document decisions so you can see their thinking.
In interviews, ask: “How would you keep me updated on a two-week project if we barely met live?”
Bad answer: “I’d check in when needed.”
Good answer: “I’d send a quick update every day or two showing progress, blockers, and next steps. If something was stuck, I’d flag it immediately, not wait until our next meeting.”
Handling feedback like an adult
US, UK, and Australian companies tend to be more direct than what’s common in Latin American business culture.
You need someone who won’t take directness personally. Who can receive tough feedback and use it to improve instead of shutting down.
Ask: “Tell me about a time you got critical feedback. What did you do with it?”
Listen for defensiveness. Listen for growth.
What a portfolio should actually show you
Let’s go deeper on portfolios because most people look at them wrong.
Projects with context
Good portfolios don’t just show work. They tell stories.
“I built a checkout flow” versus “Users were abandoning carts at 60%. I redesigned the checkout flow and reduced abandonment to 35%.”
See the difference?
One is a task. The other shows thinking, problem-solving, and business impact.
If someone’s portfolio is all deliverables with no context, they probably don’t think beyond “complete the assignment.”
Variety and growth
Look for evolution. Can you see them getting better over time? Are they trying new things?
Someone who’s been doing the exact same type of project for five years isn’t a bad worker. But they might not be the self-directed learner you need for remote work.
You want someone who’s curious. Who experiments. Who takes initiative to learn new skills.
How they present themselves
Is their portfolio well-organized? Easy to navigate? Do they explain things clearly?
This matters because remote work is all communication.
If someone can’t communicate clearly in their portfolio—something they had unlimited time to prepare—how will they communicate under deadline pressure?
The trial project that tells you everything
Interviews lie. Portfolios can be staged. References sugarcoat.
A real trial project shows you the truth.
Give them actual work
Pay them for 3-5 days of real work. Not a fake exercise. Actual work from your business.
Provide a written spec. Set up an async communication channel—whatever you actually use. Slack, email, project management tool.
Then step back and watch.
What you’re actually testing
Do they ask clarifying questions upfront, or wait until the end?
How often do they update you without being prompted?
When they hit a blocker, do they try to solve it first or immediately ask for help?
Do they document their work so you can follow their thinking?
Can they work during your overlapping hours when needed?
This is what working together will actually be like.
If someone can’t handle a 5-day trial with clear instructions, they definitely can’t handle a permanent remote position.
Red flags that everyone misses
Some warning signs are obvious. Late to interviews. Poor communication. Sketchy resume.
But here are the subtle ones that actually matter for remote work:
Vague explanations
Ask someone how they solved a problem. If they can’t walk you through their thinking step-by-step, that’s a flag.
Remote workers need to communicate their process. If they can only describe outcomes without explaining how they got there, collaboration is going to be painful.
No questions during the interview
If someone doesn’t ask you questions about the role, the team, or how you work, they’re not actually interested in making it work.
Curious people ask questions. Passive people wait to be told what to do.
They’ve never worked independently before
Some people have only worked in environments with constant supervision and immediate help from coworkers.
That’s fine for in-office work. It’s terrible for remote.
If someone’s entire work history is in supervised environments, moving to remote work is going to be a massive adjustment.
Possible, but you need to know that going in.
The real question you need to answer
After all the interviews, portfolio reviews, and trial projects, ask yourself this:
Would I trust this person to work for a week without me checking in?
Not “are they qualified?”
Not “do they have experience?”
Would you genuinely trust them to make progress, communicate problems, and deliver quality work without you hovering?
If the answer is “probably” or “I think so,” keep looking.
Remote work requires trust. Complete trust.
You need to know—not hope—that someone will handle things when you’re asleep.
The good news? Latin America has thousands of remote-ready professionals who absolutely can.
You just need to look for the right things: strong portfolios with context, genuine remote experience, ownership mindset, proactive communication, and that willingness to figure things out.
Those qualities matter way more than any credential ever will.
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