In most Anglo workplaces, you can jump straight into KPIs and metrics.
Latin American work culture doesn’t work that way.
Trust comes first. Then productivity follows.
Take time for real 1:1s. Not just “status update” calls.
Teams that skip this step get polite compliance.
Teams that invest in it get people who actually tell you when a deadline is unrealistic or when they need help.
There are patterns.
Once you understand them, setting clear goals becomes straightforward.
The “yes” that actually means “I’ll try but this might not work”
You’re on a Zoom call with your team in Buenos Aires. You ask, “Can you get this done by Friday?”
Everyone nods. Everyone says yes.
Friday comes. The work isn’t done.
In many Latin American cultures, directly contradicting a manager, especially a foreign one in a group setting, feels disrespectful.
“I’ll try” often means “this timeline is aggressive but I don’t want to embarrass you or myself by saying no in front of everyone.”
The fix is simple but requires discipline.
After group planning meetings, follow up 1:1. Ask again: “Do you really have what you need to hit this deadline? What might get in your way?”
Make it safe to push back.
Build written confirmation into your process. “Please confirm in writing that you can deliver X by Y, or let me know what resources or time adjustments would make it realistic.”
Write everything down
Remote work across borders fails when people rely on assumptions.
What “done” means to you isn’t what it means to your contractor in Lima.
Your idea of “quick turnaround” might be 24 hours. Theirs might be 3 days.
So you document it.
Make a shared expectations doc for every role. Include:
- Exact work hours in their local timezone
- How fast they should respond in Slack
- What “done” means for their specific deliverables
- Who reviews and approves their work
- How often you’ll meet 1:1
For projects, use a real task management system. Asana, Jira, Monday.
Every task needs an owner, a due date, and a definition of done.
The board becomes your single source of truth.
If you have recurring work, write playbooks. Customer support responses. Content workflows. QA checklists.
Plan around holidays
You set an aggressive Q1 goal.
Then you realize Carnival is in February and half of Brazil goes dark for a week.
Or you schedule a big delivery for mid-July and your Colombian team is celebrating Independence Day.
Latin American countries have a lot of holidays. And people actually take them.
Some are region-wide: New Year’s Day, Easter, May 1 (Labor Day), Christmas.
Others are country-specific:
Brazil: Carnival (February or March, essentially a full week). Tiradentes’ Day (April 21). Our Lady of Aparecida (October 12).
Colombia: One of the densest holiday calendars in the region. Independence Day (July 20). Plus multiple Catholic holidays.
Peru and Chile: “Fiestas Patrias” around their independence days (July 28-29 for Peru, September 18-19 for Chile). Business slows for several days.
Argentina: May 25 (Revolution Day), June 20 (Flag Day), July 9 (Independence Day).
When you’re planning sprints or quarterly OKRs, pull up a holiday calendar for your team’s countries.
Block out those weeks for lighter work or wrap-up tasks. Don’t schedule critical launches.
Turn vague outcomes into specific role goals
“Help us grow” is not a goal.
“Support the product launch” is not a goal.
Start with the business outcome you need:
- Increase qualified leads by 20% in Q2
- Ship feature X to 100% of users by May 15
- Reduce customer support response time to under 2 hours
Then break that into role-specific goals.
For a marketing assistant in Mexico:
“Publish 3 localized blog posts per week aimed at LATAM leads. Each post must go through 2 rounds of revision and be finalized at least 48 hours before publishing.”
For a senior engineer in Colombia:
“Complete 8-10 story points per sprint. All PRs must be peer-reviewed and merged within 48 hours of submission. Rollback rate should stay below 5%.”
For a customer support rep in Argentina:
“Respond to all tickets within 2 hours during your shift (9am-5pm ART). Maintain a customer satisfaction score of 4.5+ out of 5. Close 90% of tickets without escalation.”
You’ve defined what done looks like. You’ve set clear metrics. You’ve specified the timeline.
Build in feedback and growth
Latin American professionals don’t want to be disposable freelancers.
They want to feel like part of a real team. They want growth.
Quarterly development goals alongside performance goals:
“This quarter, complete the Advanced Excel certification AND maintain your current delivery pace of 15 reports per week.”
“Lead one sprint retrospective this quarter. Your team lead will coach you through prep.”
Regular 1:1s with a structured agenda:
- Review progress against goals
- Ask “What’s getting in your way?”
- Adjust scope or provide resources if they’re stuck
- Discuss one skill they want to develop
Public recognition:
When someone hits a big milestone or goes above and beyond, celebrate it in the team channel.
Finding the right talent to set goals for
The foundation of clear goals starts with hiring people who match your needs.
HireTalent.LAT uses AI-powered applicant analysis to rank candidates across job match, retention risk, and experience level, so you’re setting goals for people already aligned with your requirements.
What your Latin American team members should do
Maybe you’re the remote worker trying to figure out how to succeed with a foreign client.
Before accepting a role, clarify:
- What does success look like in my first 30, 60, and 90 days?
- How will you measure my performance? What are the key metrics?
- What are the expected work hours in my timezone? How are holidays handled?
Protect your boundaries:
Know your country’s rules around telework and right to disconnect.
If a client expects constant after-hours availability, push back. Politely but firmly.
If you’re a contractor, try to maintain multiple clients.
Build your own systems:
Keep your own task board mirroring company priorities. Notion, Trello, whatever works.
Do a weekly review: What moved the needle on my KPIs? What’s blocked? What do I need to ask?
Over-communicate:
Message your manager before deadlines if you’re at risk of missing one. Don’t wait until the day of.
Keep a log of what you’ve accomplished and the metrics you’ve hit. You’ll need this for performance reviews and rate increases.
Your goals are only as good as the system around them
You can write perfect SMART goals.
But if you’re not checking in regularly, if your team can’t tell you when they’re stuck, if you disappear for three weeks and then suddenly demand updates, the goals don’t matter.
The system around them is:
- Weekly or biweekly 1:1s
- A project board everyone actually uses
- Async updates so nothing falls through the cracks
- Recognition when things go well
- Course correction when they don’t
And the foundation under all of it is trust.
You trust them to do great work. They trust you to give them what they need to succeed.
Most companies hiring in Latin America figure this out.
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