What Recent Graduates Should Know Before Applying to Remote Jobs with US Companies

Landing a remote job with a US company as a fresh graduate in Latin America is more doable than most people think. This guide breaks down exactly what US remote employers are screening for and how to position yourself from day one.

Mark

Published: April 7, 2026
Updated: April 7, 2026

You just finished your degree. Maybe you’re in Colombia, Argentina, México, Perú, somewhere in Latin America. You worked hard for that título.

Your family is proud. And now you’re staring at remote job listings with US companies thinking, can I actually get one of these?

Yes. And honestly? You’re in a better position than you think.

Not because of your degree. Because of how you were raised.

That’s what this guide is about.

You’re a Blank Slate and That’s Not a Weakness

Most recent graduates think “no experience” is the problem. It’s not.

The real problem is not knowing how to position what you already have.

Here’s the thing about being fresh out of school: you haven’t picked up bad habits yet. You haven’t gotten comfortable.

You’re still hungry. US employers who’ve hired before know the difference between someone coasting on years of experience and someone who’s genuinely motivated to prove themselves.

Fresh grads who are hungry and reliable consistently outperform experienced candidates who’ve gone soft.

That’s not a feel-good statement, that’s what small US business owners say in hiring forums over and over again.

Your job is to show them you’re that person. Not tell them. Show them.

What US Remote Employers Are Actually Screening For

Forget the job description for a second. Underneath every remote listing, there are three things a US employer is trying to figure out.

Can you communicate in English? Not perfectly, clearly. Can you write a professional message? Can you give a status update without being asked twice? Written communication is everything in remote work. It replaces every hallway conversation, every quick check-in at a desk.

Will you show up consistently? Nobody is going to knock on your door at 9am. Remote work is built on trust. Employers want any signal, even a small one, that you follow through on things.

Do you know the tools? Slack, Zoom, Google Workspace, Trello. These aren’t advanced skills. They’re the basic infrastructure of remote work. If you haven’t used them, spend a week getting familiar before you apply anywhere.

That’s the filter. If you can show evidence of those three things, you’re already ahead of most applicants at your level.

Your Resume When You Have Almost Nothing to Put on It

US resume format is different from what most Latin American universities teach.

No photo. No date of birth. No marital status.

Keep it clean: name and contact info at the top, a two or three sentence summary, skills, experience, education.

Now, what counts as experience when you just graduated?

More than you think.

A class project where you researched and presented something. A volunteer role, even brief. Managing social media for a family member’s small business.

A freelance gig you found through a friend, even if it barely paid. An informal internship.

Describe what you actually did and delivered, not just that you did it.

Use numbers where you can. Not impressive numbers, just real ones. 3 posts per week. 2 clients. 6 weeks. Numbers signal that you think like someone who tracks their work.

The Thing That Actually Beats a Resume

For entry-level remote roles, a portfolio matters more than your resume.

A resume tells an employer what you say you can do. A portfolio shows them.

If you’re going into marketing or content, write three short pieces on topics relevant to a US audience and post them on Medium or a free WordPress site.

Design? Put your best work on Behance.

Customer support? Write out a mock email exchange where you handled a difficult situation well.

Development? Put something small on GitHub.

You don’t need clients to build a portfolio. You need examples.

Do this before you apply anywhere. Give them something to look at. It changes how they see you before the first conversation even happens.

Tools to Learn Before You Need Them

Start here, don’t try to learn everything at once.

Slack and Zoom are how remote teams communicate. Both have free versions. Get familiar with them now.

Trello is simple, visual project management. Widely used by small US companies. Easy to pick up in a day.

Google Workspace covers Docs, Sheets, and Drive. Know how to share files, leave comments, and work in shared documents without overwriting someone else’s work.

Toggl is free time tracking. Some US employers will ask hourly remote workers to log hours. Being ready for this signals you’ve thought it through.

That’s the starter list. Once you land something, you’ll learn whatever else the role needs. Right now, know the basics.

Turn Your Timezone Into an Advantage

US employers think about timezone overlap more than most applicants realize.

If you’re in Colombia or Perú, you’re in GMT-5, very close to US Eastern time. That’s a genuine advantage.

Say it directly in your applications: “I’m in GMT-5, which gives me solid overlap with US Eastern business hours.”

Argentina and Chile are a couple hours ahead of the East Coast. Still very workable, especially for roles with flexible hours.

Know your offset. Lead with it. It removes a concern before they even have to raise it.

Payment Setup Before You Land Anything

When you get hired as a remote contractor by a US company, you’ll be paid in USD. PayPal exists but the fees are rough for recurring payments.

Wise is better, faster, cheaper for international transfers, and widely accepted.

Create a Wise account now. It takes a few minutes. Having it ready before you need it is a small thing that signals you’re serious.

Where to Start Looking

For recent graduates in Latin America specifically, HireTalent.LAT connects remote workers across the region with employers who are already set up to hire internationally, which removes a lot of the friction that makes early searches frustrating.

Start applying before you feel completely ready. You’ll learn faster from real conversations with real employers than from any guide, including this one.

La ganas are already there. Now you just need to know how to show them.

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