Kenya’s economic engine is powered by its ambitious youth. With 30 per cent of the total population (15.8 million) falling into this demographic, according to the Economic Survey Report 2025 by KNBS, their potential is immense. Yet, a stubborn challenge persists – unemployment. As of June 2024, Kenya’s national unemployment rate stood at 11.9 per cent, leaving thousands of graduates and young people, armed with certificates and ready to ‘conquer’ the world, in a disheartening limbo.
The all-too-familiar phase of “tarmaking” – the relentless, often fruitless search for employment – has become an unwelcome initiation for many. For some, the hope they once possessed is slowly replaced by exhaustion and disappointment. On the flip side, employers frequently lament a critical skills gap, citing that many job seekers lack essential attributes for the modern workplace, including digital proficiency, technical expertise, and industry-relevant knowledge.
This is not just about the over one million graduates entering the job market annually; it is also about countless other young Kenyans who can’t afford college tuition, or, like Ednah Nyamusi Ochwoga, are unable to take time off from their jobs to upskill.
Redundancy, then what?
Ednah, a mother of three from Kilifi County, faced the devastating blow of an unexpected dismissal. “Why me? Why now? What do I do? How will I pay rent?” were the questions that plagued her. Survival instincts led her to poultry farming, a venture born more of necessity than passion. But the demands of farm work, endless house chores, and her children’s needs soon made “work-life balance” difficult.
Then, out of curiosity she joined the Future ni Digital Programme (Futurenidigital.org) implemented by Stanbic in partnership with Microsoft and American Tower Corporation. She never anticipated that mastering simple tools like Google Docs, Canva, and WhatsApp for Business would pivot her into the world of digital freelancing. These skills didn’t just unlock countless opportunities to market her poultry business online and design eye-catching posters for customers across Kilifi; they empowered her to manage her time better and envision a new future.
Then there is Nancy Gathigia, a trainer, who witnessed the transformative power of the train-the-trainer model that is accessible at Vocational Training Centres (VTCs) in Mtongwe, Kisauni, and Maunguja. Instructors enrolled in the Future Ni Digital Programme acquired vital digital skills and, crucially, passed this newfound knowledge to their students, creating a powerful ripple effect.
Courses available at TVETs
Once limited by location and opportunity, these students are now designing websites, editing graphics, and managing social media accounts for local businesses. For many, this is the first time they have seen a clear path to meaningful income and self-sufficiency. This shift from traditional vocational training to hands-on digital freelancing has been monumental, demonstrating a model that, if scaled across Mombasa County and other underserved areas, could equip countless young people to thrive in the modern workforce and create sustainable employment opportunities that open them up to global employability.
For a generation facing staggering unemployment rates, digital skills are no longer optional, but survival tools and pathways to prosperity. Whether it’s a young graduate competing for a corporate role, a shop owner seeking to expand her customer base through e-commerce, or a farmer wanting to access mobile-driven markets, the digital economy demands fluency in technology.
The beauty of many of these free online courses is their accessibility. They allow youth to save time and money while offering flexible learning schedules, meaning they can learn at their own pace without disrupting other responsibilities.
These invaluable courses span a wide range of in-demand areas, including Artificial Intelligence (AI), data analytics, digital marketing, cybersecurity, cloud computing, web design, e-commerce management, and freelancing essentials. Others focus on practical, everyday applications such as graphic design, social media management, and virtual assistance – skills particularly popular among Kenyan youth tapping into international gigs on platforms like Upwork, Fiverr, and Ajira Digital.
By equipping learners with both technical know-how and entrepreneurial acumen, these courses don’t just open doors to jobs; they unlock pathways to sustainable livelihoods and global employability.
A 2023 World Bank report underscored this potential, noting that digital jobs could create up to 250,000 employment opportunities in Kenya annually if young people are adequately skilled. This is precisely where programmes like Future Ni Digital by Stanbic Bank prove transformative. Ednah Nyamusi and Nancy Gathigia’s journeys paint a vivid picture of resilience and possibility, where individuals and institutions, when empowered with digital literacy, are actively rewriting Kenya’s employment narrative – from despair to boundless opportunity