April 24, 2024

The Technical Education and Skills Development Authority is seeing a surge in the demand for computer and mobile phone technicians in the months ahead, as the country rushes to adopt digital technologies amid the Covid-19 pandemic.

“We would urge high school graduates, especially those who failed to enroll in college, to consider training with us for free either as computer systems servicing technicians, or as cellphone servicing technicians,” said Aniceto Bertiz III, Tesda deputy director-general for partnerships and linkages.

“Once they are trained, they will never run out of personal computers, laptops, tablets, or mobile phones with problems to diagnose and fix. They can open their own repair shops at home, while the more enterprising ones can offer computer servicing at the customer’s location,” Bertiz said.

Even repatriated overseas Filipino workers can put up computer or mobile phone servicing corners in their homes, according to Bertiz.

“They can send their idle family members or relatives to Tesda to train then hire them as full-time, part-time, or contractual computer or mobile phone repairers,” Bertiz, a former member of Congress representing OFWs, said.

“Computer and mobile phone servicing as a small business does not require a large startup cost. A fully trained technician, a few handy tools, and a work table are enough to get them started,” Bertiz added.

He said repair shops need not keep any inventory of spare parts. “They can simply order the parts when needed, ask the customer to buy the specified parts themselves, or refer the customer to the nearest parts vendor,” he said.

The private and public sector have been compelled to embrace digital technologies due to the Covid-19 pandemic, which has also forced many Filipinos to work from home using computers and to rely on their mobile phones for a wide range of transactions.

In the academe alone, Bertiz said the national government will be spending a record P9 billion in 2021 for the computerization program of the Department of Education.

“The DepEd alone will soon need hundreds of technicians to look after their digital equipment,” Bertiz said.

Local government units have distributed tablets to public school students to help them cope with remote learning. – Press release