Global surveys now consistently show a majority of small and medium businesses using AI tools in their marketing, and employers rank AI skills among the fastest-growing capability needs. Jamaican organisations are not exempt: banks, hotels, agencies and professional firms are all asking the same question — our staff are already using these tools informally, so who teaches them to use them well?
That is what corporate AI training is for. This guide explains what a good programme looks like, what it costs in the Jamaican market, and how to evaluate providers.
What does corporate AI training actually cover?
Programmes vary, but effective AI training for business teams generally covers five areas:
- Prompting fundamentals: how to brief an AI tool the way you would brief a capable junior — context, constraints, format and iteration.
- Content production: using AI for drafts, variations and repurposing while keeping the organisation's brand voice and quality standards.
- Tool-specific skills: the platforms your team actually uses — for marketing teams that usually means Meta's AI ad tools, analytics assistants and content platforms.
- Analysis and reporting: using AI to summarise performance data, customer feedback and research into decisions a manager can act on.
- Ethics, accuracy and brand risk: hallucinations, bias, data privacy and confidentiality — what staff may and may not put into public AI tools.
What does it cost in Jamaica?
Corporate training is usually priced per session or per programme rather than per person. As a reference point, Kinson AI's team training is structured in three tiers:
- On-site half-day workshop (one skill module, up to 10 staff, printed course material and coffee break included; delivered in Kingston, Mandeville or Montego Bay): $1,200 USD.
- Virtual half-day workshop (same module live online, up to 10 staff, digital materials): $999 USD.
Per-person online alternatives exist at lower price points — a self-paced course such as the AIMAR strategy course is $199 USD per student — but self-paced study and team capability building solve different problems. One upskills an individual; the other changes how a department works.
On-site, virtual or self-paced?
Three delivery formats dominate, and the right one depends on your goal:
- On-site workshops work best for hands-on skills. Teams practise on their own campaigns and briefs, and questions surface that never appear on a video call.
- Virtual cohorts suit distributed teams across parishes or islands, and multi-week formats where spacing improves retention.
- Self-paced courses suit individuals building strategic capability on their own schedule, or organisations that want a shared foundation before live training.
Six questions to ask any AI training provider
- Will the exercises use our briefs, brand guidelines and channels, or generic examples?
- Is the content adapted to the Jamaican and Caribbean market, or imported unchanged from a US curriculum?
- Who actually delivers the training, and have they done the work they are teaching?
- Does the programme include responsible-use guardrails our managers can enforce afterwards?
- What happens after the session — is there follow-up, or does the learning evaporate in a week?
- How will we know it worked — what should we measure thirty days later?
Where should an organisation start?
Before booking training, establish a baseline. If you cannot describe your team's current AI readiness — who uses what, with which controls, to what effect — start with an assessment rather than a workshop. A readiness baseline turns training from a calendar event into a step in a plan.
Train your team on your own campaigns
On-site in Jamaica or virtual across the Caribbean — delivered by a UTech & NCU lecturer, built around your organisation's real work.
See Team Training Packages