October 15, 2025

The AARP Foundation has joined forces with Google’s philanthropy arm, Google.org, to help older workers gain digital skills.

As CNBC reported Wednesday (Jan. 26), the project will focus on women and people of color, initially targeting 25,000 people in Arizona, Georgia, Illinois, Louisiana, North Carolina, Pennsylvania, South Carolina and Texas.

Google will provide $10 million for the project, provided by AARP Foundation and Older Adults Technology Services.

As CNBC notes, the project arrives at a time when the COVID pandemic has highlighted the difficulties of older workers shifting to a more digital environment. Workers who were less educated had a tougher time to adapt to working from home, negatively impacting their ability to earn or compete for jobs.

The training sessions are due to start in March, with the goal of helping participants find new jobs, make career changes or become entrepreneurs.

Topics include lessons on using video conferencing, information security and office productivity software, as well as online job and networking tools. There will also be sessions aimed at entrepreneurial hopefuls, teaching them skills such as social media marketing, crowdfunding, mobile payment services and graphic design.

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