Published: 31 January 2026
Global instructional design jobs are increasingly appearing in technology companies, especially within operations and performance teams. These companies continue to invest heavily in instructional design, not as an academic support function, but as a core business and performance capability.
A good example is a recently advertised Instructional Designer role at Airbnb, supporting global operations and training teams.
👉 Official job link:
https://careers.airbnb.com/positions/7553044/
While this role is often described as remote, there’s an important clarification that many instructional designers, especially those based in Africa, should understand.
Remote does not always mean 'work from anywhere.'
Although the Airbnb role allows remote work, it is restricted to specific countries where the company can legally employ staff.
At the time of publishing (31 January 2026), eligible locations include countries such as Ireland, the United States, Singapore, Japan, and a few others.
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Kenya is not listed as an eligible location for this specific role.
This means Kenyan-based instructional designers may not qualify to apply, even though the role is remote.
That distinction matters.
Why this role still matters for Instructional Designers in Kenya
Even if you cannot apply, this posting is still valuable because it shows how global companies define instructional design today.
Here is what stands out.
1. Instructional Design is framed as a business function
The role focuses on:
- Performance gaps
- Operational effectiveness
- Scalable training solutions
This confirms a growing global trend: Instructional designers are expected to solve performance problems, not just build courses.
2. Learning science is non-negotiable
The job description explicitly references:
- Learning science
- Cognitive psychology
- Instructional design models
- Accessibility and inclusive design
Frameworks such as UDL, cognitive load management, and backward design are no longer optional; they are baseline expectations.
3. Tools support thinking, not the other way around
Authoring tools and LMS standards are mentioned, but they are not the center of the role.
The emphasis is on:
- Needs analysis
- Design decisions
- Measuring effectiveness
This reinforces a key insight for instructional designers:
Tools do not define seniority.
Strategic thinking does.
4. Global roles help you benchmark your readiness
Even when location limits apply, roles like this help instructional designers:
- Benchmark global expectations
- Identify skill gaps
- Shift their language from 'content creation' to performance impact
Studying such postings is part of career strategy, not wasted effort.
What Kenyan Instructional Designers should take away
If you are based in Kenya and building a career in instructional design:
- Do not assume all remote roles are globally open
- Read location requirements carefully
- Use global postings to audit your skills and positioning
- Build competence in learning science, performance consulting, and evaluation
- Prepare for future roles where remote truly means global
The instructional design field is not only expanding, but it is also maturing.
Final thought
Not every opportunity is immediately accessible.
But every serious opportunity reveals where the profession is going and how to prepare for what comes next.
That awareness alone is professional leverage.
For instructional design–related questions, whether you are navigating global roles, transitioning from academia, or strengthening your learning design fundamentals, feel free to reach out. I regularly work with educators and professionals looking to position themselves more strategically in the ID and L&D space.
Upcoming Live Q&A (Reminder)
I will also be hosting a live Q&A session on 28th February, focused on:
- Instructional Design career paths
- Global and remote ID opportunities
- What senior and strategic ID roles actually demand
If you are thinking through your next move in instructional design, this session will help you ask better questions and make clearer decisions.
