MEDIA AND EVENTS
The press acknowledges our impact
From customer stories to innovation news, the media has reported on how Jump Cube is changing the way businesses work and grow. Discover what they're saying about us.

In a context marked by the accelerated adoption of artificial intelligence in Latin America, companies capable of turning this technology into concrete business solutions are beginning to gain prominence within the regional technology ecosystem. The growing demand for automation, advanced analytics, and digital transformation has driven the development of new tools designed to address the needs of organizations across different sectors. Against this backdrop, Amazon Web Services (AWS) granted the “Rising Star Consulting Partner of the Year” recognition for Northern Latin America to a company specializing in technology solutions and artificial intelligence. The distinction was presented during the AWS Partner Summit LATAM, one of the region’s leading events for innovation and cloud computing.

The Colombian labor market recorded an unemployment rate of 9.2% in February 2026, the lowest figure for this period since 2001, according to the latest data reported by the National Administrative Department of Statistics (DANE). This indicator, which represents a 1.1 percentage point decrease compared to the 10.3% recorded in the same month of 2025, points to a high-employment environment that, combined with increases in the minimum wage, is putting pressure on corporate boards to seek operational efficiency strategies. The current landscape has sparked a debate over whether organizations should continue expanding their workforce in a linear way, or whether the optimal path toward economic sustainability lies in technological transformation and process automation. According to statistics from the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD), 20.2% of companies in the country report incorporating Artificial Intelligence (AI) into their operating structures. However, the data reveals a clear asymmetry between employee adoption and formal implementation by organizations.

JumpCube has been recognized by Amazon Web Services as the 2026 Rising Star Consulting Partner of the Year for Northern Latin America , a milestone that reinforces our growth, technological evolution, and commitment to business transformation across the region. This recognition is part of the 2026 AWS Regional Partners of the Year Awards , which celebrate AWS Partner Network members that consistently deliver outstanding results, drive innovation, and create measurable value for customers. The Rising Star Consulting Partner of the Year category recognizes AWS Consulting Partners that have achieved significant year-over-year business growth. For JumpCube, this achievement is more than an award. It is a validation of the work we have been doing with companies that want to automate processes, integrate artificial intelligence into their operations, and build scalable technology solutions on AWS. From the beginning, our mission has been clear: to help organizations free up time, reduce operational complexity, and allow their teams to focus on what truly drives growth. Through our AI-powered automation platform, we help companies design and implement solutions that improve productivity, efficiency, and decision-making. Being recognized by AWS in Northern Latin America strengthens our vision of building useful, secure, and results-driven technology. It also confirms that the adoption of artificial intelligence and automation is no longer a future trend, but a present need for companies that want to compete, scale, and operate with greater agility. At JumpCube, we will continue driving business innovation from Latin America to the world, combining expertise in AI, automation, low-code, and AWS best practices to help more companies transform their processes and accelerate growth. This recognition also belongs to our customers, partners, and team. Thank you for trusting JumpCube to help build the future of enterprise productivity.

In a global environment where digitalization sets the pace for corporate survival, artificial intelligence (AI) has moved beyond being a future promise to become the cornerstone of competitiveness, efficiency, and business sustainability. In Latin America, this landscape is increasingly dynamic. According to a Morning Consult study for IBM, more than a third of companies in the region are already planning strategic investments in training and developing their workforce to adapt to these new tools. This trend responds to a pressing need: organizations must incorporate technologies that not only optimize their internal processes but also strengthen their responsiveness to a market that demands constant agility. In this context, JumpCube has emerged as a regional leader. In just two years, the company, specializing in artificial intelligence solutions, has demonstrated that applied technology can radically transform business operations across multiple industries.

Artificial intelligence has ceased to be a futuristic promise and has become a concrete tool for business transformation in Latin America. The results of companies that have incorporated this technology show tangible advances in efficiency, competitiveness, and sustainability, in a regional context marked by the need to adapt to increasingly digital and demanding markets. A recent study by Morning Consult for IBM reveals that more than a third of companies in the region plan to invest in training and development of their human talent, a clear sign that digital transformation depends not only on technology but also on the preparation of the people who operate it.

Processing 15,000 invoices per month in weeks, rather than months, is now possible for some Latin American SMEs. This is according to Mauricio Lince, co-founder and CEO of JumpCube, a leading US company in artificial intelligence applied to business, which reports reductions of between 40% and 50% in operating costs and up to 90% in manual effort in critical processes such as invoicing, customer service, and data analysis. Among the most notable examples, a logistics company has projected savings of 45% in processing more than 15,000 invoices per month, thanks to the complete automation of its accounting processes. Meanwhile, a dental clinic manages 190,000 contacts or leads per month using almost half the resources it previously required, allowing it to reinvest the savings directly in advertising and business expansion.

Amazon Web Services (AWS), Amazon's cloud services division, awarded the AWS AI Competency certification in Agentic AI to JumpCube, a US-based technology company with operations in Colombia and other Latin American markets. This recognition is part of AWS's global competency program, which evaluates organizations that develop and implement artificial intelligence solutions in enterprise environments. The certification validates technical aspects, real-world use cases, and best practices related to the security and responsible use of these technologies. With this achievement, JumpCube becomes the second company in Latin America to obtain this distinction and the first in the Northern Latin America (NOLA) region and Mexico to reach this level within the program.

For years, artificial intelligence in businesses has functioned as a kind of copilot: analyzing data, suggesting answers, and automating simple tasks. But now a new stage is beginning. This change—which until recently seemed distant for many Latin American companies—is starting to take hold in the region. A technological leap that is already arriving in Latin America. In this context, the technology company JumpCube has just received AWS AI Competency certification in Agentic AI, a recognition awarded by Amazon Web Services to companies with a proven ability to implement this type of advanced artificial intelligence.

Processing 15,000 invoices per month with half the effort and in weeks, not months, is a possibility for some small and medium-sized enterprises (SMEs) in Latin America that have incorporated artificial intelligence (AI) into their operations. This was explained by Mauricio Lince, co-founder and CEO of JumpCube, a US firm specializing in enterprise artificial intelligence. According to Lince, the implementation of comprehensive automation has allowed for reductions of between 40% and 50% in operating costs and up to 90% in manual effort in processes such as invoicing, customer service, and data analysis. Without addressing these challenges, Ecocarga risked impacting its financial efficiency and limiting its ability to effectively scale its operations.

The democratization of artificial intelligence (AI) has transformed companies' cost structures by 2026, enabling reductions of over 40% in process automation and up to 60% in customer service times. According to data from JumpCube, a US firm specializing in enterprise AI, the adoption of these technologies has shifted from being an exclusive resource for large corporations to a profitability tool for companies of all sizes, eliminating the need for expensive infrastructure and prioritizing models of progressive scalability.

In a context where Latin American companies are seeking to accelerate their growth without fragmenting their operations, the technology company JumpCube has managed to capture the attention of international investors. The company received a strategic investment from Dipat Capital, a fund specializing in the development of startups with the potential to become unicorns. This decision marks Colombia as the fund's entry point into Latin America, solidifying the country as an emerging hub for technological innovation. The transaction not only strengthens JumpCube's presence in the region but also opens the door to its expansion into markets such as Spain, Mexico, and the United States.

Dipat Capital announced its entry into Latin America with a strategic investment in the Colombian startup JumpCube, a platform focused on business productivity based on intelligent agents. According to fund spokespeople, the decision reflects the company's potential for international scaling, making it a key player in the development of technology solutions geared toward business results. This transaction positions Colombia as a starting point for the fund's regional strategy, which already includes a presence in Spain and the United States.

Artificial intelligence is a reality that sooner or later all companies will have to implement in their processes if they want to remain competitive in the market, as stated by Mauricio Lince, general manager of JumpCube, the company behind the AI BPO tool for process automation. Lince discussed the automation that companies are implementing with artificial intelligence, as well as the implementation landscape of this tool in the region and the new markets that will emerge.

When we think of artificial intelligence, we almost always think of the most everyday uses: asking for advice, solving quick tasks, supporting our work, or helping us write, organize, and search for information. In short, we use it daily. But AI goes far beyond that. Behind this daily use lies an expanding ecosystem that includes new careers, technological infrastructure, and a profound transformation of the digital economy. In this context, Colombia is beginning to move forward and ask itself how it fits into this global competition, according to Stanford University's AI Index Report 2026.

In April 2026, the Colombian firm JumpCube received a strategic investment from Dipat Capital, an accelerator fund based in Spain and the United States, led by former Amazon executives. This alliance aims to address operational fragmentation issues in Latin American companies by using an intelligent agent platform designed to accelerate revenue and centralize systemic productivity. The investment will allow the company to scale its operations into international markets, specifically Mexico, the United States, and Spain.

