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Apayao
DTI-Apayao Brings Social Media and Content Creation Training to Conner — and Entrepreneurs Practiced With Real Products on the Same Day
A March 19 training in Malama, Conner brought together cooperatives, indigenous peoples associations, and small enterprise owners for a hands-on session on digital marketing — one of the most practical skill gaps facing rural entrepreneurs in the Cordillera today.

Amianan Desk
Amianan Innovation Ventures
The Department of Trade and Industry Apayao, through the Comprehensive Agrarian Reform Program, conducted a Training on Social Media Marketing and Content Creation on March 19, 2026 in Malama, Conner, Apayao. The session brought together members and officers from RIMALIPAD-NABA MPC, Conner Multi-Purpose Cooperative, Arya Malama SLP Native Delicacies, United Isnag Indigenous Peoples Association, and two registered sole proprietors — a mix of community-based enterprises that reflects the actual texture of Apayao's local economy.
The resource speaker was Mr. Kelly L. Kengay of Kengay Local Food Products, a local entrepreneur who brought his own experience in product marketing to the room rather than a generic digital marketing curriculum.

What the Training Actually Covered
The session went beyond theory. Participants worked through the fundamentals of social media marketing — identifying target audiences, building brand presence, creating content that holds attention, and maintaining consistency across platforms. But the part that matters most for rural entrepreneurs came in the hands-on portion: a live product photo shoot where participants practiced lighting, composition, and product styling using their own items.
They also worked through caption writing, hashtag strategy, and post optimization — the practical, repeatable skills that determine whether a product post reaches ten people or ten thousand. By the end of the session, participants had not just learned about digital marketing. They had done it.
The RIMALIPAD-NABA MPC team was recognized for producing the Best Photo Output of the day, earning a package prize from Kengay Local Food Products. That kind of peer recognition in a training setting does something a certificate alone cannot: it shows participants that the skills are learnable and that their own community members are capable of producing quality content right now, not someday.
Why This Matters in Apayao
Apayao is one of the least densely populated provinces in the Cordillera, with a largely rural economy built around agriculture, indigenous crafts, and community-based enterprises. For a cooperative or small food producer in Conner, physical market access is limited by geography. Digital platforms are not a nice-to-have. They are the most realistic pathway to reaching buyers outside the province.
The gap is not motivation. The gap is skill and confidence. Many small producers in the region have products worth selling but no working knowledge of how to photograph them, describe them, or place them in front of the right audience online. A one-day training like this does not close that gap permanently, but it gives participants a starting point, a practiced skill, and the evidence that it is doable.
The choice of a local entrepreneur as resource person rather than an outside consultant is also worth noting. Kengay Local Food Products operates in the same environment these participants do. The advice is not theoretical. It comes from someone who has sold local products online from a similar context, which gives it a credibility that a generic digital marketing presenter cannot replicate.
What This Means for Northern Luzon
DTI's provincial offices across Northern Luzon are running variations of this kind of training regularly, and the cumulative effect of those sessions matters more than any single event. Every cooperative officer who learns to shoot a clean product photo, every sole proprietor who figures out how to write a caption that converts — these are incremental capability upgrades that compound across an entire provincial economy over time.
For Apayao specifically, the presence of the United Isnag Indigenous Peoples Association in the room is significant. Indigenous communities in the Cordillera produce culturally distinct products with genuine market demand from buyers who specifically seek out authentic, locally sourced goods. Connecting that supply to digital platforms is one of the highest-leverage things a training like this can do.
Entrepreneurs in Apayao looking to continue building their digital marketing skills can reach out to DTI-Apayao directly. For cooperatives and community enterprises across Northern Luzon, checking in with your provincial DTI Negosyo Center on upcoming digital skills training is a straightforward next step that costs nothing but time























