 When someone upgrades their phone or computer, their old device is quickly forgotten or worse thrown away. E-Waste is a growing global issue which has both detrimental health and environmental consequences. But a local not-for-profit organisation in Geneva, Switzerland, has found an innovative way to reduce e-waste and train unemployed people with digital skills for a digital future. We sell in average 10,000 pieces a year, laptops, PCs, printers and screens. 5 to 10% are PCs. We sell at the store or store 6,000 pieces, and the rest, the 4,000 pieces, around, are scattered. I make all the computer material used and recycled material, which are prepared in this workshop, then distributed in the offices for digital training for real-time employees. We have been training for a year, a new project in the digital world, in the form of people in web development who will be able to work in companies to make development here in Geneva. There were many, many requests for web developers or people who would do coding. We were in a lack of personnel at the national level. So today, it's a job that is quite affordable, both for men and women. By giving old equipment a new lease of life, programmes like this could help shrink the global digital skills shortage and help fill 756,000 unfilled jobs in the European ICT sector today, and just as importantly, reduce the millions of tons of e-waste generated around the world. I'm very happy because I feel that I'm also participating in something for the environment. Find out about IT's work to reduce e-waste on IT's website.