A widespread narrative among Spanish-speaking online course creators holds that the e-learning market is saturated, dying, or has been undermined by generative AI. This paper examines that narrative against aggregate market data, platform-level financial disclosures, and the cognitive-science literature on perception. Six independent industry research firms project compound annual growth rates of 7.6% to 20.6% for the global e-learning market through the early 2030s, while Latin American EdTech is projected to grow at 14.5% CAGR through 2035. Platform-level evidence reveals a bifurcation: creator-focused platforms combining content with structured implementation (Hotmart Company, Kajabi) report record gross merchandise volume, while marketplaces built on unstructured information delivery (Udemy's Consumer segment) show declining revenue and have publicly pivoted toward subscription. We propose the Market Filtration Hypothesis: the perception of contraction is the cognitive trace of a structural filtration in which information-only models lose viability while implementation-supported models continue to grow. The narrative is amplified by the availability heuristic (Tversky Soroka et al., 2019). The implications for creators are framed through the CursoVivo implementation model, which embeds AI-driven personalization within existing course assets to address the knowing-doing gap (Pfeffer & Sutton, 2000) at the level of the individual learner.
Humberto Inciarte (Sun,) studied this question.