Early career Abaroa created Legal Corp, a firm providing legal services to most multinational record labels based in Mexico and to major artists. In 1994, he moved to
Miami to cover the Latin American market and worked alongside the
Recording Industry Association of America (RIAA) to support the growing Latin music industry. In 2000, along with a group of visionaries, he founded
Wireless Latin Entertainment, the first U.S.-based Latin content producer, focusing on developing ringtones for the untapped U.S. wireless market.
The Latin Recording Academy Motivated by his brother Mauricio, who was the founding vice president of the Latin Recording Academy, Abaroa began his association with the organization as the vice-chairman of its board of trustees. In March 2003, he was appointed president of the academy, and in August 2010, he was promoted to president and CEO. Under Abaroa's leadership, the Latin Recording Academy experienced significant growth, becoming a respected international entity with exceptional financial stability and strong credibility. He led the establishment of the
Latin Grammy Cultural Foundation in 2014, serving as its founding president. By 2020, the foundation had allocated over $6.5 million toward scholarships, grants, musical instrument donations, and educational events in the United States and Ibero-America. In 2018, Abaroa led the negotiating team to secure an unprecedented multi-million-dollar agreement extending the partnership with
Univision, the largest U.S. Hispanic network, through 2028, with multi-platform coverage of the Latin Grammy Awards. He was instrumental in transitioning the Latin Grammy Awards telecast from English to Spanish, broadening its appeal to Spanish-speaking audiences worldwide. In recognition of his influence in the industry, he was listed among
Billboard's Latin Power Players in 2016. After nearly 20 years at the helm, Abaroa stepped down from his role in August 2021 and was named president emeritus of the academy. ==Other activities==