National Post (National Edition)

Digital nomads: The reality of running a business from anywhere

`NOT COMING HOME, AT ALL, EVER'

- VANESSA BROWN

Jubril Agoro remembers first hearing the word “coronaviru­s” last March in Bali, Indonesia. “I was just panicking,” he says. After 11 years on the road, the cofounder of financial education business Live Richer Academy and founder of travel video company Passport Heavy rushed to get on a flight back to the United States.

Agoro, 34, is one of a growing number of digital nomads — people who work remotely online and are “location independen­t.” According to a report by MBO Partners, which supports independen­t profession­als and their clients, their numbers have increased by 49 per cent in the U.S. during the pandemic, rising from 7.3 million in 2019 to 10.9 million in 2020. The “biggest shift is that traditiona­l job holders have been unleashed from their offices and many, instead of staying in one place, are taking to the road,” the report adds.

A nomadic life is appealing — and some countries, such as Barbados and Bermuda, are trying to attract more remote workers. But the wider tax implicatio­ns of working away from your home country are complex. Anyone planning to work abroad long-term needs to get specialist tax advice. Agoro, a Nigerian American who started his first business as a teenager selling items on eBay, says he first hit the road because “if you're living an $8,000-a-month lifestyle in Chicago or New York it will cost you about $2,000 a month.”

After returning to the U.S., he headed to California. He has since travelled internatio­nally again and acknowledg­es it is “a very sensitive topic.” There has been a split on social media, with some arguing non-essential travel is irresponsi­ble. “I'm trying to live my best life as responsibl­y as possible,” Agoro says, adding that he wears a mask and takes weekly COVID-19 tests.

Thomas Parkinson, a British Amazon seller and founder of Amazon support company Fast Track FBA, says that after quitting an electronic engineerin­g degree he worked in bar management for five years before starting his first online business. After going through a relationsh­ip breakup, a friend suggested he try running his company from abroad. “I only booked a four-week getaway ... and I still remember to this day I got on the phone to my sister and said, `I'm not coming home, at all, ever, period.' That was about three years ago,” he says.

Parkinson, 35, is currently in Mexico and after five months in Cancún plans to move to Mexico City.

Malaysian software developer Farez Rahman, 49, is married to British data consultant Jo Lodge, 46. The couple relocated to Malaysia from the U.K. in 2017. The aim was to run their web developmen­t agency Redkey Digital remotely, while retaining their U.K. client base. “When I worked in London, I had quite a good salary and at the end of each month I didn't have anything left. Here, we are living on a fraction of that salary and we seem to have more cash,” says Lodge.

“Some days I'm working

for my client, some days I'm doing my own thing and some days I'm just surfing. I'm doing what feels exciting for me,” says Rahman.

Travel writer and author Matt Kepnes founded his blog, Nomadic Matt, in 2008. “I never wanted to take this path. You know, life unfolds accidental­ly,” he says. He started the blog, which focuses on budget travel and life as a digital nomad, as “simply a way to do freelance writing in hopes of writing enough so I could keep travelling”. The 40-year-old American has been to more than 100 countries, but during the pandemic he stayed closer to home, travelling within the U.S. as well as spending six weeks in Mexico.

For Brenna Holeman, her childhood dream of becoming a travel writer “seemed as unattainab­le as wanting to become an astronaut.” Now in her thirties, she started her blog, This Battered Suitcase, in 2010. Having not left her home region of Manitoba since January 2020, she says her readers appreciate the fact she has not promoted travel during the pandemic. “Either they feel it's not an ethical decision or it makes them feel bad because they can't travel as they're in a part of the world where there is a lockdown,” she says.

HOW THE PANDEMIC AFFECTED BUSINESS

“The last year's actually been incredible,” says Agoro. “As people started to focus more on their finances and learning how to budget,” Live Richer Academy had its first seven-figure revenue month in April 2020.

For Rahman, business has been “OK,” with “projects coming and going.” Lodge worked for her previous employer, a U.K. council, remotely for a few months, but since her contract ended she's been focusing on setting up a “techie YouTube channel” covering data and business intelligen­ce.

The travel blogging community has been hit harder. Kepnes has created a membership program and started hosting virtual events. “These are things that never would have happened without COVID,” Kepnes said.

Holeman had several income streams before the pandemic. “When all of them shut down all at once, that was quite a blow,” she says. “It's really allowed me to examine what do I truly love? How can I pivot and what can I salvage?” The digital nomad lifestyle may be an appealing next move for some workers who have become freed from office life. According to MBO Partners' report, between 2019 and 2020 there was an 18 per cent increase in Americans saying they “plan on becoming digital nomads over the next two to three years.”

Agoro says: “One of my biggest goals is just to show people, open people's minds to, this is possible and it's a lot easier and more affordable than people even thought.”

 ?? NICOLA MUIRHEAD/BLOOMBERG FILES ?? Abbie Sheppard is one of many lured to Bermuda by
programs aimed at snagging remote workers.
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