Business Traveller

HOT DESKING

As the pandemic moves into 2021, countries are offering options so you can set up your remote office somewhere more appealing

- WORDS NIGEL TISDALL

It’s a lifestyle change that is being encouraged by destinatio­ns ranging from Anguilla to Georgia

Are you reading this at home? Perhaps in the spare room/kitchen table/garden shed “office” that has been your improvised workspace for most of this year? Poleaxed by the pandemic, many of us have had to adjust to a strange new era of business travel – one abruptly shorn of getting on planes and going to offices and where the business day is now conducted almost entirely via electronic screens. The trend towards remote working has been rapidly accelerate­d (even Zoomed) by Covid-19, along with the dreamy thought that we might as well do this somewhere warm and uplifting – a lifestyle change that is now being encouraged by exotic destinatio­ns ranging from Anguilla to Georgia, inviting us to up laptops and “work from paradise”.

Doing so is worth considerin­g, given that the technology exists to allow work from almost anywhere and that Covid-19 isn’t going away. As Professor Sir John Bell, a leading immunologi­st and Regius professor of medicine at the University of Oxford, has put it: “There’s going to be lots of this virus around for a long time, probably forever.”

At the same time, working remotely is going mainstream. Microsoft has said it will allow staff to do this permanentl­y, even from another country if approved. Germany plans to make working from home a legal right, while the Welsh government wants to see “around 30 per cent of the workforce working remotely on a regular basis”. Pontypridd or Bora Bora? Now that is a question.

The good news is that working from abroad doesn’t have to mean a major sell-up and relocation. Most of the new long-stay working visas are valid only for a year, so are ideal for testing the water, and their requiremen­ts are pretty standard. You can’t work in the host country, you need to demonstrat­e a decent income and have health insurance, you can come and go as you please, and you are not taxed locally. (Note that the chance to set up in these locations is subject to entry restrictio­ns on internatio­nal arrivals owing to the pandemic.) With uncannily good timing, in April travel guide publisher Lonely Planet brought out a bible for all this, The Digital Nomad Handbook (£12.99), that is full of tips on how to live and work on the road. It outlines how to apply for a workfriend­ly visa in less-hyped places such as Mexico and Costa Rica, and even suggests a novel way to stay in Thailand. Apparently, if you sign up for a year-long course in Thai boxing, you only have to train for four hours a week – and that might come in handy if the boss is giving you grief...

USER FRIENDLY

The best of the new, Covid-inspired long-stay visas have a fast and inexpensiv­e applicatio­n process, such as Work from Bermuda, which is all done online with approval

Canada, some have been from as far afield as Serbia, Morocco, Nigeria and Iraq.

Among these “happy stampers” are Britons Martin and Laura Macdonald, who arrived on the island in August with their children aged 12 and seven. The family was previously based in California, where Martin runs a digital marketing consultanc­y, and their relocation was prompted by the news that their local school would not be reopening in the autumn.

“Our first question before committing was: ‘What’s the internet like?’” Laura recalls. “In fact, it’s much better than in Silicon Valley.” Barbados also has a high standard of education and medical care and they’ve settled in well, renting a restored plantation house in the green and quiet east of the island that is large enough to accommodat­e Martin’s office along with visiting friends and relatives. “Bring everything you need,” Laura advises anyone following in their footsteps, and “be wildly flexible”.

CARIBBEAN CHECK-IN

With tourism taking a dive, Barbados has a decent range of villas available, although some visa-holders prefer to rent an Airbnb property first as a way of getting their bearings. Hotels that are normally filled with winter sun-seeking regulars are also offering discounted long-stay packages, including classy Cobblers Cove, where you can set up

office on the patio of your garden suite and enjoy perks such as a free minibar, yoga sessions and daily motorised watersport­s sessions.

Numerous hotels worldwide are promoting themselves as the ideal venue for remote working, and that’s fine if they have a business orientatio­n. But how easy is it to knuckle down with the spreadshee­ts in a beach resort full of loved-up couples and sporty families? Pretty easy, I’d say. As business travellers, we are all familiar with working on the hoof, juggling time zones and firing off emails from poolside. As proof, this feature is being written at Waves Hotel and Spa, a 70-room all-inclusive property on the west coast of Barbados, where most of my fellow guests are cheery Brits soaking up the sun and unlimited Mount Gay rum. Luckily, my work ethic is proving the stronger spirit.

Staffed with smiling and helpful Bajans, this four-star property is part of the Marriott Internatio­nal-owned Elegant Hotels Group, and its Working from Waves package costs US$8,010 a month for two, with all meals, drinks, watersport­s, exercise classes and some spa treatments included. A B&B alternativ­e at sister property Colony Club by Elegant Hotels is US$5,790. This represents a 35 per cent discount on the rate for a standard room but expect to pay more for extra space or an ocean view.

“We’re open to upgrading long-stay guests,” says Gayle Talma, the company’s group operations director. In my experience, while the attitude here is extremely can-do, you might want to consider checking into a hotel where the rooms have kitchen facilities to avoid having the same breakfast choice for

30 days in a row (the lavish self-serve buffets of yore are another Covid casualty). On the plus side, the chance to wake up and step into a glistening turquoise sea, jump on a Hobie Cat catamaran in your lunch hour and kick back with some grilled mahi-mahi in the evening is clearly a boon. Employers sometimes complain that working from home is less productive than in an office, but that’s not the case when you’ve swapped your standard view of the kitchen clock for glossy palm trees and outrageous sunsets. I certainly feel motivated to crack on by the warmth, fresh breezes and radiant colours of the Caribbean, and the Bajans, who are a go-ahead and cosmopolit­an lot, are a joy to work and play with.

When launching the Welcome Stamp, Mia Mottley, the dynamo prime minister of Barbados, commented about the strain that Covid-19 had placed on people’s mental wellness and the benefits that a year on her charismati­c island might bring. “The sunshine is powerful,” she argues. “The seawater is powerful. They’re both therapeuti­c in ways that are hard to explain. And we felt, why not share it?”

▪ Turn the page for some of the destinatio­ns worldwide offering long-stay visas for remote workers…

I certainly feel motivated to crack on by the warmth, fresh breezes and radiant colours of the Caribbean

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 ??  ?? LEFT: Traditiona­l houses in Tbilisi Old Town, Georgia
LEFT: Traditiona­l houses in Tbilisi Old Town, Georgia
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 ??  ?? CLOCKWISE FROM ABOVE: The beachfront Cobblers Cove hotel in Barbados; remote working at Waves Hotel and Spa in Barbados; Bermuda’s Tobacco Bay
CLOCKWISE FROM ABOVE: The beachfront Cobblers Cove hotel in Barbados; remote working at Waves Hotel and Spa in Barbados; Bermuda’s Tobacco Bay
 ??  ?? ABOVE: The beaches in Barbados make for an inspiring work backdrop
ABOVE: The beaches in Barbados make for an inspiring work backdrop

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