Upwardly mobile, tech-savvy young professionals across the globe are swapping their briefcases and brogues for backpacks and sneakers, setting themselves up as digital nomads who can operate from wherever their laptops can go.
Jobbatical and Teleport, two recent tech start-ups, promise to take the guesswork out of digital job hunting on a global scale. Both hail from tiny tech titan Estonia and are part of a crop of cutting-edge online sites catering to digital nomads, typically young males who work remotely and move around regions like Southeast Asia every few months.
Their creators insist the startups have the potential to shake things up on the global job market, similar to how Estonians previously transformed global communications with Skype and digital international money transfers via Transferwise.
Karoli Hindriks, a Tallinn-based entrepreneur, said she launched Jobbatical two years ago to fill the growing gaps she noticed in global recruiting.
With employment offers from Greece, to Thailand and Costa Rica among others, it takes just a few clicks of the mouse for product or account managers, programmers and other tech professionals to land a dream job, whether programming in Malaysia’s tropical paradise of Penang or managing an adventure travel operation in Bali.
Jobbatical targets “adventurous tech, business, and creative professionals with over five years of working experience,” Hindriks said at the Latitude59 technology conference in Estonia’s capital Tallinn.
She points to “a generational mindset shift” as key to her client base of 70,000 unique users each month across 150 countries.
“The Millennial’s view of success isn’t necessarily a house, a well-paying job and a picket fence,” she said. “There’s a huge shift towards defining success as working in terms of things that one truly believes in, and appreciating experiences over material possessions.”
New technologies, less expensive international travel and communications mean that moving around to work is “becoming smoother and cheaper than ever,” she added.
Most Jobbatical offers involve positions that, like sabbaticals, last about 12 months, creating a revolving client base. The company takes a “success” fee of 5 percent of the annual salary upon hiring.
Vicente Gracia, a 28-year-old business strategist from Chile, has been surfing more than just the Internet since he began using Jobbatical.
Dissatisfied with the terms he was being offered by South American companies, Gracia used it to find a job based in Bali.
“New generations are looking for more than just a paycheck,” Gracia told reporters via Skype.
A keen surfer, he now enjoys riding the waves on a Bali beach every morning during a break in his commute to work.
“For me, being able to prioritize my career and a healthy lifestyle is crucial,” he said.
Insisting that Jobbatical is unique, Hindriks shuns comparisons to online job sites like Monster, insisting that “it’s like comparing Craigslist to Airbnb.”
Describing Jobbatical as a “matchmaker for companies,” Hindriks insists that short-term “jobbaticals” encourage professionals to choose countries off the beaten path — like her own Estonia — that they might not have considered were the positions permanent.
“If you look at the reality, there are no permanent jobs any more, so in that sense we’re bringing honesty to the conversation,” she said.
Meanwhile, Teleport takes stock of the personal preferences and expectations of digital jobseekers and then suggests ideal places for them to live and work.
Teleport “scouts,” or local experts, are just a click away to iron out any wrinkles. For a modest fee, they can help with everything from visas to finding the right apartment or the nearest vegan restaurant.
A veteran tech entrepreneur who headed up Skype’s Estonia operations from 2005 to 2012, Teleport chief executive officer Sten Tamkivi insisted his start-up goes further than competitors like NomadList, which essentially works like a traditional travel guide.
Tamkivi said that aside from calculating ideal locations based on personal preferences and its “scouts,” its “flock” service also locates the nearest co-working spaces.
Anthony Lapenna, a Frenchman working in New Zealand, is one happy Teleport user. The service meant he could keep his job, but change hemispheres, shifting from Paris to Auckland, New Zealand, where he continues his role as a software engineer.
“I wanted to go to an English-speaking country in order to improve my English, plus I was kind of sick of the big city of Paris,” he told reporters via e-mail.
“I’ll probably move again, but not before I’ve explored as much of New Zealand as I can,” he wrote.
DEATH CONSTANTLY LOOMING: Decades of detention took a major toll on Iwao Hakamada’s mental health, his lawyers describing him as ‘living in a world of fantasy’ A Japanese man wrongly convicted of murder who was the world’s longest-serving death row inmate has been awarded US$1.44 million in compensation, an official said yesterday. The payout represents ¥12,500 (US$83) for each day of the more than four decades that Iwao Hakamada spent in detention, most of it on death row when each day could have been his last. It is a record for compensation of this kind, Japanese media said. The former boxer, now 89, was exonerated last year of a 1966 quadruple murder after a tireless campaign by his sister and others. The case sparked scrutiny of the justice system in
The head of Shin Bet, Israel’s domestic intelligence agency, was sacked yesterday, days after Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said he no longer trusts him, and fallout from a report on the Oct. 7, 2023, Hamas attack. “The Government unanimously approved Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s proposal to end ISA Director Ronen Bar’s term of office,” a statement said. He is to leave his post when his successor is appointed by April 10 at the latest, the statement said. Netanyahu on Sunday cited an “ongoing lack of trust” as the reason for moving to dismiss Bar, who joined the agency in 1993. Bar, meant to
DITCH TACTICS: Kenyan officers were on their way to rescue Haitian police stuck in a ditch suspected to have been deliberately dug by Haitian gang members A Kenyan policeman deployed in Haiti has gone missing after violent gangs attacked a group of officers on a rescue mission, a UN-backed multinational security mission said in a statement yesterday. The Kenyan officers on Tuesday were on their way to rescue Haitian police stuck in a ditch “suspected to have been deliberately dug by gangs,” the statement said, adding that “specialized teams have been deployed” to search for the missing officer. Local media outlets in Haiti reported that the officer had been killed and videos of a lifeless man clothed in Kenyan uniform were shared on social media. Gang violence has left
‘HUMAN NEGLIGENCE’: The fire is believed to have been caused by someone who was visiting an ancestral grave and accidentally started the blaze, the acting president said Deadly wildfires in South Korea worsened overnight, officials said yesterday, as dry, windy weather hampered efforts to contain one of the nation’s worst-ever fire outbreaks. More than a dozen different blazes broke out over the weekend, with Acting South Korean Interior and Safety Minister Ko Ki-dong reporting thousands of hectares burned and four people killed. “The wildfires have so far affected about 14,694 hectares, with damage continuing to grow,” Ko said. The extent of damage would make the fires collectively the third-largest in South Korea’s history. The largest was an April 2000 blaze that scorched 23,913 hectares across the east coast. More than 3,000