We live in a hi-tech digital savvy reality. The Internet-of-Things is very much science fact so my refrigerator talks to the grocer, my lights talk to the electricity company and my TV watches everyone and everything even when it’s not switched on. No, really!
Trends, in this world of megabytes and megabucks, seem to come and go quicker than a browser can refresh, except for Internet Explorer of course, and BizNet, which still takes an age, and what was yesterday’s hottest potato can easily be today’s toad-in-the-hole.
To call a trend that’s even remotely connected to things techie is a risky call, I know that. Just look at what happened to much smarter people than me with Smart Watches and Samsung’s Galaxy Note 7 before catching fire became an issue. Both were slated to revolutionize our lives and make them easier, remember? But did they? Answers on a postcard please.
So what’s this trend all about?
Digital Nomads is what it is.
Actually, it’s more about how the movement is growing, what it’s trying to do and how Bali has all the potential to drive it home.
Wikipedia and Investopedia both define digital nomads as people who are location independent and use telecommunication technologies to perform their jobs. Basically they work remotely to keep in contact with clients and employers. This isn’t exactly breaking news. They were identified in 2012 apparently, but I’m sure the species has been around for a lot longer than that … and called a lot worse than digital nomad.
You could argue that most business men and women use telecommunication technologies to perform their jobs anyway right? I know I do. I was on a trip to Singapore recently and almost everyone I saw had their heads buried in some sort of digital device. Sure, not everyone’s doing business, but a lot of people are keeping up to speed via email, chats and social media platforms.
So, are they digital nomads too?
Short answer is ‘no’ because the key is in location independence. Not being tied to any one place makes a huge difference in lifestyle. You get to choose where to be rather than what to do.
That’s a game changer.
In a 2015 Huffington Post article, Hannah Lamarque summed it up like this … “I want to be able to work wherever I want, whenever I want. I want to be able to pick up my laptop and venture off into the sunset, knowing that the work will get done and I will get to see some of the world’s most amazing places.”
But there are a lot of amazing places to choose from when your young, foot loose and fancy free; the world’s your oyster.
If you’re a cool millennial and you’re going to pick a cool place to do some cool digital stuff, you’d be thinking of how you can get your cool nomad ass off to somewhere nice and warm and tropical, right?

Cate Hogan from the UK’s Daily Telegraph wrote a couple of years ago that ‘the original digital nomads were enticed to idyllic destinations such as Bali, Chiang Mai or Hanoi by the lifestyle: exotic surroundings, the low cost of living, great food, warm weather, the dream of getting healthy on yoga and coconut water.’
So why choose Bali?
If we’re brutally honest we’d have to admit Bali’s honeymoon and excitement can soon wear thin, especially as internet connections can be unstable (to say the least), navigating narrow roads can be a pain in heavy traffic and immigration officers have been known to check visas in passports with frowns and many shakes of heads because working without the correct visa is a big no-no in Indonesia. Working means taxes, and for those who aren’t aware, tax is a very sensitive topic of conversation right now.
Guess, it’s time to pack up and move on to pastures new then.
Or is it?
