First SPK Meeting: A Foretaste

 

The first SPK Digital Nomads Meeting is fast approaching! In addition to our article on balancing travel and work with Snipcart , we asked the four guests who will open the discussion on May 25 about their experiences to give you a taste of the event.

 

Emilie Bergeron

“For me, being a digital nomad means seizing opportunities when they arise: saying yes to everything, especially when it’s a travel experience! It’s working from your laptop, anywhere.”

Graphic designer Émilie Bergeron chose to embrace digital nomadism because it’s a lifestyle that allows her to feel free. “I don’t hold back from going abroad because of my job: I bring it with me.” She enjoys experiencing the work culture of other countries, whether in student or freelancer cafés or in coworking spaces abroad. Émilie enjoys seeing how, but also what, people work on elsewhere in the world.

It was in Eastern Europe that she began her adventure. Since then, she has traveled to several countries such as Hungary, the Czech Republic and France. One latvia mobile phone numbers database  of her favorites is a great shop in the center of Budapest where you can find prints by local artists, clothing and crafts. The concept combines a café and a screen printing workshop. “I settled in to work for a few days and at the end of my stay, I was invited into the workshop to create my own screen prints. It was an inspiring and enriching experience to work side by side with local artists, who did not speak any English at all, but with whom I had a lot of fun learning about design that differs in our respective countries,” she explains.

 

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Maxime Laboissonniere

“Being a digital nomad has allowed me to see things I would NEVER have seen at home.”

Maxime Laboissonnière, a developer at Snipcart, has just returned from a four-month trip to Asia. His love of travel, the fact that his colleague François was experiencing it at the same time, and his weariness of everyday life in Quebec City are what pushed him to get started.

His favorites are shared between Bali, more  rehiring “boomerang” employees: winning conditions precisely Canggu, and his vacation in Japan. Canggu, for the focus he managed to find there thanks to the people who worked around him, for the relaxing atmosphere of this more isolated city and for its way of life ( hello scooters and soothing rice fields! ). His vacation in Japan will also remain memorable because his family came to join him. Together, they developed a taste for discovering the fascinating culture of this country, its delicious food and its people.

Charles Mclaughlin Piché

“Being a digital nomad means being homeless, traveling, and working online. It’s being part of a movement of people experimenting with a way of life that’s different from the status quo.”

Although SEOCharles founder Charles McLaughlin Piché now has a permanent home and travels less, he initially decided to experiment with this lifestyle for four years in order to get out of his comfort zone and routine.

Of all the experiences he has had, crossing Vietnam in five weeks on the motorbike he bought in Hanoi remains his favorite. He has also been a great inspiration for the guys at Snipcart , for whom digital nomadism is now an integral part of their company culture.

 

Manon Gruaz

“Being a digital nomad allows you to be free   while doing what you love most, fulfilling yourself personally and professionally.”

Manon Gruaz, graphic designer at Arcbees, is passionate about her job. Being thirsty for discovery, she does not feel attached to a place and instead insists on the fact that her heart is her home. It is this questioning that allowed her to take the plunge. During her four-month journey, she visited several places such as Iceland, Rome and Berlin. A favorite? Having a cruise ship between Helsinki and Tallinn as an office. “Working in these conditions… It’s quite magical,” she says.

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