travel
The best travel locations for vacations or workplace locations around the country and the world.
Setting Up Shop in Southeast Asia
Becoming an entrepreneur and starting a business is challenging and can be downright scary in your hometown, let alone another country. But for those willing to pack up and head to Southeast Asia the market is ripe and the opportunities abound. That doesn’t mean it’s all unicorns and rainbows, there are just as many challenges for foreigners doing business in the region as their are benefits. In this article, I’m going to map some of those out for you by location.
By dana blouin7 years ago in Journal
Career Adventures in Cambodia
On a trip to Cambodia, I met three generations of people having career adventures in Southeast Asia — 50-somethings reinventing themselves, 30-somethings re-energizing themselves and 20-somethings finding themselves. Their common attributes included embracing risk, a sense of adventure, independence, empathy, pragmatism, curiosity and cultural sensitivity. Here are some of their stories with a few of my reflections.
By David Shindler7 years ago in Journal
"How Did You Want to Spend Your Life?": Fight Club Philosophy Meets Overseas English Teaching
"I don't want to change your life," I wrote to her via Facebook Messenger. And that was true...because what I wanted was for her to change her own life. My role was only to act as catalyst...
By Matt Cates7 years ago in Journal
Tie-Con 2017 Through the Perspective of Jason M. Titus
My experience being cordially invited as an Influencer with my fellow friend and confidant Gurtej Sekhon (Future CEO Someday) at what can be called the largest technology anchored conference dedicated to helping capture a new mixture of ideas. “Tie-con is ranked alongside Demo, TED and World Economic Forum among top 10 conferences worldwide for ideas and entrepreneurship by Worth Magazine.” (WHAT IS TiEcon?)
By Jason Titus7 years ago in Journal
My Punk Rock Advice For High School Graduates
Every generation seems to have less hope staring back at them than the previous generation. Social security and a decent retirement plan look less likely every year for the youth of today. College tuition and student debt keep increasing, and there are fewer jobs than ever.
By Terry Osterhout7 years ago in Journal