Starting a Business as a Digital Nomad: How to Get the Best of Both Worlds

By Kyle Platt

There is a new breed of worker emerging today: the digital nomad. This is someone who works online and can do their job from anywhere in the world. They are able to take advantage of technology to stay connected with their team and clients, no matter where they are.

Thanks to advances in communication and
collaboration tools, there has never been a better time than now to be a digital nomad. But what if you also want to start your own business? Is it possible to be both a digital nomad and a startup entrepreneur? Can you live the lifestyle you want while also dealing with the challenges of running a new company?

The answer is yes! In this article, we will explore the benefits of combining these two lifestyles and show you how you can make it work for you.

Benefits of being a digital nomad

There are many benefits to being a digital nomad. Perhaps the most obvious benefit is that you can work from anywhere in the world. This gives you the freedom to travel and explore new places while still being able to do your job.

Additionally, as a digital nomad, you have more flexibility to take on projects that interest you and that fit your schedule. You also have the opportunity to work with a global team, which can be a great way to learn new things and expand your horizons. By immersing yourself in new cultures, interacting with new people, and trying different things, you better yourself as a human—plus get more enjoyment out of life.

Why being a digital nomad and running a startup is a perfect match

There are many reasons why being a digital nomad and creating a
startup are a perfect match. Perhaps the most obvious reason is that both lifestyles give you the freedom to do what you want, when you want. As a digital nomad, you have the freedom to travel and explore new places while still being able to do your job.

I myself have really grown to dislike snowy winters. While working more traditional in-office jobs, I felt like I was just grinding through winters, counting down the days until it was spring. With the flexibility of being a digital nomad, I now can travel south to warmer climates and enjoy my life to a much higher degree.

In addition, as a startup entrepreneur, you have the freedom to make your own decisions and chart your own course. Combining the flexibility of being your own boss with the flexibility of being a digital nomad removes barriers that stop you from doing the things you love or have always wanted to try. For example, have you ever thought about going on vacation, and then decided against it because you know traveling will just make things more complicated once you get back to the office?

Finally, combining both lifestyles gives you the opportunity to make a significant impact on the world. You have the chance to create a company that solves a problem and makes the world a better place as you connect with people from all over the globe.

Steps to starting a business and becoming a digital nomad

Taking the leap into this world can be scary. Maybe you can dip your toes by doing just one and then later introducing the other. In my case, I entered the startup world first, and stayed local so that I could rely on friends and family for emotional support. I felt that making too many changes all at once would introduce too much risk to me and my family. However, after stabilizing my startup processes, I have started to ease into the digital nomad lifestyle by moving to warmer climates a few months at a time during the colder months.

You may have better luck doing it the opposite way. If you are stuck in an office for most of the week, approach your bosses with the idea of working from home. If you already work from home, why not try and leverage that into a working from a different city, state, or country for a few weeks at a time situation? Baby-stepping your way into full flexibility may take a little bit of time and effort, but it is achievable. Think about which direction you would want to start from and give it a shot.

Ultimately, being a digital nomad and startup entrepreneur gives you the freedom to do what you want, when you want. You have the flexibility to make your own decisions and chart your own course. If you’re looking for an enjoyable and rewarding lifestyle, then being a digital nomad and startup entrepreneur may be perfect for you.

About the Author

Post by: Kyle Platt

Kyle Platt is a serial entrepreneur and engineer. His journey, trials, and learnings can be found at
https://kyleplatt.com.

Company: KylePlatt

Website:
https://kyleplatt.com
Connect with me on Twitter

15 Founders And Investors Share Tips for Raising Startup Capital

Over the past five years, I’ve asked more than 250 founders, investors, and advisors from around the world to share their fundraising stories so emerging founders can learn from their experiences. Whether you’re looking for tips on targeting investors, advice for nailing your pitch, or hacks for running a solid round, I’ve likely talked to a founder who has been in your shoes.

Here are a few of the most valuable pieces of fundraising advice I came across in the past 12 months.

Steer clear of the one-size-fits-all fundraising process

Consider crowdfunding

When
Mike Bell faced a down round (a lower valuation than the previous round) for Miso Robotics’ Series C, he turned to crowdfunding. Miso raised $60 million across its Series C, D, and E rounds from crowdfunding alone, which Bell says is the ideal path for the right startup. “You need to be able to tell the story really simply and really clearly,” he says. “And it needs to resonate with people.”

Find the “super founders”

When seeking early investors for his startup
Captain, Demetrius Gray went after founders who had raised at least $50 million or exited at over $100 million. These experienced entrepreneurs offered Demetrius valuable feedback, and they advocated for him among peers and investors. “With that endorsement, it’s going to continue to open doors,” he says. “If you need an introduction to a VC, it just becomes easier by virtue of having previous founders on your cap table.”

Ask for an introduction

“Enlisting investors to help us think about how to build a company that is fundable and potentially viable—I couldn’t recommend it more,” says
Astrid Atkinson of cleantech startup Camus Energy.

Knowing she was building tech for a notoriously difficult customer segment, Astrid leaned on her network for warm introductions to knowledgeable investors. Then she started conversations about what a viable company would look like, digging into details of the business model and go-to-market strategy. Some of those conversations turned into checks for Camus Energy’s friends and family and Series A rounds.

The more the merrier—invite everyone to your party round

After raising traditional rounds with previous startups, seasoned entrepreneur
Richard White chose to optimize his fundraising by welcoming as many investors as possible. His Zoom app, Fathom, boasts more than 90 investors, including top VC funds like Maven Ventures and Character.vc, as well as the founders and CEOs of Reddit, Twitch, and Cruise.

“I would love to have thousands of small investors,” he says. “It’s the person who writes three checks a year—doesn’t matter the amount—out of their own piggy bank who is going to care much more about your outcome than some big VC where [your funding] is one of 10 checks they’re going to write this quarter.”

Send cold emails

Plenty of fundraising advice focuses on networking—and for good reason. But founder
Michael Bamberger instead found success almost entirely through cold outreach, raising $7 million for software startup Tetra Insights. When warm intros weren’t working, he doubled down on research to target the best-fit investors, then cold-emailed his first batch of five funds, one of which became his lead investor. “When I changed my criteria to finding people who were a fit,” he says, “the process was really quick.”

Provide value and build relationships

Scott Kitun, host of the
Technori podcast and co-founder of bespoke song platform Songfinch, is an expert at playing the long game. He leveraged the relationships he forged running a valuable podcast to raise the first $1 million for Technori in 2018 and to fill a full slate of pitch meetings for Songfinch’s Series A. As he considered an exit for Technori, he built a lucrative newsletter and readership—an ideal fit for acquiring company KingsCrowd.

He advises founders to work toward creating value, even before launching a startup: “I would start focusing my attention on building one single asset, [one] you know your [potential] acquirers desperately need.”

Bottom line: Not every startup is destined for the traditional fundraising process. Know what your company needs and don’t hesitate to go after it.

Level up your pitch meetings

Let investors know what to expect

Frame your meeting as you go, says serial entrepreneur
Iddo Tal, whose live online course Raise the Round teaches investors his step-by-step method for fundraising success. Telling investors what they can expect from the meeting upfront—one of the steps in his seven-step method for meetings that close deals—demonstrates your organization and preparation, and the effect on investors is immediate.

“I see their shoulders relax,” he says. “They know they have five minutes that they need to be quiet, and after … [it’s] their show to ask questions.”

Give investors a chance to breathe

Demetrius Gray of Captain also found success in acknowledging the taxing schedule of back-to-back pitches that investors often face. He uses this quick script to provide everyone a moment to pause before returning focus to the pitch: “Hey, I understand that you’ve had a busy day. I can’t imagine how many meetings you’ve had so far. I’ll give you 30 seconds to just take a breath. And then I’ll start.”

Stay on task

Investors’ packed schedules often mean founders have very narrow windows of opportunity in which to communicate their messages.
Eitan Reisel, founder of gaming fund vgames, advises keeping your pitch deck short and sweet. “In two seconds, I need to understand what you’re about,” he says. “Tell the story with no more than eight slides: who you are as founders, what you’re building and what the vision is.”

Eva Dobrzanska of startup consulting firm True Altitude echoes this advice, pointing out that a pitch deck is not a sales deck. She advises against going into great detail about products or tech in your pitch deck. “I want to know what the product is, but then show me the results,” she says. “Show me the traction. Show me your go-to-market. Show me where the people interested in that product are.”

Bottom line: Run a kickass meeting by setting up expectations and maintaining a laser focus on what’s most important to investors.

Identify your champions

Employees

Your startup’s success is a function of how good your team is, says
Biju Ashokan, founder of the Radius Agent platform for real estate agents. When it comes to hiring, he looks for people who have previously worked on a successful project—and it doesn’t necessarily need to be at a startup. “If they’ve seen growth and witnessed growth, they know what works and what doesn’t work,” he says. “Ask them really challenging questions. Make it look like your company is going to be a lot of hard work and see how they react to those questions.”

Partners

For
Kindred cofounders Justine Palefsky and Tas Amina, a significant part of laying the groundwork for their home-swapping membership platform was engaging in serious “founder dating” by diving into difficult conversations upfront and understanding what each founder brings to the table. “Over time, that’s resulted in us seeing around a lot of corners,” Tas says. “The amount of trust that we have in each other allows us to split problems and run with them.”

Don’t try to go it alone. The startup journey is not an easy one, so finding the right partners to walk alongside you can make all the difference. “You have to play whatever cards you get dealt. But whenever possible, find people to join up with,” says Fathom’s Richard White. “That’s sometimes the hardest thing to do. I struggled for a long time with being the lone wolf in the woods, and you can’t really get as much done that way.”

Investors

Find the “true believers” in your network. Strong connections with investors can give you a huge head start, whether you’re raising capital for your startup or raising your own VC fund. But, as
John Zeratsky discovered when looking for limited partners for his fund Character.vc, even the best connections must understand the value of the business model before they’ll write a check. “We had to understand the landscape of limited partners who invest in venture and figure out who was looking for this kind of exposure, versus the ones just taking a meeting because we know them,” John says.

Bottom line: Surround yourself with people who believe in your vision and will help elevate your company to success.

A strong foundation makes for successful fundraising

From key hires to finances to detailed documentation,
Mountside Ventures founder Jonathan Hollis recommends a long checklist for founders preparing to fundraise. Near the top of that list? A robust financial model that includes thoughtful growth projections for multiple future scenarios, which is a critical element in addressing investors’ potential concerns.

“As an investor, I can [look at the assumptions and see] what happens if my growth doesn’t double year-on-year,” he says. Prospective investors can also forecast “what happens if it takes six months instead of three months for my new sales hires to [become] productive and bring in new customers, what happens if my customer numbers fall.”

If a strategy is good for fundraising, it’s good for building a great company, says
Jason Yeh of Adamant Ventures. The experienced entrepreneur and investor creates content to support and educate founders about their most difficult challenges, including fundraising.

He says founders should stop thinking of fundraising preparation as separate from growing their companies: “I believe the best fundraising is demonstrating that you are a great company and that you’re worth betting on, and then doing everything you can to have investors discover that.”

Make sure your hard work is reflected in your outreach. For fund manager
Paige Finn Doherty of Behind Genius Ventures, a well-positioned cold email can help a startup stand out. That’s especially important when only 0.5 to 1% of those that contact her fund get a check. “Get really clear [about]that problem,” she says. “Why are you uniquely positioned to solve it? What steps have you taken to validate that the problem is a really large one, and that people are willing to pay?”

Bottom line: Invest time and effort in building a strong startup—the return will be worthwhile.

The CPRA Compliance Checklist Every Business Should Follow in 2023


By Adil Advani

If you run a business, it’s essential to be aware of and comply with all relevant regulations. One such regulation is the California Privacy Rights Act (
CPRA) which was approved by California voters in November 2020 and went into effect on January 1, 2023. The CPRA builds on the California Consumer Privacy Act (CCPA), which became law in 2018, and provides additional rights for California consumers regarding the collection of their personal information and how it is collected, used, and shared by businesses.

Understanding the CPRA

The CPRA applies to companies that do business in California and meet certain criteria, including having gross annual revenues over $25 million, collecting personal information from more than 100,000 consumers or households, or deriving 50% or more of their annual revenues from selling consumers’ personal information.

Personal information is defined as any information that relates to, or could reasonably be linked to, a particular consumer or household. This includes names, addresses, email addresses, IP addresses, and more sensitive information like biometric data and personal financial information.

Some of the fundamental rights that the CPRA gives to California consumers include:

  • The right to know what personal information a business has collected about them
  • The right to request that a business delete the consumer’s personal information
  • The right to opt-out of the sale of their personal information
  • The right to opt-out of automated conclusions, such as profiling for targeted behavioral advertising
  • The right to know how automated decision technologies work and their likely outcomes
  • The right to correction in the event the personal information is incorrect
  • The right to limit the use of a consumer’s sensitive personal information
  • The right to data portability where an organization share data with other entities
  • The right to notify minors if the business intends to sell or share their personal data

Ensuring your business is compliant

1. Make a plan

It’s essential to have a plan in place for how your business will handle requests from California consumers, including who will be responsible for responding to them and how long it will take to respond. The CPRA mandates that these requests must be addressed within ten days and processed within 45 days.

2. Review and update your privacy policies and notices

The CPRA requires businesses to provide clear and conspicuous notice to consumers about their rights under the law, as well as information about the personal information the business collects and how it is used. This means taking a close look at the personal information that your business collects, how it is collected, and how it is used and shared. You should also review any contracts or agreements with third parties involving the collection, use, or sharing of personal information. Ensure your privacy policies and notices are up-to-date and compliant with the requirements of the CPRA.

3. Designate a data controller

Designate a contact person or team to handle CPRA-related requests from consumers. This could be a privacy officer or a
customer service team with the necessary training and resources to handle these requests.

4. Train staff

Train your employees on the CPRA and its requirements. This will help ensure that everyone in your organization is aware of the new law and knows how to handle CPRA-related requests from consumers.

5. Introduce privacy and security measures

Implement procedures for verifying the identity of consumers who make CPRA-related requests. This is important to protect the privacy of consumers and prevent fraud. Additionally, keep thorough records of all CPRA-related requests and how they were handled. This will help you demonstrate compliance with the law and provide evidence in the event of a dispute or investigation.

Consequences for non-compliance

Keep in mind that there can be financial consequences if a business is not complying with CPRA’s requirements. The severity of the offenses determines the penalties for violations, where each infraction carries a $2,000 fine, negligence-based errors are subject to a $2,500 fine per offense, and intentional disregard of the law carries a $7,500 fine per offense.

About the Author

Post by: Adil Advani

Adil Advani is a digital marketing strategist at
Securiti.ai, a company that specializes in AI and machine learning based security solutions. He has an extensive background in business development, marketing, and technology consulting.

Company:
Securiti

Website:
https://securiti.ai

Connect with me on
Twitter and LinkedIn.