Episode 28 | Andrew Williams: Remote Tribe, Digital Nomads, and the Shifting Landscape of Global Work

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Published: November 26, 2025

We sat down with Romanian creator and long-time nomad Andrew Williams, the founder of Remote Tribe. The plan was simple: have a focused conversation about his platform and the resources he provides for remote workers. But, as often happens when nomads get together, the conversation expanded into a wider and more personal exploration of identity, community, and the ever-evolving digital nomad lifestyle.

Recorded in Bangkok with Palle and Christoph sharing one microphone, this episode blends stories, definitions, observations, and a few unexpected detours. It became an honest look at what it means to live and work globally in 2025.

Who Is Andrew Williams and What Is Remote Tribe

Andrew founded Remote Tribe about five years ago, in the middle of the pandemic, when millions of people suddenly found themselves working from home, travelling more flexibly, or taking their first steps into remote work. As someone who had already spent years as a nomad and remote worker, he began creating guides, community insights, and practical advice to help others understand the lifestyle.

Remote Tribe started as a personal project and grew into an active blog, a social media community, and a platform that highlights networking opportunities, nomad events, and practical strategies for people exploring a location-independent life.

The Digital Nomad Definition That Actually Makes Sense

In the episode we touch on a topic that keeps showing up in discussions: What exactly is a digital nomad?
Academic researchers have settled on a definition that focuses on mobility and work, not just remote flexibility. By this definition, a digital nomad is someone who travels to at least three countries a year, stays for extended periods, and works from those locations. Importantly, this does not include short family visits.

Using this standard, the digital nomad population is far smaller than most media headlines suggest. It is likely fewer than 100,000 people worldwide.

Why Most People Love the Idea of Nomad Life But Do Not Actually Choose It

There is a striking moment in the episode where Palle shares a story from a talk he gave in Denmark. He asked a room of 200 people whether they believed he was living the dream lifestyle. Every hand went up. But when asked whether they would personally choose to live full-time as digital nomads if all obstacles were removed, only two hands remained.

This is a theme Andrew recognises as well. Many people are curious, inspired, and even a little envious, but only a tiny percentage genuinely want the long-term uncertainty and freedom that comes with a fully nomadic life.

How the Community Is Changing and Why Newcomers Keep Coming

Another key part of the conversation is how fast the nomad community regenerates. Christoph shares recent experiences from events in Vietnam and Athens, where around 80 percent of attendees were first-timers at any nomad gathering. Even Nomad Summit often sees about half its audience being newcomers.

This constant rotation keeps the scene lively and energetic, but it also means that the community is not defined solely by long-term nomads. Instead, it includes new remote workers, adventure seekers, career changers, and people experimenting with location independence for a limited period.

From Johnny FD to New Nomad Generations

We also touch on the evolution of well-known nomad figures. Johnny FD, once considered one of the early driving forces behind the global nomad movement, is now in a very different chapter of life. Christoph reflects on how Johnny was one of the influences that first took him to Chiang Mai and mentions a recent interview he did with him in Kyiv.
It is an example of something that happens often in this lifestyle: even the most committed nomads shift, settle, evolve, or reinvent themselves over time.

Why Some People Keep Travelling and Others Stop

Palle opens up about living almost ten years on the road and still feeling absolutely at home in this lifestyle. Having no small children or obligations makes long-term travel easier, but he also emphasizes that for many people nomadism is a phase. For some it is a way to reset life, gain clarity, or move through personal change. For others it is a chance to briefly explore another way of living before returning to a home base.

This diversity in motivations is part of what makes the digital nomad world so fascinating and hard to define.

Why You Should Listen to This Episode

This conversation is a great listen for anyone who wants more than the surface-level Instagram version of nomad life. It dives into the psychology behind mobility, the realities of building community, and the patterns we see at events around the world. Andrew’s journey also highlights how remote workers and digital nomads often overlap, but are not always the same group.

Whether you are considering your first workation or already living long-term on the road, this episode offers clarity, nuance, and a refreshing level of honesty.

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