Join people who work on their own terms
Wild Community

Join people who work on their own terms

Every workation brings together dozens of people who decided not to play by someone else's rules. Entrepreneurs, developers, designers, marketers. People with projects, ambitions, and a desire to live differently. In a week at sea you will not just meet people — you will find those who truly get it. People you can be honest with, work alongside, and come back to.
Why it works

What makes this community different

Six reasons why connections made on a workation tend to last
No random people
No random people. You do not end up on a workation by accident. It is not a conference you attend for work, and not a tour group assembled around a discount. Everyone made their own decision to come — paid for it, set aside a week, packed their bags. That already says a lot about a person. The level of conversation here is higher from the very first evening.
Conversations without small talk
Conversations without small talk. On a yacht, there is nowhere to hide and no one to perform for. After a day or two, the polite surface fades — and real conversations begin. About what actually works in business. About failures you would never post on LinkedIn. About why you are doing any of this in the first place. These are the conversations that change something.
Unexpected synergy
Unexpected synergy. A developer stuck on product positioning ends up at the same table as a marketer. A designer who needs a technical co-founder sits next to an engineer. A founder in month three of a hard pivot meets someone who's been through it twice. These overlaps aren't planned — but they happen on every trip. Because when you put eight people who chose this life into 42 feet of boat, the overlaps are inevitable. In May, a backend engineer and a product marketer met on the Marmaris trip. By September they had shipped their first joint project.
Connections that stay
Connections that stay. After most conferences, business cards sit in your pocket for a week and then disappear. This is different. People you spent a week at sea with are not contacts in your phone — they are people you actually know. You know how they think, what matters to them, what they have been through. These connections turn into working projects, into friendships, into the next trip together.
Help because they want to
Help because they want to. No hidden motives, no implied obligations. If someone on board knows what you need, they will help — just like that. Not because they have to, not because you might be useful to them later. Because it feels good to help someone you see every day and have come to trust. This is how networking is supposed to work — and usually does not.
You are not alone in this choice
You are not alone in this choice. When you work for yourself or in a small team, it is easy to start thinking you are the exception. That most people live and work differently, and you are somehow the odd one out. A workation changes that. Around you are dozens of people who made the same choice. And that feeling — that there are many of you, that this is not a deviation but a normal way to live — stays with you long after you leave.
Feedbacks

Reviews from friends and guests

From people who came to work — and didn't want to leave.

«Gentlemen, that was awesome! One of the best non-vacations of my life. Thank you all!»

Artem Levenkov

Artem Levenkov

Software engineer

«Yes, and I would go as a sailor a couple more times, but I will definitely go, because what I saw, even with the prospect of reduced libations, completely ruined all other possible types of sea recreation.»

Alexander Fomich

Alexander Fomich

Mobile Lead

«It was my first time on a yacht, and I was worried it would be boring or I'd get seasick, but my concerns were completely unfounded. The sea, sun, fresh air, good company, absence of unnecessary people, sounds and events allowed me to reboot and rethink a lot. The sense of freedom that a yacht gives you is incomparable to anything else.»

Nikita Baranovskiy

Nikita Baranovskiy

.NET Architect, Team Leader