From Dubai to Thailand: How I Landed a Remote Role at a South African Company
The Next Chapter When I left the waiter job and returned to engineering, I knew I wanted something different. Not just a different job, but a different way of working. The kind where your location does not limit the problems you can solve. I found that in Thailand, working for a South African company called Exonic. Why Bangkok After Dubai, I wanted somewhere with a lower cost of living where I could build runway while working remotely. Bangkok checks that box. The city is a hub for remote engineers. The internet is fast. The infrastructure works. The street food is better than any restaurant I have ever worked in. I arrived with a laptop and a clear goal: find a remote role where I could work on meaningful projects without being tied to a physical office. Landing the Role at Exonic Exonic is a technology consulting company based in South Africa. They serve clients across multiple industries and geographies. When I found the opening, it matched exactly what I was looking for: full time remote, exposure to diverse projects, and the chance to work across the full stack. The interview process was practical. System design discussions, technical assessments focused on AWS and modern frontend frameworks, and conversations about how I approach end to end delivery. I got the offer and accepted it immediately. As a full time remote employee, I was embedded in Exonic's engineering team. My day to day involved building cloud native solutions for their clients, designing architectures on AWS, and shipping production systems across the entire stack. The team was distributed, and the work required communicating clearly across time zones. Three Continents Through One Company Exonic's client base spans the globe. Over my time there, I built production systems touching three different continents. One project was Scoring AI , a voice enabled match scoring application for sports courts. Players start a match, share a link, and control the scoreboard using voice commands. I worked on th