I work remotely as IT support for my old company back home still. We got here because my partner got her TEFL certification and teaches English for Apollo here in Hanoi. It's a 120-hr cert that - with any college degree - will definitely get you a job and a work permit in Vietnam. I'm here as her dependent. We were also able to bring our two cats over with minimal-ish hassle.
EDIT: A little more info, I had to switch from a full-time employee to a contracted employee for tax purposes. I also registered my own business to make it easier for them from a contract and invoicing perspective which cost me about 80 dollars. I worked out going from 40 hours a week to 20 hours a week, so I work 6p-10p local time here which is currently 7am-11am EST (though DST will mess with this when we get there).
I had another friend who was out here (in Thailand and Indonesia) for a while who worked in phone support/phone sales from out here. The hours were bad (he worked nights to align with daytime hours in the US), but he was able to extend his stay for quite some time out here. He and his partner never secured a 1 or two year permit anywhere though, so they stayed moving back and forth a bit on the longer-term tourist visas that both of those countries allowed.
I work remotely as IT support for my old company back home still. We got here because my partner got her TEFL certification and teaches English for Apollo here in Hanoi. It's a 120-hr cert that - with any college degree - will definitely get you a job and a work permit in Vietnam. I'm here as her dependent. We were also able to bring our two cats over with minimal-ish hassle.
EDIT: A little more info, I had to switch from a full-time employee to a contracted employee for tax purposes. I also registered my own business to make it easier for them from a contract and invoicing perspective which cost me about 80 dollars. I worked out going from 40 hours a week to 20 hours a week, so I work 6p-10p local time here which is currently 7am-11am EST (though DST will mess with this when we get there).
I had another friend who was out here (in Thailand and Indonesia) for a while who worked in phone support/phone sales from out here. The hours were bad (he worked nights to align with daytime hours in the US), but he was able to extend his stay for quite some time out here. He and his partner never secured a 1 or two year permit anywhere though, so they stayed moving back and forth a bit on the longer-term tourist visas that both of those countries allowed.
Thanks for the info, it certainly sounds doable. Getting out of the states really is my top priority these days.