The 7 hour time winner

It's 6am in Chiang Mai. The air is still cool, the coffee is strong, and the UK is fast asleep. I have seven hours of pure, uninterrupted work ahead of me.
No emails. No WhatsApp pings. No 'quick questions'. Just me, a laptop, and the best working hours of my life.
I've been doing this for twelve years now. Working whilst travelling. And in all that time, the single biggest productivity advantage I've found — bigger than any app, any system, any morning routine — is the time difference.
The maths of it
When I'm in Southeast Asia, I'm typically six or seven hours ahead of the UK. So when my alarm goes off at 5.30am, it's 10.30pm back home. Nobody is emailing me. Nobody is expecting a reply. The WhatsApp groups have gone quiet.
The world, as far as my clients are concerned, is sleeping.
By the time someone in Manchester picks up their phone at 8am, I've already done four hours of focused, deep work. I've written content, reviewed proposals, planned campaigns, and had two cups of coffee. I'm ready for the day. They're just starting theirs.
What those seven hours actually feel like
I want to be honest about this — the first hour can be slow. Especially if I've been out the night before. But once you're in it, those early hours have a quality to them that I've never been able to replicate during a standard UK working day.
There's no cognitive load from other people's urgency. Nobody needs something. Nothing has gone wrong yet. It's just you and the work.
And when that work is the kind of thinking work that actually moves a business forward — strategy, content, planning — that uninterrupted space is worth more than almost anything else I can think of.
The flip side
Yes, by early-afternoon local time, the UK is fully awake and expecting things. Client calls, questions, the usual flow of a working day. That's fine. I handle those in what feels like my early afternoon, even though it's breakfast time back home.
But by 5pm local time — 10am in the UK — I'm done. And I've done more in that day than I ever managed sitting in an office in Southport wondering what to have for lunch.
I've spent twenty years in digital marketing and twelve of them working this way. People sometimes ask me what my secret is. The honest answer? I woke up earlier than everyone else, in a timezone where that meant something.
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