Residency

  • South Korea

Citizenship

  • United States of America

Languages

  • English

  • Korean

Industry

  • IT

About me

I’m Ian Wagner, originally from the east coast of the US and now based in Seoul, South Korea. I’ve been enamored with all things digital since I first saw my uncle’s wristwatch. As a teenager, I started my first business building custom desktop computers, and during university I started a business with some friends developing apps for the newly-released iPhone. I’ve been building startups remotely ever since; long before “WFH” entered the vernacular!

Steeped in American startup culture, I was no stranger to innovation, but I didn’t usually expect it to come from government. When I heard about e-⁠Residency though, I didn’t see a service or program; I saw a government trying to innovate. I signed up almost immediately, before even knowing what I would do with it. Something was happening, and I wanted to be part of it. I quickly realized that, while the primary use case was setting up a company, e-⁠Residency was a magnet for likeminded entrepreneurs who thought on a global scale and had values that matched my own.

Many of my close friends and business partners now come from the e-⁠Residency community. In addition to being involved with multiple businesses, I’m also a founding member of EERICA: an MTÜ (Estonian non-profit association) that helps e-⁠Resident entrepreneurs find each other and connect with Estonia. If this message resonates with you, join us!

Outside of “work” (which is mostly really fun!), I enjoy long walks in the park, listening to deep house and techno, building new LEGO worlds with my daughter, and learning languages (both human and computer).

"E-Residency is a huge part of my identity. Since becoming an e-resident of Estonia in 2015, I've met hundreds of you, and so far, I have yet to meet an e-resident whom I couldn’t become friends with. I'm honored to be recognized as a Community Leader, and I believe highlighting e-residents who are approachable and have been 'around the block' will make our great community even better."

My journey

With e-⁠Residency, you can easily register an EU business online without relocating and free from bureaucracy: great for remote entrepreneurs! 


2015
I became an e-⁠resident
I became an e-Resident in 2015. I heard about it from my good friend Luke. I immediately realized that Estonia was trying to flip the usual government business model on its head and would "compete" for these new "e-Residents." I was not used to seeing such progressive thinking come out of any government, so I did some more research and realized that it extended to a vibrant startup ecosystem as well. At that point, I just had to apply, even though I didn't have any immediate "practical" need for it!

2017
I registered my first company as an e-⁠resident
I registered my first Estonian company in 2017. I had been preparing to leave the US for some time (to get married and move to Korea), and pretty quickly realized that e-⁠Residency could have a practical value here. Of course, I could have kept on using a US company, but Estonia had my attention since they were going out of their way to make things easy for location-independent entrepreneurs. I had a consultation with the folks at 1Office during Latitude59 to answer a rather long list of questions I had given my situation. Everything checked out, and a few months later, Funktional OÜ was registered.

Service providers I have worked with throughout my journey

Please  to watch this video.

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