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Why Scheduling International Meetings Is Hard

When your team spans New York, London, and Seoul, finding a single meeting time that works for everyone feels impossible. A 9 AM call in New York is 2 PM in London and 10 PM in Seoul — someone always ends up joining at an inconvenient hour.

The good news is that with a reliable process and the right tools, you can minimize friction and find workable windows consistently.

Step 1: List All Participants and Their Time Zones

Before opening a calendar, write down every participant's city and UTC offset. Remember that UTC offsets change during daylight saving time (DST), so always check the current offset, not just the standard one.

  • New York: UTC-5 (EST) / UTC-4 (EDT)
  • London: UTC+0 (GMT) / UTC+1 (BST)
  • Seoul: UTC+9 (KST, no DST)
  • Sydney: UTC+10 (AEST) / UTC+11 (AEDT)

Step 2: Map Each Time Zone's Business Hours

Shade in the 9 AM–6 PM window for each participant on a shared timeline. Where those windows overlap — even partially — is your meeting opportunity zone.

For New York + London + Seoul, the only realistic overlap is early morning New York time (9–10 AM EST = 2–3 PM GMT = 11 PM–midnight KST). Seoul participants will always be outside standard hours in this trio.

Step 3: Use a Time Zone Overlap Tool

Manual math leads to mistakes. Use a timezone overlap finder to visualize the grid instantly. TimeFYI's world clock view lets you pin multiple cities and scan across hours at a glance.

Step 4: Rotate the Burden

If no perfect window exists, rotate the inconvenient slot. Week one, Seoul joins at 10 PM. Week two, New York joins at 7 AM. This fairness principle builds team goodwill over time.

Step 5: Send Calendar Invites with Explicit Time Zones

Always include the time in at least two formats in your invite: the sender's local time and UTC. Example: "3:00 PM KST / 06:00 UTC". This prevents the single most common scheduling mistake — DST transitions that silently shift meeting times by one hour.

Common Mistakes to Avoid

  • Forgetting DST transitions (US switches in March, Europe in late March, some countries never)
  • Assuming "morning" means the same urgency level everywhere
  • Not accounting for lunch hours and local customs
  • Booking recurring meetings without reviewing DST impact twice a year

Seoul–San Francisco overlap: 9–10 AM KST (6–7 PM PST prior day). Seoul–London overlap: 5–6 PM KST (9–10 AM BST). These are tight windows — plan agendas in advance to make every minute count.

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