ANYONE OUT THERE WANT TO DISAGREE?
You’ve got a ground-breaking idea, a solid business plan,
encouragement from friends and family, and enough cash to live on for three
months. Now what do you do? You move to Silicon Valley as fast as you possibly
can. Why?
1. Intellectual
capital
You need access to outstanding human capital who can – like
you – wear several “hats” at one time, right?
Valley
impact. The San Francisco Bay Area
population is near the top in the nation for overall education level and several
outstanding universities, including the
of
and the
Francisco
interns. The area’s risk-taking ethos lures talented immigrants who often
chance everything to come to the
becoming millionaires, having sold their companies to the Google’s and Cisco’s
of the world. In 2006, The New York Times
wrote, “
is responsible more than any other for creating the network technology that
supposedly renders geography irrelevant.”
2. Resources within
reach
There is no region with more easily accessible and
knowledgeable support for entrepreneurs than the Bay Area. Financing is
omnipresent, and I’m not just referring to the large venture capitalists on
Angel investors can be found milling around Peets Coffee or grabbing lunch in
in
These sources of wealth and the number of wealthy individuals are growing steadily
over time, despite the economic downturn. What’s more, the Bay Area ecosystem
includes head hunters, real estate agents, accountants, and lawyers who
understand an entrepreneur’s needs and challenges. There are even non-profit
groups that help accelerate new businesses.
3. Free networking
On any day of the week you can find a group of professionals
in your industry sharing ideas, talking about best practices, listening to an
expert speaker, and collaborating. For example, digital media executives like me
attend events by San Francisco Bay Area
Interactive Group (SF BIG), Women 2.0,
SF
New Tech Meetup, Dealmaker Media,
and dozens more. Even if you’re looking for other Ruby on Rails engineers who
live in
and share your love of Guitar Hero, I bet you can find this group.
4. New media adoption
Two-thirds of San Fransciso’s population have HDTV; half
know how to twitter; and one third maintain a blog. Admittedly, I just made up
these statistics, but seriously – they can’t be too far off. The Bay Area, as a
region, is far ahead of the rest of the country in broadband adoption at 76
percent, versus 47 percent of the total
to the Pew Internet & American Life Project. Frustrated that there are only
24 hours in a day, Bay Area locals are magnets to emerging platforms that make
communication faster, easier and more efficient. If you want to test your new
technology product’s adoption rate, just head to
This “Facebook generation” is proof that social media is connecting the world
and globalizing media consumption.
As one blogger
new to San Francisco put it: “The Valley itself is Web 2.0 incarnate: a
villains burst out of the web page into full color, three-dimensional reality.
And for the newbie San Franciscan, there’s a novelty to Twittering as you
wander past the Twitter offices; pulling up Digg on your iPhone as you cruise
by Digger HQ. Emails, once from faceless industry moguls, take on a human
voice. Where else can you almost get run over by a horn-tooting UStream
founder, or drop by coffee shops where half the clientele not only know what
FriendFeed is, but actually use it?”
5. Respect
Similar to how politicians are considered “celebrities” in
D.C., in the Bay Area it’s entrepreneurs who are respected, encouraged, and put
on a pedestal. To tolerate the unknown and these risk-takers aren’t just smart,
they’re truly dynamic and brilliant. Take a look at who’s profiled in leading
business publications – the founders of Salesforce, BlueLithium, Youtube, etc.
No longer are serial entrepreneurs considered eccentric.
Nowadays, it’s the underdogs who are esteemed and sought
after. East coast based traditional media companies have been begging and acquiring
digital media and publishing startups right and left, thereby transferring the position
of power out west. According to a BDO Siedman study released in February, CFOs
of companies based in Silicon Valley were more optimistic than CFOs in other
regions, as fifty-nine percent of CFOs believe that merger and acquisition
activity in the tech sector will pick up, compared to only thirty-six percent
of companies not located in
6. Escapes
Just when you think you’ve had too many late nights coding and
not enough fresh air, you can easily hop in the car and venture to dozens of
gorgeous Bay Area scenic spots that will get your legs and lungs pumping. You
can hike in Marin, ski in Tahoe, bike over the Golden Gate bridge, taste wine
in
and stunning beauty of these options aren’t offered in the likes of