Silicon Valley layoffs as a hiring opportunity for IT developers/city economic development elsewhere
The Philadelphia Inquirer has an article, "Philly employers are desperately seeking tech workers even as Silicon Valley giants are laying off thousands," making the point that despite the massive layoffs at software technology firms in California and Washington, there remains plenty of demand for developers at firms in places like Philly. From the article:
Locally, “tech jobs” have generally been safe from cuts, he explained, because they tend to be focused on maintenance or development of current products. In that way, Philadelphia is different from Silicon Valley, where many technologists are doing research and development and other speculative work, Wink said, which might get de-emphasized in a recession.
... The Chamber of Commerce for Greater Philadelphia is working on a campaign to attract and retain tech talent in the city. A shortage of tech talent exists in most places, said Sarah Steltz, the chamber’s vice president of economic competitiveness, and Philadelphia wants to welcome displaced tech workers who may have been laid off.
“Philadelphia has not had the same profile of being a tech ecosystem” as some other cities, Steltz said. But local companies now see “a unique opportunity to try to build the concentration of tech talent we have here in our region.” ...
Multiplier effect
A recent report from Technical.ly titled “A Way Forward: What’s really holding back diversity in tech?” explained that while Greater Philadelphia’s tech ecosystem is relatively small, employing just 3.7% of area workers, it is important because each tech job created supports 4.4 other local jobs. That effect is lost, however, if the employees don’t spend any of their time in the region where their employer is based, Wink said.
Sure they won't make quite as much, but the cost of living is likely significantly less and there can be other quality of life improvements as well.
This could have positive impact on local economic development in the same way that Pfizer's dumping of a major research facility in Ann Arbor, Michigan led to the strengthening of the biotechnology business sector there, with almost as many employed as before, but spread across many more companies, and in a manner where more steps of the value chain remain in Ann Arbor.
-- "How the closure of a Pfizer research center in Ann Arbor, Michigan led to the development of a biotech sector there ," 2021
-- " AI and agglomeration/cluster development ," 2021
Labels: agglomeration economies, change-innovation-transformation, economic development, inf, innovation districts/technology sector, knowledge management, urban economics
6 Comments:
https://m.washingtontimes.com/news/2023/feb/3/nsa-wooing-thousands-laid-big-tech-workers-spy-age/
https://asia.nikkei.com/Spotlight/Datawatch/Mass-layoffs-at-U.S.-tech-giants-help-startups-secure-IT-talent
https://www.wsj.com/articles/washington-d-c-has-more-tech-job-openings-than-silicon-valley-11675772084
Relatedly, non tech companies that have opened hubs in "technology clusters" far from their HQ may be consolidating.
"Walmart to Close Three Tech Hubs, Tells Tech Staff to Return to Offices"
2/13/2023
Retail giant is closing offices in Austin, Portland and Carlsbad and telling hundreds of staff they must relocate to keep their jobs
https://www.wsj.com/articles/walmart-to-close-three-tech-hubs-tells-tech-staff-to-return-to-offices-3fb131e4
Where are all those tech workers going? A Silicon Valley exodus is shaking up the landscape.
https://www.washingtonpost.com/technology/2023/04/12/silicon-valley-bay-area-tech/
Silicon Valley still ranked first last year in terms of venture-capital investments and the number of deals, according to data from PitchBook. But funding for companies in Miami have nearly quadrupled in the last three years, totaling $5.39 billion in 2022, while deal volume jumped 81%. Austin venture capital investments rose 77% to $4.95 billion with the number of deals jumping 23%. New York, Seattle, Philadelphia, Chicago, Denver and Houston also saw relatively large increases in investment and deals, data shows.
These regions still pale in comparison to Silicon Valley, which in 2022 drew $74.9 billion in investments across 3,206 deals. That’s about $45.36 billion and 1,058 deals more than New York, the second highest region for VC fundraising. The Silicon Valley region was also the home of 86% of start-ups, up from 53% last year, funded by famed start-up accelerator Y Combinator.
DC surpasses San Francisco for AI jobs, driving lobbying and data center growth
https://wtop.com/business-finance/2024/03/dc-surpasses-sf-for-ai-jobs-driving-lobbying-and-data-center-growth
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