Should You Really Move Your Startup to San Francisco?

san-francisco

As a tech entrepreneur, one of my goals/dreams is to move to the San Francisco Bay Area, and I have both practical and emotional reasons to feel that way.

On the emotional side, it just seems awesome to live at the heart of Silicon Valley, where most of the tech stuff we use daily was invented and built. It’s the land of Bill Hewlett, Dave Packard, Gordon Moore, Steve Jobs!

On the practical side, the abundance of high-tech companies and startups, software engineers, entrepreneurs, angel investors, venture funds and tech-related events makes it the best place in the world to start and build a tech company. Or does it?

A couple of days ago I was listening to an interview Tim Ferriss did with Matt Mullenweg, the man behind WordPress and its parent company, Automattic. Matt has a point of view that contradicts the “you gotta be in San Francisco” logic. His own words (32 minutes into the interview):

When Automattic started it was literally bootstrapped. We had no money, and I thought why would I move all these people to the most expensive place in America. Most investors said that when we raised money we can finally move everyone there, but Donna in Ireland was getting ready to start a family. People are in different places for different reasons.

It’s true that the Bay Area has some amazing talent […] but you also have talented people around the world who don’t want to live here. You also have some of the largest and most successful companies in the world, market caps of over trillions of dollars combined, competing for the same 20 or 30 thousand engineers. When you add up Cisco, Oracle, Apple, Google, LinkedIn, Facebook, Twitter, plus all the startups, they are all fishing on this same pond.

He does have a point. In fact he later told in the interview that although Automattic’s headquarter is in San Francisco, only 20 or so people work there. The rest of his 300 employees are scattered all around the world.

I still think that being in the Bay Area puts you in a unique and favorable position. In fact Matt was born in Houston, Texas, and he decided to move to San Francisco. Had he not moved there I am not sure if he would have had such an early contact with blogging, which gave him the idea to start the WordPress project.

That being said, it seems that it’s not not necessary, perhaps not even desirable, to have your whole team working there, as Automattic attests.

What do you think?

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Comments

  1. richard1941 says

    Silicon Valley is NOT “San Francisco”. I lived half of my professional life in Sunnyvale, Mountain View, and San Jose. During that time, I came to dislike San Francisco so much that I would, when traveling north, go around it through the east bay. Part of the problem is that businesses are terrified of the large homeless population in San Francisco that you don’t find in Silicon Valley.

    As far as Brasil goes, a friend of mine from Santa Cruz, Bolivia had a Brazilian girlfriend. He was so much in love with her, and dreamed that he would get married and bring her to San Jose. Until he got the letter…. she got married to someone else.

    Finally, your fast exponential function may be capable of further speedup. That is because it performs most poorly when there are long strings of 1’s in the binary expansion of the exponent. To get the idea, take a close look at integer multiplication by by Booth’s algorithm. I think that a variation of that idea could further improve what you already have without excess complication. Alas, what I seek is very fast and accurate exponential for real number; the rapidly converging power series is hard to beat.

    And, if you can, consider attending HHC 2016 in Fort Collins Colorado this year. We have plenty of Europeans come every year, why not you? It is mostly about HP handheld computers and is mostly organized by Richard Nelson and Joseph Horn (holyjoe).

    . . . Richard

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