I don't usually defend the Valley when articles like this come up, because as a tech employee I like having the ability to work anywhere and the concentration of tech in the valley is counter to that.
That said, the main arguments here are are 1. wages are too high and 2. rent is too high.
Given that both of these are set by the market, this smacks of "nobody goes there anymore, it's too crowded"
Newark is an instructive geography. The ambitious head to New York or San Francisco out of tradition. For the same reason, they avoid Newark. It’s off the map...
That's not why people avoid Newark. Plenty of people are moving to Jersey City and Hoboken which have the same "bridge&tunnel" stigma.
People avoid Newark due to legitimate fear of being robbed, raped or murdered.
Newark is fine if you live in Ironbound. I lived there in Newark for 6 months and it was the best 6 months I had in 26 years living in/around New York City.
Would live there again in a heartbeat.
Artists have moved to Newark. All of those old warehouses were converted to lofts and sold in < 2 years.
Even Jersey City isn't 15 minutes from Manhattan... Last I checked, almost takes an hour (45-60 minutes depending on congestion) just to get the path to take me to WTC.
It must have gotten worse since I left the US. Even from Journal Square it never took me more than 20 minutes to WTC, though train frequency did slow down late at night.
I live in North Newark, its really not as bad as people say as long as you stay away from the west side of town. Much like most cities east of the Mississippi. Also if you take NJ transit in Newark it is exactly 20 minutes from the train station, the Path on the other hand is more like 35 min to 33rd street or 25 min to WTC.
Seems specious to me. SV is a centre for innovation because of two major things: Funding and Talent.
So firstly, it's unlikely that any VC's are going to move out because their personal rents are too high, while there's still the high concentration of talented people in the area. They might branch out to other locations, but personal choices over where to live are usually about far more than just money. So the Funding is unlikely to relocate.
It's possible they might start encouraging businesses to move further afield to increase their survivability, but ultimately a lot of founders will take <$30k salary when starting a company and accept any hardship in order to succeed. So suggesting that corporate finances at startups are suffering because of high rent is also a shaky premise. There may be a few borderline companies that fail "just before" they "would've made it big", but that'll be true at any burn rate.
If anything, investors probably like high rents because it forces higher burn rates and hence encourages startups to generate revenue or flip quickly. Either of which is preferable to a long, drawn out investment with no end in sight.
It's not like Detroit where a combination of cheaper manufacturing elsewhere and a lack of demand for US cars, led to necessary relocation/offshoring/downsizing.
I can't see there ever being a lack of demand for what SV produces. Businesses. Unless people start running out of ideas in and of themselves, I can't see how it'll die any time soon.
I agree on funding, but talent (1) can be found elsewhere (2) is much easier to attract when you're not in Silicon Valley, competing with thousands of other great companies.
Talent is in Silicon Valley only because opportunities, and opportunities are in Silicon Valley only because of funding.
Yes that's perfectly true, but the initial funding frequently requires the talent to go find the money.
Take YC for example; Many people from Europe would love it if YC accepted applications from London or Berlin - and - let them stay there for the duration. But instead if they want to join, they're required to move out to California for a while. Because it's not possible (or at least, easily feasible) for PG to run it remotely, or franchise, or double-up each year, etc...
It's the sheer concentration of talent and capital that gives SV its lead imo. I wouldn't necessarily go there just looking for a job, but I certainly would when looking for funding, even though that would be an international leap for me. Then if the startup fails, there's dozens of others looking for talented people of any skillset in the area, there may not necessarily be so elsewhere. Then after a while, you can go try founding another startup of your own.
The safety net of being able to easily jump to another startup can't be underestimated.
NB: Also note that SV has international reputation that can't be understated either. I can imagine shifting from London to SV for funding, but it's a much harder sell to shift to Austin just because the rent is cheaper. If I'm following the rent rather than the funding/talent, why not move elsewhere within my own country?
ultimately a lot of founders will take <$30k salary when starting a company and accept any hardship in order to succeed. So suggesting that corporate finances at startups are suffering because of high rent is also a shaky premise.
Most of those people have no other options. You don't want to fund people (in general; obviously there are outliers with 150+ IQs and fucked-up careers, I was one and, who knows, may be one in the future) who don't have other options. You want to fund people who could actually get the $250k hedge fund quant jobs. They'll come down to a savings-neutral (with no children) $125k, but not $30k. Not in the Valley.
The people who'll take $30k in the Valley are (a) rich kids with parental sources, and (b) the truly desperate. Founders are not an exception.
If anything, investors probably like high rents because it forces higher burn rates and hence encourages startups to generate revenue or flip quickly.
True, but the real reason VCs want to stay in one area (and keep their companies there) is that the collusion among VCs would be dangerous and possibly legally hazardous if it happened on paper instead of through a mouth-to-mouth social network.
I can't see there ever being a lack of demand for what SV produces. Businesses.
The whole country produces businesses: restaurants, cleaning companies, indie bookstores. Most HNers find those lines of work uninspiring-- and starting one of those is way riskier to one's tech career than working at Google. Oh, and those businesses tend to get crushed by big corporations (see: WalMart) and landlords and changing trends.
So, there's no lack of businesses being generated in the US. What there is a lack of is inspiring and truly innovative businesses, but SV is no longer producing inspiring companies, so what use is it?
> in general; obviously there are outliers with 150+ IQs and fucked-up careers
Is that really the exception? I only know a handful of founders, but none of them had stable careers before they started doing the founder-game. Most of them were working in fits and starts, or were in college but dropped out.
>Most of those people have no other options. You don't want to fund people (in general; obviously there are outliers with 150+ IQs and fucked-up careers, I was one and, who knows, may be one in the future) who don't have other options.
I don't disagree. The problem is that the incapable and highly capable (who both fail in typical, micromanaged, closed-allocation type environments) get lumped together and there are fewer of the latter. The profiling (see: job-hopper stigma) really hurts those of us who've had a lot of failures or mistakes but have good reasons.
If you really need A+ players (not just the A- and B+ players who become executives) this costs you. But VC-istan is just another version of the corporate ladder and most of these VC-funded startups don't need outlier excellence, so a person like me might not be worth the trouble.
VC culture is about commoditizing founders and companies (and especially engineers) and it has worked at creating a world in which A+ players (the people who originally built SV because they didn't fit anywhere else) aren't really needed.
Sure, but one result of that is that in SV, networking is less important. You can email your resume to a recruiter at any funded company, they'll fly you out for an interview, nobody is expected to know anything about you other than what they can discern in an interview. You'll get 5 to 10 thousand dollars in relocation/sign-on bonus. And the salaries are significantly higher than in Tennessee.
Salaries are higher in SV, but you'll have more disposable income in Nashville, and probably a more comfortable home. Also, the local politics and culture are different. As much as it may surprise the people who do like it, some people don't like the way California operates.
Boomer fodder, all the memes are at least a decade or two out of date. The great lakes area is not the rust belt, it rusted and blew away in my grandfathers generation half a century ago. Innovation economy is not CRUD apps with quirky marketing, at least not since '95. The general idea of the article is more or less correct. I checked the byline and its only four hours old although it sounds much more ancient.
I am strongly biased because I don't like articles about this topic, the vultures should stay away. Yeah, you'll all freeze in the snow, so best not come here. Nope we don't have any money or quality of life, I advise staying away, LOL.
Given that immense level of bias my evaluation of the style and memes of the article might be tainted.
> I am strongly biased because I don't like articles about this topic, the vultures should stay away. Yeah, you'll all freeze in the snow, so best not come here. Nope we don't have any money or quality of life, I advise staying away, LOL.
Ah, if only that worked. Austin, Dallas, Seattle, Portland, Nashville, Kansas City...all of their residents have said the same thing and the "vultures" keep on coming. It's the circle of life, my friend.
Are you saying you're using as a primary evaluation tool, the newness of the authors meme references? How about evaluating the ideas from first principles? You might just have inadvertently demonstrated what's generally gone wrong with scenes like SV.
There's a bigger, MUCH bigger, point to be made about geography and finding other creative people than this article, with its glib, provably inaccurate quoting (1) can make.
The big picture is that there are always under-stated, inexpensive places where you can get creative work done which are outside the major, known centers (SV, NYC, LA, etc.). They are tricky to find because they don't have metrics like insane rent, barking realtors, etc. to mark them.
For example, everyone (including me) used to laugh at Kansas City. Then I met a world-traveling DJ who told me KC was one of the hippest places, where the "kids" where the most into the music than anywhere else.
But beware: places that become symbolically cool and ideal attract posers. In contrast, there are people who evaluate tons of metrics to choose where to live and work. I suggest evaluating towns on the quality of their makerspaces as one useful feature. Tech accelerator programs' presence is another signal.
Another town I'm hearing is great to work in is Boulder.
(1) I just googlemapsed Newark to Manhattan (mid-town). It's 17 miles, 30 minutes best case, 45 in 10:00am weekday traffic.
My best guess is that SV has jumped the shark. "Dying" is probably an adjective too far. Microsoft is "dying". Still might have another 40 years of profitability left in it, though, and if that's dying, dying looks pretty good.
SV is not going to be replaced anytime soon. Rather, what's happening is that there are a thousand small places that each will amount to about 1% of SV. In the aggregate, that means that SV will have a smaller piece of the pie. Due to location and network effects, though, I don't think any of that's going to be clear for some time.
California is busy re-engineering its society. Good for them. But hell if I'll work there, and hell if I'd try to launch a startup there. I love the folks in SV and am terribly jealous of all the cool stuff going on. Having said that, it's simply not worth the effort to fool around with all the obstacles in place. And more are on the way. Sure, it's still great and awesome for those that win the SV beauty contest, but not so much for us little fry. That's what "jumping the shark" looks like.
Most of the anti-SV crowd want the VC funding and the same essential culture. They just want to move it to another place in the country. That would be a marginal improvement-- and massively beneficial to me as a 30-year-old who'd be able to get in on the ground level and buy housing-- but it wouldn't fix the underlying problem. It's like a revolution where the people revolting want the same damn system but with themselves on top.
You can't have it both ways. Silicon Valley is defective because of its culture. If you copy the VC feudalism and the California softie NIMBYism somewhere else, that place will become just as broken in a matter of a few years (assuming that copy operation is successful, which it almost certainly won't be).
Not quite. What I want is to be able to easily find a new job on the strength of my skills and aptitude rather than my social connections, without having to move my entire household. Again. I want to be able to work with both younger people and older people, with managers that used to do what I do, even if they weren't as good at it. And I want a 40-hour work week or less.
That isn't exactly a tall order. It is possible to find companies that do treat employees like people with lives outside the office. Larger and more dysfunctional companies apparently like to swallow them whole, digest them, and crap out the useless cost centers. It would be nice to not have to uproot and relocate every time that happens.
Sorry for being a little negative, but "easily"? I think is too much to think that one can find a job that is, well, perfect for their demands, "easily".
I have a job that follows all the requirements you said, but I had to move to a different country for it.
I want it to be easy because it is currently inexplicably difficult outside of a handful of locales. For criteria as simple and sensible as those I described, that is a crying shame, because places beyond that handful are nice places to live, too.
Do you think the existence you described is the norm in the Valley? Or elsewhere? Or nowhere?
I guess I'm cynical, but my sense is that most people bashing the Valley are advocating for making that same VC culture more geographically available. Obviously, there are people like you and me who have more insight into the problem.
No, I don't. I have worked for a few companies that were good, and a few that were bad. I very much prefer the former, but every single one of those jobs were purchased by a bad company and subsequently piped to /dev/screw-you-buddy .
If I were in SV, I could probably jump right into another similar job without too much disruption. But I wasn't. Two of the three times, I had to move to a different state of the US to even come close to what I had before. And where I am now is mired in endemic mismanagement thanks to all the military-industrial complex money flowing through the streets. Since companies don't seem to have any inkling of loyalty to employees any more, I need to find my job security in the ability to quickly find a new and similar job on short notice. That is a poor substitute for just one company that does not have its head up its own backside, but those seem increasingly hard to find.
I hear you loud and clear. Also, I think a major factor pushing people into the star cities is the two-career family. It's a good thing, but it tends to push people into a small number of locations that become extremely expensive.
Now there's an argument that could go into the affordable housing debate. "If you don't support real estate reform, you're a sexist."
I agree that good corporate cultures seem to get driven out by bad ones. It's like a Gresham's Law.
* And where I am now is mired in endemic mismanagement thanks to all the military-industrial complex money flowing through the streets.*
Now I'm curious. What part of the country do you live in?
If SV is as severely broken as you say, then it should be possible to repeat the same phenomenon elsewhere, but better, provided you can manage to attract true talent which has been cast-off by SV for the wrong reasons. Create an alternative without the sexism, ageism, and groupthink, and it will attract the mistakenly rejected talent. Getting the right ingredients together might take the resources of a state, however.
I can't speak for michaelochurch, but I have been reading his comments for the last while. I think his point is that the root problem of Silicon Valley isn't the sexism, ageism, groupthink, etc - those are just symptoms of a larger core systemic problem.
By putting all the power and attention on a few extremely wealthy key funding players (aka VCs) the cultural distortion is all but inevitable.
Picking up and setting up shop elsewhere is in the long run pointless if we're just going to mint a few new extremely wealthy VCs and continue to cycle.
I think his point is that the root problem of Silicon Valley isn't the sexism, ageism, groupthink, etc
Of course, but it is such alienation that provides an opening for the establishment of alternative scenes. The real difficulty is setting up the right context. (Culture that attracts creatives, high quality educational institutions with enlightened attitudes about IP, presence of capital.) hence the need for the "resources of a state."
Why is it when an article is written talking about the downfall of Silicon Valley, or talking about other great tech oriented cities, that Chicago is hardly ever mentioned. Chicago is the third largest city in the country with a booming tech culture here.
I don't mean to sound flippant but is there any city of greater than, let's say, 100,000 people that's located in the United States that people would not say has "a booming tech culture?" Numerous posts on HN talk up, in alphabetical order: Atlanta, Austin, Chicago, Dallas, Detroit (yes, really), Fort Worth, Houston, Kansas City, Las Vegas, Nashville, Orlando, Pittsburgh, Portland, San Antonio, Seattle, and I'm sure I missed a few.
Simply put, I'd like to know the inverse, if nothing but sheer inquisitiveness: Let's say you either hate technology startups and want nothing to do with them, or you love them and want to make the biggest career mistake ever. What city do you choose?
I would, because the infrastructure is crumbling, the tax base to fix it is non-existent, and the bureaucracy running the city is overbearing and corrupt. Detroit is still in the early stages of a death spiral, and it would take something mind bendingly huge to snap out of it.
Detroit is going to stand as the lesson to all cities in North America.
Mind-bendingly huge like the mayor forcibly removing the elected city officials and installing emergency city managers to cut down on the corruption and bureaucracy? Mind-bendingly huge like the largest US city to ever successfully declare bankruptcy ($18.5 billion in debt)?
Because that's what happened. Now we wait to see if it works.
> the mayor forcibly removing the elected city officials and installing emergency city managers
The Detroit emergency financial manager was appointed by Michigan Governor Rick Scott against the loud and outspoken wishes of the citizens and elected officials of the City of Detroit.
Detroit isn't going anywhere. The residential community may be on the decline, but the business community is thriving and private interests are investing in the infrastructure themselves. The business community doesn't need to rely on the city for infrastructure when there is plenty of capital available to invest directly versus waiting on the corrupt bureaucracy.
Right, but if I were investing in downtown Detroit I'd be wary of the fact that bureaucracy still hasn't been burned to the ground, and if your business succeeds they will leech off it as much as possible.
Detroit unquestionably needs greater amounts of private investment, but the governance has been so bad that it is a significant risk factor. Combine that with the widespread crime and anti-gentrification sentiments that would exist if you tried to do something about it, and it looks difficult.
It looks like the plan in Detroit may be to bring in a lot of EB-2 visas. I'm not sure how I feel about this. It would be great to bring more people to the area, but also there would be more competition for tech jobs.
Haven't you ever played Conway's Life? Cells that are surrounded die. Cells that are isolated die. Cells that have neighbors and room to grow multiply.
I'm not sure there is a "next", at least not in the U.S. I think the Boomers and the venture capitalists have pulled the ladder up for good.
Silicon Valley dying (and slowly) does not mean that a B-list city will replace it. I wish it were otherwise, because we have a lot of infrastructure and a hell of a lot of talent that's still in the B-list cities. However, I don't see much hope for most of those places. I wish I were wrong about that, but when the spirit is crushed it takes a long time for it to come back.
Corporate America "proper" (i.e. Fortune 500s outside of banking and elite startups) is in decline, because most corporations don't exist for any purpose other than their own mindless growth at this point. Talented people don't give a shit about the default corporate mission (make rich people richer) and move through them seeking their own career goals, not caring (and why should they?) what really happens to the firms as they go. The end result of this is documented by the "Gervais Principle" analysis of Venkatesh Rao, and I continued the analysis in the "Gervais / MacLeod" series on my blog.
The "big reveal" for those of us who came of age in the past 10 years is that VC-funded "startups" are just an outgrowth, and an especially dysfunctional one, of this uninspiring system. VC-istan isn't an alternative to corporate serfdom. It's a newer and generally worse form of it: shittier benefits, less investment in employees, faster firing, worse career paths, more ageism and sexism and classism. I would actually prefer the old corporate system (with at least some investment in the employee's career) seen in larger banks and hedge funds, but after having worked in tech (where most jobs become pointless after a few months, thanks to constant reorgs and broken promises) for 8 years, I've had "too many" jobs and the hedge funds aren't really an option anymore.
The big problem with the VCs is that they play outside of companies in ways that would be illegal if their interactions were more documented. They collude. Even if you refuse to take VC funding, they can still destroy you by funding your competition. What they really are is a social network designed for insider trading of marginal, non-public microcaps. One of the reasons why they prefer to fund companies in their geographic areas (and, also, why VCs outside of the Valley and New York will never really matter) is that much of their collusion would be legally dangerous to them if it happened in writing, rather than informally and socially within a closed network of people they trust.
Here's why I think the future outlook is grim. The Soviet system destroyed the entrepreneurial spirit of several countries for generations. (The reason Russian business is so tightly intertwined with crime is that the people who retained that know-how were the black-marketeers.) It didn't spring back in a year or even ten, and it wasn't without some nasty conflicts even 20+ years after the Soviet system was formally gone.
The American corporate system, culminating in the VC-funded clusterfuck we see every day in Valleywag, has had similar effects. Although its decline is evident, peoples' spirits have been so thoroughly crushed that I don't see a replacement coming for at least a generation.
That said, the main arguments here are are 1. wages are too high and 2. rent is too high.
Given that both of these are set by the market, this smacks of "nobody goes there anymore, it's too crowded"