90% Of Software Developers Work Outside Silicon Valley (qz.com) 180
An anonymous reader shares a Quartz report: So much code to write, so few developers. The chronic talent shortage afflicting Silicon Valley is now all over the US -- and the developers are too.
A study by the software trade group The App Association analyzed government and private sector data to map where software developers live, and it identified 223,054 open positions around the country. It found that most developers live far away from the technology epicenter of Silicon Valley, and job openings follow a similar pattern. The upshot: Silicon Valley-style talent wars are moving away from tech hubs to smaller metro and even rural areas. Everywhere from rural Vermont to the middle of Montana is in need of programmers. "You can find places where you didn't expect software developers to be, but they are part of the local economy," said association spokesman Jonathan Godfrey in an interview. "It's pretty much everywhere."
It's Simple Economics (Score:5, Insightful)
Why would I pay $3000/month to share a ROOM with four other people making $120K when I can BUY a four bedroom house on one acre of land in the country for $825/month on half that salary anywhere between the Rocky and Appalachian mountain ranges? I'd take the boring enterprise 9-5 job at a no-name B2B service company any day of the week and enjoy my big house and yard with my kids any day of the week.
It's simple geography. (Score:5, Insightful)
Most of _everything_ is outside Silicon Valley.
Is this news to anyone?
Re:It's simple geography. (Score:4)
Most of _everything_ is outside Silicon Valley.
Including San Francisco, which is 50 miles down the road.
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sick burn!
suck it San Francisco!
Re: It's simple geography. (Score:2)
Silicon Valley still has high rental prices. A bargain 1 bedroom apartment is still going to cost you at least 2x more. Probably not $3k, but still pricey.
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Shop around. Get roommates and that $3000/mo gets more affordable. Commute from further away instead of living in the priciest places.
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Most of _everything_ is outside Silicon Valley.
Is this news to anyone?
Apparently it is to those living/working in Silicon Valley.
I've been a software engineer / system administrator since 1987. I and 100% of my co-workers have never worked in Silicon Valley.
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Most of _everything_ is outside Silicon Valley.
Is this news to anyone?
It is to many inside the Valley.
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Why would I pay $3000/month to share a ROOM with four other people
You don't. Even in the heart of SV, you can rent your own room for about $1000/month. You can find $700-$800 rooms in south San Jose, or Fremont. Or $500 in Gilroy, but the commute will eat up the savings. Go to Craigslist, click on "sby", then "rooms for rent".
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Or you can buy a decent house here for that. So am I surprised most software developers don't live in Silicon Valley? No. For the same reason I never moved there.
Aside from that, as mcmonkey quite correctly pointed out, most of everything is outside of Silicon Valley. Most of anything is outside of any given city.
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Or you can buy a decent house here for that. So am I surprised most software developers don't live in Silicon Valley? No. For the same reason I never moved there.
Aside from that, as mcmonkey quite correctly pointed out, most of everything is outside of Silicon Valley. Most of anything is outside of any given city.
Are you sure about that? Because I pretty much gave up trying to move to the valley because I could not find anything decent for that price. Yeah, I could find that in very shitty areas, but what would be the point of that? I did the math, and pretty much I would have to earn 3X of what I make now to afford the type of housing, schools and amenities that I currently provide my family (and I live in South Florida, not the cheapest of regions.)
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I have a 1500 sq. ft. house that is $800/mo including escrow and PMI. My commute is 5 minutes.
My salary would probably have to quintuple before I'd even consider going to SV for work.
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I have a 1500 sq. ft. house that is $800/mo
You could rent that for $3000/mo in SV. So the difference is $2200/mo or about $28k/yr.
My salary would probably have to quintuple before I'd even consider going to SV for work.
If your salary would have to quintuple to get an extra $28k/yr, then you aren't even making minimum wage.
Other than housing, costs are not particularly high in SV. Gasoline is slightly more than average. Groceries are the same. Utilities tend to be lower since the weather is nearly perfect, so you don't need to heat or cool much. The schools are among the best in America.
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The commute from there is much better than the commute from San Francisco though, and fewer hipsters as neighbors.
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Yeah, but you get paid less, the taxes are high, you have fewer jobs to choose from, and the weather sucks for large chunks of the year. The closest major city is the most boring place in Canada, and Toronto is 5 hours away. Good skiing available nearby, at least. And a lot of strip clubs :).
P
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Why would I pay $3000/month to share a ROOM with four other people [...]
I pay $1477 for a 475-sqf studio apartment in San Jose, where I lived there by myself for 10+ years and make only $50K per year in IT support.
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That's actually cheaper than the the tech area of downtown Seattle, where a small studio apartment runs ~$1800 if you're moving in now. Of course, there are also 50-somehting new highrises going up in Seattle, mostly residential, so maybe that will help a bit.
San Jose is high, but it's not crazy. I found the pay more than offset the cost - just stay away from SF. Seattle is bordering on crazy, but at least they're building out.
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When I worked for AMZN, parking was like $200/mo after company reimbursement, so there are definitely financial incentives to living somewhere within walking distance. (I lived somewhere where busing would turn a 40 minute commute to a 70 minute one, and I value an hour a day not on the road.) Hell, it would be a pretty tough call on how much less space I'm willing to live in to trade for a ten minute walking commute. Back when I was single at least--not so much now.
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Redmond and Bellevue aren't cheap by non-SV standards (I pay north of $2400 for a two bedroom) and the commute is getting measurably longer. Hopefully that will settle down once all this new housing comes online.
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Have they said if its going to be actual affordable housing? If not I wouldnt count on it. In denver they've been building apartments and condos like gangbusters. However all of them are still priced ridiculously high that Im not sure who all these people are that can afford them. Seems like average rent for a place outside of denver thats nice and about a 10-15 min commute to the tech area runs about 1200-1400/mo, but all these new places start at at least 2000 for a one bed to rent and most are 400k+ to
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Supply and demand will sort it out in the long run. What's terrible is when only new businesses get built, and no new housing - then it goes through the roof. That was happening for a while in Seattle.
My real hope is that all the new downtown housing drains the suburbs a bit, making the commute easier and suburban rents cheaper as demand declines.
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Why would I pay $3000/month to share a ROOM with four other people [...]
I pay $1477 for a 475-sqf studio apartment in San Jose, where I lived there by myself for 10+ years and make only $50K per year in IT support.
You can make almost twice as much and pay the same amount for a 2-bedroom apartment rental with 1-car garage in a decent area here in South Florida. You are getting ripped off. What the hell are you doing there?
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[...] here in South Florida.
Real estate is cheap because South Florida will be under water by end of century.
What the hell are you doing there?
Born and raised here. One of the few natives still left here.
Re: It's Simple Economics (Score:2)
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And California will have slid into the ocean after the Big One.
Still waiting after 30+ years.
What do you plan to do with your savings? Retire to an old folks home in the same neighborhood?
Las Vegas. Should be far enough inland to avoid the flooding of the SF Bay Area and Central Valley from rising sea levels.
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that's more than my mortgage for a 3000 sqf single family home.
When I first moved in 10+ years ago, the rent was $800 per month, the security deposit was $199 and I got a free microwave oven. What I pay in rent today is actually $300 below current market rate.
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When?
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[...] sounds like you're getting ripped off considering the area.
Unless like most people, I was born and raised here. I'm not yet ready to let the hipsters run me out of town.
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[...] sounds like you're getting ripped off considering the area.
Unless like most people, I was born and raised here. I'm not yet ready to let the hipsters run me out of town.
But you are certainly bleeding money. Money is not everything, but by God, do the math. You could be losing between $300K to $500K in wages in 10 years if you stay where you are. That's not chump change.
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Money is not everything, but by God, do the math.
I could move away to a cheaper area, but pay more in commute and time costs. Or I could make the best of my situation. Either way, I'm still saving 20% of my income.
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First: you could probably get more than 50k per year in IT support in other areas of the country.
I work for government IT and $50K is the national average this position. On the bright, I'm two years into a five-year contract that's fully funded. Job security and consistent income is a nice trade off.
So you spend 34% of your GROSS income on RENTING a room the size of a postage stamp?
My studio apartment is quite big for my needs. I could probably live in a smaller space, maybe less than 150 square foot. Smaller spaces don't necessarily mean less rent unless I go further out from downtown.
That sounds like a really stupid way to live, if you ask me.
No, I didn't. :P
[...] a much nicer town than SJ [...]
I'm in the sweet spot for public transit. I'm an hour away from North San Jose (ligh
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I'm raising my family in SF. It's great. Lots of culture, lots of playgrounds, vibrant public schools, lots of engaged parents. SF has amazing food, interesting places to go for day trips, tons of museums and libraries. It's a great place to raise kids.
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I agree with your sentiments on raising a family but since you insist on calling it "SanFran" I, for one, can't wait for you to leave.
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Why would I pay $3000/month to share a ROOM with four other people making $120K when I can BUY a four bedroom house on one acre of land in the country for $825/month on half that salary anywhere between the Rocky and Appalachian mountain ranges? I'd take the boring enterprise 9-5 job at a no-name B2B service company any day of the week and enjoy my big house and yard with my kids any day of the week.
I agree with you, partly, on the wisdom of paying crazy rent in the valley. But I have misgivings about living away from major metropolitan areas because the smaller the metro area, the less number of employers. Less expensive real state tends to correlate with a smaller number of employers (and thus a greater risk when things go south.)
So there is a balance where, at least for me, I prefer to pay the extra cost of living in a large metropolitan area (say, Atlanta, South Florida, Dallas, Denver, Portlan
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I'm absolutely shocked that anyone would make the claim that "10% of all software is written in Silicon Valley" - what utter tripe! Silicon Valley may be tech heavy, but it contains less than 0.001% of the world's population that is technically capable of writing software.
Two million new Android developers in India next year, are there 200,000 Android developers in the valley?
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It doesn't cost that much. Seriously. Just don't live in San Francisco (which is NOT silicon valley).
As for software, it's never been the biggest thing in Silicon Valley until the last decade. It's called "silicon" not "software", and was a big engineering hub before the wannabe programmers moved in with their social media.
The reason the valley is nice is that if you lose your job then there's another one nearby. Employers at the moment do not like you to work from home or telecommute. Even for softwar
xkcd (Score:5, Interesting)
One look at the map in TFA and this came to mind: https://xkcd.com/1138/ [xkcd.com]
I guess it surprises someone that "software development" includes a whole lot of people all over the country. Databases don't query themselves, and there's always a lot of corporate tools in every line of work. Software developers make them...
Re:xkcd (Score:5, Insightful)
I guess it surprises someone that "software development" includes a whole lot of people all over the country.
It actually surprises me that a full 10 percent of software jobs are actually in Silicon Valley. Every major city I've ever lived in across the US has been teeming with job openings in the tech sector. Just seems kind of weird that the headline of the article is going on about 90 percent of software developers working outside the valley. Is this news to anyone?
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I guess it surprises someone that "software development" includes a whole lot of people all over the country.
It actually surprises me that a full 10 percent of software jobs are actually in Silicon Valley. Every major city I've ever lived in across the US has been teeming with job openings in the tech sector. Just seems kind of weird that the headline of the article is going on about 90 percent of software developers working outside the valley. Is this news to anyone?
For the mobile app/unicorn hipsters in the valley, yep.
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Every major city I've ever lived in across the US has been teeming with job openings in the tech sector.
Sometimes it feels like there's nothing but software jobs in Silicon Valley.
joke went over your head, didn't it? (Score:2)
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Don't be silly. Theoretically it's possible, but it's fundamentally as stupid as saying that if you got enough sengis they'd be heavier than not one - but two - elephants. Which is clearly bollocks, because even a single elephant is bloody huge and I don't even know what a sengi/o/us is.
LIke if it was the case, you'd have to come up with some retarded name like a power law or or even a made-up word like "zipf" to describe it.
Rubbish (Score:2)
Re:Rubbish (Score:4, Interesting)
The real question I was wondering why does anyone find that surprising?
While Silicon Valley is a major technology hub (10% of the software developers is HUGE!) there is need for software development across the globe. Many Major colleges teach Computer Science and Computer Engineering around the world, However there are a lot of Major ones in the North Eastern US. It is insane to think that all these people whose home is spread across the world, will travel away from it to study in colleges in one half of the country, then travel 2000 miles to the other end of the country for work?
Most of these people tend to stay near their homes or their colleges (Hence why a lot of communities like having colleges in their area, causing a lot of new business around those areas, from young new grads, who have nothing to lose and startup new companies).
Comment removed (Score:5, Funny)
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Others started to think that way and before long they moved all the Jews into a camp.
No Kidding (Score:2)
It's almost like there are way more people living on the east coast than the west coast.
How convenient (Score:5, Insightful)
A trade group for the software industry claiming there are a quarter million software jobs open around the country. Yet oddly, when people with years of experience apply for these positions they are routinely told they don't have the experience the company is looking for.
Granted, not every candidate has the experience for every position, but it seems quite odd that for all the people who apply for a position, not one is qualified. Ever. Not even remotely close qualified. Even with the thousands of new developers being sent to pasture every month from other companies.
And here we have a trade group for the software industry essentially claiming the same thing. Coincidence? You decide.
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They like there chained to the job H1B's
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Re:How convenient (Score:4, Insightful)
Being involved in the hiring process, I find that a lot of technology candidates with many years of experience do not have the right experience. Too much focus on New Technology that the organization may not implement. Too much focus on older technology that we are trying to faze out, or had removed a long time ago. Or jobs that require basic human interaction, because no matter how good they are technically, we don't want need a jackass who makes everyone looks bad. Where you are better off with someone with less skillsets, who is better for the job.
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I have had to deal with plenty of entry level people trying to fill senior level positions either they make it through the trial by fire or they don't. If those people you are hiring for their charisma you find leaving in less than a year chances are you need to rethink that strategy.
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Too much focus on New Technology ... Too much focus on older technology
So... you want somebody who hasn't worked on new technology OR old technology?
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Yeah, my bullshit detector was twitching on this one too.
Hire a good generalist and TRAIN them.
Re:How convenient (Score:5, Insightful)
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Too much focus on New Technology that the organization may not implement. Too much focus on older technology that we are trying to faze out, or had removed a long time ago.
So no new technology, and no old technology.
I think I see your problem.
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A trade group for the software industry claiming there are a quarter million software jobs open around the country. Yet oddly, when people with years of experience apply for these positions they are routinely told they don't have the experience the company is looking for.
Indeed. This is part of the "have to find a pink unicorn" philosophy of corporate hiring brought about by the disposable worker phenomenon. That is: Companies only want to hire the special snowflake that already has 100% of the skills and knowledge they want because they are willing to invest $0 in training them to do the job. Once upon a time, experience in related (but not identical) skills and tools were considered a good measurement of whether you could learn something and be good at a job involving it.
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And here we have a trade group for the software industry essentially claiming the same thing. Coincidence? You decide.
Every place I've worked on the West Coast has a developer hiring bar that turns away between 60% and 80% of those they interview. "Experience" on the resume doesn't matter once you're that far - it's all about demonstrating coding skills.
I don't think it's a great system. I see too many candidate rejected who would be perfectly acceptable in the role. The bar is set high enough that normal random performance variation of the candidates mean there's IMO a 50% chance that any given qualified candidate get
makes sense. (Score:3)
You dont have to be from silicon valley to be interested in software, and the best developers are the ones who learned out of personal self interest. such people will be all over the place.
It makes sense that employers who need and value them will accept telecommuting in exchange for securing that talent, given the so called scarcity. (sweetening the deal, rural US wages are much lower than on the coasts.)
I really dont see what is so unusual about this statistic.
News flash: People live and work elsewhere (Score:5, Insightful)
Film at 11.
Why do people think that Silcon valley is the be all and end all of software development?
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I'm fairly sure the "Valley People" think the rest of us are living in caves grunting at each other around the fire.
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Wish I had some mod points... +1 Funny
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Why do people think that Silcon valley is the be all and end all of software development?
It pays better. That's why for me.
Yeah, it's true that housing costs are expensive, but where else can you get $170k-$200k? That's more than enough to make up for the increased expenses.
Just In... (Score:5, Funny)
Breaking News!
The world doesn't revolve around California.
In related news, New York and London are also not the center of the universe. This news may come to a shock to just under 0.5% of the world's population that live in these locations.
From the No Shit Sherlock Instution (Score:2)
10 percent! (Score:5, Interesting)
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Shocked in a different way (Score:2)
I am more shocked that 10% of all developers in the US work in the Silicon Valley area. I would have guessed a sub-5% figure.
This just in! (Score:2)
People whose "product" is independent of where they produce it don't want to live in areas where it's insanely expensive to rent a cardboard box, let alone an apartment.
Who would have thought?
Confused! (Score:2)
Seriously, I don't get it. On alternating weeks there are stories of how there is a shortage of qualified IT people in the US labor market or stories of how qualified IT people are training their H1-B replacements. WHICH IS IT???
Re:Confused! (Score:5, Insightful)
there is a shortage of "qualified applicants".
There is not a shortage of talent.
qualified applicant == a person with the skillset we want that will also work at well below median pay, work much more than median hours without overtime, and is beholden to the company and cannot leave easily. They also have to be local, so they can attend those all important meetings.
I hope that helps.
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Re:Confused! (Score:4, Interesting)
of course not, but they still need to be local to have their daily browbeatings in person, and attend all those critically important meetings.
H1Bs are perfect fits.
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There is a real shortage of qualified software developers, but there is far less of a shortage of the rest of it, such as support and system installation(Linux/Windows sysadmins).
Thanks Captain Obvious! (Score:2)
Gee, you can't fit all 100% of programmers into a small geographic area? Some of them don't want to live there? What a crazy world we live in!
I'd bet 90% is a bit low for an estimate. Probably more like 99% of software developers work outside of Silicon Valley.
No shit, sherlock (Score:2)
The ratio of Silicone Valley's population to the rest of the world is
2.63x10^-4. Most developers live outside of that tiny area?! I'd have been amazed if it was any other way...!
Stop repeating that myth. (Score:3, Insightful)
The chronic talent shortage afflicting Silicon Valley is now all over the US—and the developers are too.
There is no chronic shortage. It is a myth invented by tech companies to get the H1-b quota boosted.
And if any company is having a hard time recruiting people, they are doing something very wrong. My company hasn't had to use a recruiter or job board in over 8 years. HR just sends out an email to everyone saying they're looking for someone and in about two weeks, the new person starts. Somebody on the team knows someone with the skills who's looking for a new job.
Also, don't immediately discount unemployed folks. Just because they're out of work doesn't mean they're no good - especially in this day and age of people being replaced by H1-bs and offshoring.
And as far as new grads are concerned, "elite" schools don't have a monopoly on hard working smart kids.
And maybe your system isn't as cutting edge as you think it is. I've seen too many jobs where at most a BS CIS is all that's needs and many times a 2 year tech grad would be able to do a wonderful job. But they want the MIT grad to do their web page.
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Also, don't immediately discount unemployed folks. Just because they're out of work doesn't mean they're no good - especially in this day and age of people being replaced by H1-bs and offshoring.
I was out of work for two years (2009-10), underemployed for six months (working 20 hours per month), and filed for chapter seven bankruptcy in 2011. During that time I was told by hiring managers that I was overqualified for minimum wage jobs and recruiters that I was unemployable for anything else. Funny how that attitude changed all the sudden when they needed bodies to fill out the headcount as the economy turned around. I spent the next two years working seven days a week.
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and many times a 2 year tech grad would be able to do a wonderful job. But they want the MIT grad to do their web page.
... and they want to pay him less than the even the 2 year college grad would accept.
Rural (Score:2)
I'm conflicted... (Score:2)
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Links to Tech CEOs' demand for $250M from Feds (Score:2)
Let's see - study comes from a Microsoft/Google/Apple-sponsored group that asks site visitors to join the CEOs of those companies to demand that Congress cough up $250 million in K-12 computer science education funding [actonline.org].
no surprise (Score:2)
after all, "computer software developer" is the most popular job in CO, UT, VA and WA. [npr.org]
That doesn't mean what you think it means (Score:2)
Well no shit, Sherlock! (Score:2)
TIL India is outside of Silicon Valley
Silicon Valley is overrated (Score:2)
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from opening up shop in Fresno where the jobs are much needed.
I suspect the thing stopping companies (like Google) from opening offices in a particular place (like Fresno) is that whoever proposes that idea in the company probably wants to find some qualified person currently in the company to move there to supervise the buildup of the company at that location to preserve the company culture.
If you want some BigAssTechCompany to open an office in Fresno, probably the best way to do that is to join said BigAssTechCompany at the headquarters (perhaps in the bay area), w
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I suspect the thing stopping companies (like Google) from opening offices in a particular place (like Fresno) in [...]
A lot of people who work in Silicon Valley live in Fresno and commute four hours each way every day. I knew a coworker at eBay who carpooled with four other people, each person driving one day out of the week. If Google opened a satellite campus in Fresno, they will probably have 50+ employees to staff it.
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I suspect the thing stopping companies (like Google) from opening offices in a particular place (like Fresno) in [...]
A lot of people who work in Silicon Valley live in Fresno and commute four hours each way every day. I knew a coworker at eBay who carpooled with four other people, each person driving one day out of the week. If Google opened a satellite campus in Fresno, they will probably have 50+ employees to staff it.
Given the stereotypical sillyvalley culture (e.g, young, unmarried, saying late at work, etc, etc), I suspect these people do not fit the profile of a company leader that can keep the torch for the company culture for a remote office.
Having been through these remote office actualities with companies of different size, the empirical evidence is that finding acceptable site leaders is often the biggest obstacles. A warm body (even if a outstanding technical contributor) is insufficient qualifications for bei
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Someone that insane shouldn't be running an office anyway.
The person who is willing to commute four hours each way? He bought a five-bedroom ranch house in Fresno. I think he telecommutes in his current job.