Austin, TX sees mass exodus of ex-Silicon Valley tech companies, here's why

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Austin sees mass exodus of ex-Silicon Valley tech companies, here's why
Is the big tech trend in Austin over?

Cristela JonesDec 9, 2023

AUSTIN, TEXAS - MARCH 15: Founder & CEO of Meta Mark Zuckerberg appears via video stream for the session 'Into the Metaverse: Creators, Commerce and Connection' during the 2022 SXSW Conference and Festivals at the Austin Convention Center on March 15, 2022 in Austin, Texas. (Photo by Jim Bennett/WireImage)
Jim Bennett/WireImage

Austin's potential as a successor to Silicon Valley is in jeopardy. Over the years, Austin has seen a huge migration of tech companies moving to the city, from billionaire owners of Twitter (X) to the largest search engine in the world. But many startups are now choosing to leave the capital city they once flocked to because of the rising cost of living, low funding, and lack of diversity, according to TechCrunch.

On Thursday, December 7, the cloud computing company VMWare announced it was laying off 577 employees in Austin as part of a nationwide job reduction to cut costs, according to the Austin American-Statesman.

Techstars Managing Director Amos Schwartzfarb is one of several startup founders that are leaving Austin, TechCrunch reports.

This comes as Austin's startup scene has been labeled "lackluster" by some, according to TechCrunch. This is only a few years removed from tech investors and startup founders bringing their businesses to Austin in droves, living it up with lower rent (compared to California and NYC), the young and "hip" population, and the beauty of no state income taxes.

After the COVID-19 pandemic, more tech companies chose to work from home, emptying their downtown offices for at-home desks. Layoffs also began to save money with the rumors of a nationwide recession and companies needing to scale back costs.

This year alone was full of tech layoffs. Indeed announced in March that it was letting go of 15% of its workforce after tech giants Google, Meta, and Amazon did the same.


In 2022, Meta abandoned plans to move into the biggest skyscraper in Austin, and Google froze plans to move into 35 floors of a different downtown building, despite paying rent to the developer, according to the Washington Post. TikTok also announced it was subleasing six floors in downtown Austin, but has yet to announce a move-in date, according to Inc.com.

In January, CEO Don Ward of Laundris, a B2B enterprise industrial software platform, announced he would be relocating his company to Tulsa because it reminded him "of where Austin was 10 years ago in terms of the tech ecosystem being built," according to Tulsa World.

Last month, startup unicorn Cart, an e-commerce business, announced it was moving its headquarters back to Houston after relocating to Austin in late 2021, according to TechCrunch.

Airlines have also responded by shifting their focus from Austin, with American Airlines cutting 21 routes from the Austin-Bergstrom International Airport. The CEO of Austin's Technology Council told the Austin Business Journal in March, "We're not seeing a lot of pain yet in Austin," after the journal revealed a list of the largest tech companies in Austin not yet reporting a widespread loss.


If this is a growing trend, it begs the question. What will Austin have to do to remain the darling of the tech world?









 
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Vandelay

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I don't really know how anyone thought Austin could replace NorCal as a tech incubator. The Valley just has so many indicators brewing even with the high cost of living; the schools, the freedoms, the history, the overload of companies, the diversity influx, the overall culture is just way more conducive to tech breakthroughs.

Austin may supplement, but it'll never be the epicenter. It'll share that with Boston, Atlanta, Chicago, NYC of course and a half dozen other cities; mostly if not all blue cities in blue states. It's basic logic and etymology...you can't have significant innovation with conservative thought.
 

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Let me tell you something about Austin: I lived there for 26 years
 

Batsute

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I don't really know how anyone thought Austin could replace NorCal as a tech incubator. The Valley just has so many indicators brewing even with the high cost of living; the schools, the freedoms, the history, the overload of companies, the diversity influx, the overall culture is just way more conducive to tech breakthroughs.

Austin may supplement, but it'll never be the epicenter. It'll share that with Boston, Atlanta, Chicago, NYC of course and a half dozen other cities; mostly if not all blue cities in blue states. It's basic logic and etymology...you can't have significant innovation with conservative thought.

Basically.

It’s like that one CEO said had they came 10 years ago it’d be different. Texas red tape makes it impossible to get anything bootstrapped unless you’re already in the game.

A friend and I were trying to liquor company up and the TABC is a fukking nightmare. Talking to a TABC rep about what license we need was a nightmare. the bureaucracy to build anything destroys the entrepreneurship.
 

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Been hearing that Austin's allure has been fading for a while now. Even had a buddy that moved there a few years ago and said it wasn't dynamic in the way that he thought. Said there is a, relatively speaking, visible black professional population though.
 
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