What kind of company can you build outside of the Valley?

I often get asked by investors and entrepreneurs alike how building a startup outside of Silicon Valley is possible and I always answer that it depends on what kind of company you are trying to build. So if you are trying to create the next Facebook, Google, YouTube, Twitter, or Foursquare and your company requires a large amount of funding and needs to be close to where the buzz is (because dozens of other startups are competing with you with exactly the same idea and the winner will take it all), then a “secondary market” like Denver / Boulder, San Diego, Seattle, Boston, Montreal or Vancouver is not the best place to be. But if you have carved out a niche for your company that is a bit off the beaten track, are comfortable to do more with less money, bootstrap longer and grow your company a bit more organically, then any of those secondary locations could be the perfect place to start and build your company. You might not have the same access to money and senior talent but you usually have much lower costs of operating your company, access to great engineering talent without competing with the Google’s and Facebook’s of the world (and the salaries that they are paying) and an environment that sometimes makes it easier to focus on the real value of a product for customers compared to chasing the latest hype.

Not sure if you can create big companies in places like Edmonton, Kelowna or Victoria? Yes, you can! Take Bioware, the Edmonton-based gaming company that the two founders Greg and Ray built over a decade in a city that did not have not a single gaming company before they started their company – sold to EA for close to a billion dollars. Or Kelowna’s Club Penguin, a company that was the first to create a virtual world for kids and sold to Disney for over $750 million. Or my own company AbeBooks that got built in Victoria, BC, over more than a decade before being sold to Amazon.

Great companies are being started in these markets every day – they will perhaps not be as glamorous as the Valley startups but will still create enormous value for customers and subsequently exit opportunities for entrepreneurs and investors alike.

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  • kevin_swan

    Boris – love the thoughts behind this post and the recent discussions we have had on this topic. I think your approach is correct, and what interests me, is how the funding requirements for these types of companies are different than most tech startups.

    I see these types of companies needing less money, but more time. This is a tough sell as it requires patient investors and / or fund. Many angels can't forgo long periods without liquidity, or have better investment options, and funds always have maturity dates that they have to meet.

    We are starting to see some innovative ways to get around this for both founders and investors (i.e. stock buy backs, SecondMarket). Hopefully this will continue and we will see more of these types of companies growing in secondary markets.

  • bwertz

    Very good point, Kevin – I know of a lot of angels in Vancouver and Seattle that haven't had any exits for some time and are not investing in new deals before they haven't had any.

  • http://twitter.com/paul__sullivan Paul Sullivan

    Boris, how timely given that Calgary-based Smart Technologies IPO'd today with a market cap > $2 Billion.

    Dominating their niche category, Smart has quietly gone about their business the last 20 years without much fanfare. Clearly, they have shown that great technology companies can be created (and managed) in the Great White North!

  • bwertz

    Another great example – should have mentioned them as well.

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