New York Is Driving the Next Wave of Technology Innovation

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MapThe tech energy in New York is driving a new kind of startup culture that’s unique to the city. Entrepreneurs are choosing the New York City ecosystem in droves because it meets their needs in ways that Silicon Valley, Chicago, Austin, and other emerging U.S. tech hubs cannot.

When I first moved here five years ago, it was hard to get someone to move to New York for a tech position. The best talent wants to live in a place with a vibrant tech community. Now, however, people from the West Coast are reaching out to me. Our ecosystem rivals the ones they are used to, and they also find it exciting that the companies here aren’t just pure tech plays, but iterations on already rich industries. It’s become much easier to place top talent in the city, which has come to be known as the birthplace of some of the most exciting and innovative tech startups, such as Etsy and AppNexus. There is a pressing demand for tech talent in New York — and it’s not just from the startups.

The nation’s brightest tech stars are finding new homes in New York, whether in dynamic new tech startups or established companies in any one of many different industries, including fashion, finance, media, marketing, and biotech, all of which are expanding their horizons with firm foundations in next-generation technology. These core industries are driving the demand for technology and innovation and making the city a destination for the most innovative technology experts in the country. New York City startups, as well as established and mature companies, are responding to these demands with creativity, connectivity, and the city’s unique can-do culture.

That these synergies exist is no surprise. The city has made significant commitments to tax credits, incentives, programming and policies, and even urban planning with innovation in mind.

A report released June 24 by CITIE   — a joint venture from Nesta, Accenture, and Future Cities Catapult — placed New York City at the top of its innovation-friendly index of 40 different global cities.

“New York City was identified as having the most effective policy environment to foster innovation, followed closely by London, Helsinki, Barcelona, and Amsterdam,” write the 2015 study authors.

According to the report, New York City officials:

  • find creative ways to effect change outside of their formal policy responsibilities; they take startups on mayoral visits, host meetups, and connect different parts of the community with each other;
  • recognize that the expertise necessary to solve problems in the 21st century may not reside solely within city hall, and they work with outside organizations wherever possible;
  • and they act more like entrepreneurs than bureaucrats. Employees are given license to try things out, think big, and to work at the pace of change in the world around them.

SkylineFrom the Digital.NYC initiative to Applied Sciences NYC, Mayor Bill DiBlasio and other city leaders are working hard to ensure that tech flourishes in New York.  Those investments on the part of local and regional policy makers are at the heart of New York City’s ascendancy — and they’re contributing to the growth of tech hotspots in Brooklyn, Lower Manhattan, SoHo, and the Union Square-Flatiron-Chelsea area.

Real estate deals for tech space accounted for 16.2 percent of leases in Manhattan last year — and that included 470,000 square feet for Amazon’s new site near the Empire State Building. Last month, PayPal signed for 95,000 square feet in Greenwich Village.

Tech is fueling a lot of real estate deals outside of Manhattan, too. The June 2015 report from real-estate firm Jones Lang LaSalle notes that “investors raced to meet growing demand [from] local creative talent to live, work, and play in Brooklyn.”

New York City is also flush with venture capital. A grand total of $1.3 billion worth of venture capital poured into city businesses in the first quarter of 2015, according to Robin Gill, New York market manager for City National Technology Group.

Beyond the VC deals, the real-estate ink on tech-firm leases, the accolades, and the policy investments, Gill points to the diversity of New York City’s tech businesses as a major source of strength for the city’s startup community.

Take the media industry as an example. New York City is home to 300,000 media jobs and 29 multibillion-dollar media companies. The New York City Economic Development Corporation reports that these firms and their people generate $30 billion in annual revenues generated — and that accounts for about half of the entire nation’s broadcast television, magazine house, and book publishing revenues, along with one-fourth of the market share in cable outlets and newspapers.

” … [E]mployment growth at companies within the advertising and public relations industry has paralleled the growth in high-tech, increasing by 25 percent during the recovery,” writes New York State Comptroller Thomas P. DiNapoli. “The high-tech industry has benefited in turn from the creative talent and changing business models at these firms.”

Indeed, the high-tech sector has benefited: digital media salaries were the highest in NYC high-tech in 2012, with high-tech sector wages exceeding $11 billion overall.

Similar trends are true in the financial district, in fashion, and in New York’s retail and consumer services sectors. New York tech energy is building a new city on the foundation of the one that never Bridgesleeps — and that’s what makes New York’s ecosystem so different from other tech hubs.

“The high-tech industry’s young, creative workforce is attracted to New York City because of its culture, diversity, public transportation system, and the opportunities it offers to live and work in the same community,” DiNapoli writes. “World-class academic institutions and creative industries also draw people to New York City, providing new ideas and talent for the industry.”

By Tatiana Becker