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As appeared in
the Winter 2004 edition of Trade & Industry Development magazine
Site
Selection for the Technology Industry
By:
Angelos Angelou
Few
industries are so globally-driven as the technology industry. While many
pundits once predicted a world where “place” would have a
diminished role in an age of infinite communications, location has become
even more important to the success of technology companies.
Prior
to 2000, technology relocations or expansions were closely tied to a search
for a quality, competitive labor supply in a tight environment. Now, site
selection has been expanded to achieve higher, more strategic purposes
over the long-term. Site selection for the technology industry has now
become the lifeline to new capital, new markets, and new research.
The
technology industry is now entering its next growth phase. The past two
years were difficult times for the technology industry. With the post-Y2K
decline in technology equipment spending and the subsequent crash in the
NASDAQ, technology companies have been hesitant to make capital investments.
Despite recent turbulence, the technology industry still stands to be
a top catalyst for growth in the U.S. economy. Historically over the last
20 years, the sector has grown at three times the rate of the national
economy and its high wages and investment levels will continue to command
even greater levels of incentives and recruitment activities from communities
across the U.S. Technology companies are now vying for position in the
next expansion phase.
Site
selection has become more complicated as decisions become even more global
in nature. Offshoring has become a top issue. The ability to access new
global markets is now a major factor in manufacturing investments. Traditional
companies continue to explore outsourcing opportunities, and at times
off-loading their IT departments to large service providers such as HP,
IBM, and EDS. Regardless of industry or size, technology companies are
now critically evaluating how their location decisions affect their bottom
line, customer relations, and strategic position.
Site
Selection Trends in Technology
For
the purposes of this article, we will limit our definition of technology
to the electronics, software, and biotech industries. These industries
are umbrella groups for most of today’s leading technologies such
as semiconductor chip manufacturing, computer assembly, software design,
Internet services, and pharmaceutical research.
While each industry and each company will have its own unique requirements
and concerns, technology companies are united in their search for the
best talent, research, and business climate in the world.
The
Search for Talent
Access to a pool of highly educated, talented, and technically skilled
workers is vital to any technology company. Manufacturers seek workers
who are smart and trainable. To attain world-class levels of quality
and productivity, manufacturers seek intangible qualities such as attention
to detail, work ethic, adaptability to change, and quality consciousness.
Communities with a large pool of technical workers enable companies
to grow without recruiting and relocating costly technical talent. Employee
talent is an important asset and key differentiator for tech companies.
Success breeds success as star companies and best-in-class workers seek
out each other. Technical functions tend to cluster in different regions
as workforce specialties vary across the globe. For example, a computer
manufacturer may have its headquarters and engineering in San Jose,
manufacturing in Austin and Taiwan and back offices in Phoenix or Bangalore,
India.
The Search for Research Universities
Universities play a larger role in the technology industry than ever
before. Universities play a dual-role: they deliver new research to
the marketplace and train the industry’s next cutting-edge workforce.
Availability of local technical graduates is important for technology
companies, especially growing ones. Local technical graduates help companies
manage labor costs that are by far the largest expenditure of most high
tech service firms. As technologies evolve, skills acquired in school
only a few years ago may be obsolete today. Success for companies can
depend upon whether workers can quickly upgrade.

Site
selectors will evaluate the enrollment and degrees conferred in engineering,
life sciences, business and computer science or any other degrees that
are relevant to their clients. Reputation of the school’s programs
and graduates is also a key factor. The Metropolitan New Economy Index
ranks the leading metro areas for degrees granted in science and engineering.
Raleigh-Durham, Austin and Boston were ranked first, second and third
respectively.
Research universities consistently are one of the most important catalysts
for technical growth in all tech metros. These universities not only
supply knowledge based workers and research, but also plant the entrepreneurial
seeds as professors and students often transform technologies into start-up
companies. Today’s research becomes tomorrow’s new technologies
and products. University research is one of the most important drivers
of technology site selection decisions, particularly for small and mid-size
firms. Many of the nation’s most successful technology firms located
in cities with university-level research activity. San Jose is littered
with companies that started with local university graduates and technologies,
for example Google, Sun Microsystems, and Hewlett Packard.
A key driver of university research is federal funding. Grants from
NASA, the Department of Defense, and the Department of Health and Human
Services help drive leading-edge technologies. The Federal government
doled out $22 billion in grants for research and development in science
and engineering in 2001. The top 50 recipients of these funds included
prominent private institutions: Johns Hopkins, Harvard, and Stanford
as well as large public schools like the Universities of Michigan, North
Carolina, and Colorado. These top 50 schools accounted for over 36%
of the grants, leaving the majority of the funds to be dispersed among
lesser-known institutions.
Most if not all of the nation’s tech metros have at least one
top-tier research university. San Jose has Stanford and Berkeley, Boston
has Harvard and MIT, and Raleigh-Durham has Duke and UNC. According
to data from the National Science Foundation, in 2001, San Jose area
universities received $1.4 billion in R&D funding, Boston $980 million,
and Raleigh-Durham received $921 million.
The
Search for a Competitive Business Climate
Corporate site selection is increasingly affected by tax environments,
and more than ever, companies seek predictability and avoidance of risk
in their tax burden. Most tax and incentives decisions are made by capital-
or research-intensive industries such as semiconductor manufacturing,
electronics manufacturing, and biotech research. Tax liabilities can
vary greatly from state to state. While some states suffer high property
taxes, which greatly affect manufacturers, they often compensate with
accelerated depreciation schedules for technology equipment or investment
and R&D tax credits on income or purchases. Income tax apportionment
formulas can also vary widely from state to state. States with triple-factor-sales
formulas for corporate income heavily favor technology companies who
export a majority of their products or services out of the state. Labor-intensive
firms should closely monitor the impact of income taxes in many states.
Due to the complexity and variability of tax systems across the U.S.,
technology companies should employ the services of a talented site selector
or accounting firm to truly estimate the impact of their location decision.
Often, this analysis is done too late in the process to alter a decision
or be used as a basis for incentives negotiations.
Business climate evaluations should be based solely on tax analysis.
Economic growth observations may often sway a decision. Companies seek
out high growth, dynamic environments for many reasons. Often, economic
growth suggests better job opportunities in the region, which makes
recruiting talent easier. Also, a location’s entrepreneurial and
networking environment assists companies by allowing them to connect
with entrepreneurs commercializing new technology. Workers also enjoy
immense benefits by casually connecting with their technical peers in
town. Financing availability, particularly venture capital, is a top
reason why smaller technology firms relocate. As small businesses grow,
they require higher levels of capital to hire new employees, develop
prototypes, and launch their products to market. Venture capital firms
prefer to invest in firms close in proximity to them so that they are
more familiar with the company and can exert more control. The combination
of talent, research, and financing form the core of the technology clusters
in the U.S. such as Boston, San Jose, Austin, and Raleigh-Durham.

The
Site Selection Process for Technology Companies
Once the site selection team has determined its needs and ranked them
in importance, they must start the evaluation process:
The site selection process is comprised of seven main steps, which begin
with the project set-up.
1. Project set up / needs assessment / scope of search
2. Determine Incentives Strategy (optional)
3. Issue Requests for Proposals (optional)
4. Evaluation of top locations and sites
5. Cost of operation benchmarking
6. Short-list communities and engage in closing negotiations (optional)
7. Final selection
Step
1: Project Set-u p / Needs Assessment
It is important to determine project goals, facility needs, and site
selection criteria in the initial phases of any site selection project.
Initiate a 1-2 day brainstorming session regarding the scope of the
project, desired outcomes, and timeframe. These meetings should include
top management, facility directors, financial executives, accounting
consultants, and site selection consultants. Often, executives have
early expectations on where their next facility or office is best suited.
A discussion of incentives begins here, with the site selection consultants
giving an early assessment of what incentives could be available based
on similar type expansions and relocations. Milestones and success metrics
should be set. The most effective site selection efforts allow 6 to
12 months for the full evaluation, negotiation, and selection of a community.
Step 2: Determine an Incentives Strategy
(optional)
Most technology companies are moving at a pace too fast to allow the
exploration of incentives in their site selection decisions. For many,
incentives are often the icing on the cake, sweetening the deal often
after a decision has already been made. Software companies are generally
too small to see the benefit of financial incentives or just don’t
qualify. Others, such as manufacturers, know just how valuable incentives
can be. New industries such as nanotechnology, biotechnology, and fuel
cells, are now caught up in a virtual “incentives arms race”
among states and communities. Hiring a site selection consultant is
a requirement to effectively explore the full range of incentives opportunities.
In addition, a consultant provides a firm “arm’s length”
protection from any problems or aggressive negotiations that might sour
the public relations impact of an announced move. While the primary
goal of incentives is to remedy a prejudiced or burdensome tax system,
incentives often become a stamp of approval by communities that large
technology companies seek in their local public relations. More than
ever, incentives are cash-based, where state and local governments commit
funds to invest in infrastructure, workforce training grants, free land
and buildings, or even straight cash to a company in order to win large
projects and make a marketing statement to the world.
Step 3: Issue a Request for Proposals (optional)
If a technology company desires to pursue incentives, it is important
that its site selection representative issue a “request for proposal”
to a large list of communities. This ensures that a full range of options
are presented to the decisionmakers, and incentives negotiations can
begin. Technology companies should present themselves to communities
in a confidential fashion, using project code names and relying on non-staff
to interact with local representatives.
Step 4: Evaluation of Top Locations and
Sites
The technology company or its site selection consultant must do thorough
research on its list of potential locations. Today, communities maintain
much of their information on an economic development website. In fact,
site selectors use the Internet to gain most of the information they
need in their evaluation before any phone calls or visits occur. Typing
“Texas Economic Development” into Google will generally
take you to the appropriate Texas website, and other websites aim to
centralize information for numerous communities across the U.S. Communities
should be evaluated for each of the criteria set out in Step 1: Project
Set-up. Good site selectors will devise a weighted ranking system for
all factors and rate communities on each.
For technology companies that require very specific sites for new construction,
such as an electronics manufacturer, visits to a community must be conducted
by an experienced engineering or site selection team. These individuals
make drive-by evaluations of sites and typically get information for
local chambers of commerce on their acreage, topography, soil type,
zoning, geotechnical conditions, utilities, and access points. Often,
the lack of sites and infrastructure may remove a community from a site
selector’s review list. Technology companies are increasingly
focused on the supply of developed, “shovel-ready” sites
in communities around the U.S., thus raising the bar for corporate recruitment.
Many communities pre-certify their manufacturing site for specific uses
such as semiconductor manufacturing or automotive manufacturing.
Utility evaluations are still very important to technology firms. The
demands of the digital world result in the large consumption of power.
Affordable, reliable electricity is of utmost importance, particularly
for manufacturers or datacenters. Dual-feed and gasoline-powered generators
are extreme examples of requirements. Reliable telecommunications are
equally important. Site selectors will evaluate brownouts, outages due
to storms, power spikes and excess capacity for peak periods. After
the recent massive black outs in the northeast, reliability of the electric
grid gets deserves scrutiny.
Step 5: Cost of operation benchmarking
Technology firms vary in their attention to costs. Manufacturers and
large consumers of electricity do thorough evaluations of the costs
for various locations. This benchmarking analysis should cover the cost
of labor, supplier purchases, air travel among locations, real estate
costs, and tax costs. This analysis is generally done by the site selection
consultant or an in-house financial analyst.
Step 6: Short-list communities and engage
in closing negotiations (optional)
As the process moves to the final stages, the competing area’s
recurring cost structure becomes an important factor. Benchmarking the
final communities for a variety of weighted scores can help determine
where an operation would experience the lowest operating costs. Numerous
factors are ranked and weighted for all areas in contention to determine
which areas are best suited for the operation.
If incentives are part of the selection process, intense negotiations
are required in the final weeks of the decision. Corporate executives
must be involved in these negotiations and an internal understanding
of incentives targets must be understood by all. Confidentiality is
best kept throughout negotiations with communities.
Step 7: Final selection
The final selection of a community often rests on one or two key requirements:
the availability of a site, the desire of the CEO, a marketing goal,
or an incentive. The winning city is almost certain to be the one which
brought the most comfort and enthusiasm to the CEO and the executive
team. Thorough evaluations by staff and consultants can provide strong
guidance to decisionmakers, but not a final decision. Once a decision
is made, technology companies should make every effort to maximize the
publicity and exposure in the community in order to build goodwill and
begin to attract the much needed technical talent that they will need.
Closing
Tip: Most technology companies are after a young and entrepreneurial
workforce. The strong presence of the 25-45 year old age group may be
one of the most important and decisive demographics in determining if
a community will make it to the short list.
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