US I'm a tech executive who moved from Silicon Valley to Houston. I know firsthand why the tech industry is packing up and hightailing it to Texas.

I'm a tech executive who moved from Silicon Valley to Houston. I know firsthand why the tech industry is packing up and hightailing it to Texas.​

  • Texas is poised to outpace California in industrial innovation.
  • There is a reason venture capitalists are pouring millions of dollars into tech innovation in Texas.
  • Texas is home to incredible diversity, a spirit of ingenuity, and major industries that need innovation.
  • Yang Tang is the chief technology officer at Houston-based GoExpedi.
  • This is an opinion column. The thoughts expressed are those of the author.
  • See more stories on Insider's business page.
Here's something you already know: California-based businesses - Tesla, Oracle, Hewlett Packard Enterprise, and many others - have made Texas the state of choice when it comes to relocating headquarters and opening satellite offices for several years now.

The reasons? It's cheaper to operate a business; there is no state income tax; there is an abundance of land, pro-business policies, lower cost of living, significant talent pool for hiring; and the list goes on and on.

But let's discuss something that may boggle some minds - at least for those who are out-of-state looking in. Why are tech executives leaving Silicon Valley? It's easy to understand why an oil and gas company would relocate to Texas - Houston is the energy capital of the world - or even healthcare startups - the city is home to some of the world's premier medical centers, but why would technology companies leave the reigning epicenter of the tech universe for the Lone Star state?

The primary reason, in my opinion, is because of the opportunities to apply new technologies in our country's largest industrial sectors. I am Texas's latest Silicon Valley transplant and am witnessing this firsthand.

Like many other tech executives, I think Texas is positioned to outpace California due to its proximity to the world's top companies in energy, healthcare, and aerospace, to name a few, and its willingness to innovate with technology in those industries.

That's why I'm here, leading the technology operations for an emerging e-commerce company for industrial businesses like oil and gas, manufacturing, and others. Before I dive into the immense opportunities for enterprises driven by the state, I'd like to quickly share my journey so you can better understand why there's no place like Texas.

My journey​

My father grew up in communist China in tenement housing. Living with his family of 12 in a single room, he was the only child to attend college. He knew it would be nearly impossible to be successful through hard work alone given various cultural shifts by the country following his graduation. Therefore, he moved to the US a few years later and built a career in astrophysics and data mining. He eventually landed a rewarding financial services career in Boston - where I'm from.

I graduated from universities on the East and West coast - most recently the MIT Executive MBA program - and worked most of my career for companies with footprints in Silicon Valley, from Accenture to eBay to Walmart to ABInBev. During my time in that area, I personally witnessed what works and what can be improved upon in an increasingly digital world.

… And I will go to Texas​

Don't get me wrong. Silicon Valley has and will continue to pave the way for some of the world's most forward-thinking companies, supported by its specialized tech workforce, concentration of capital, and world-class educational institutions. However, in today's world, I believe the innovation stemming from this region is incremental compared to what I've observed in Houston.

Out of all the major and booming markets of Texas that house various large industries I chose Houston as my new hometown for its diversity of people and thought. The city's major port, healthcare systems, and energy sector have had a significant effect on the local, state, and national economies and have set Houston apart from the rest of Texas. Additionally, as the most diverse city in the country, Houston presents endless opportunities and is a melting pot for new ideas and the spirit of ingenuity - the same spirit and community that created Viet-Cajun Crawfish.

That's what makes Houston a prime location for the next wave of innovation. Industrial companies in the region are securing millions of venture capital dollars annually - $2.6 billion in total over the last five years - and are allowing engineers, like myself, to do what they do best: use their tech, resources, skills, and knowledge to solve unique and complex issues out in the field. That's where the true power of technology takes shape and allows us to grow economies, attract more jobs and talent, improve lifestyle and beyond.

Prime examples are the revitalization of the aerospace industry from Elon Musk's SpaceX in Boca Chica, Texas, and Houston-based biopharma company Nanospectra, which is spearheading a patient-centric use of nanomedicine for the removal of cancerous tissue.

The same yearning for opportunity and innovation my father experienced can now be found in Houston - not just on the East and West coasts. If folks looking in still don't see Houston and Texas as the next technology mecca, they soon will.
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Emphasis was mine.
 
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Fuck off, fuck wad we don’t want your Califaggot ass here, Houston is already on the brink of becoming an utter shit hole as it is fix your shit instead of spreading your societal disease to other states.
 
Diversity means yummy fooderino. Every fucking time with these people.
Most of that food is easy enough to make yourself unless you live in an area where everyone only eats abominations from 1960's cookbooks and the grocery stores only carry ingredients for that. If you do, get therapy. That sounds traumatizing.
 
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Can someone American explain to me why silicon valley bros have been pushing for permanent WFH shit for the last 18 months? Surely companies can just fire you and outsource your job to someone in Iowa or Oklahoma who is willing to do your job for a third of the pay?
 
Can someone American explain to me why silicon valley bros have been pushing for permanent WFH shit for the last 18 months? Surely companies can just fire you and outsource your job to someone in Iowa or Oklahoma who is willing to do your job for a third of the pay?
This is a positive IMO. Yes, it’s happening lol.
 
You lose control of your cities, you lose control of the culture, economics, education, and finally political system.

Abbott is too much of a aw-shucks GOP-type to recognize this and act, IMO.
Are you aware of what the politics of Houston already is? This is the city that gave us such sterling civic-minded political figures as Sheila Jackson-Lee. Every urban area in the country has roughly similar politics as the (R)/(D) political divide is largely along rural/urban whitecollar/bluecollar and racial divides.

In the cities it isn't about reps versus dems like the rest of the nation, it is dems against themselves with occasionally the reps and the socialists playing spoiler. Just because it is Texas doesn't mean jack.
 
Great so your saying in about 10 years texas will be a failed communist state like california and you'll being paying 10k more for cars due to environmental regulations, you'll thirst to death because water can't be properly managed because of an endangered gold fish, and you'll have to eat cicadias because meat is murder? Keep celebrating the commies fleeing california for texas like its some victory and not just the termites moving on to a new tree to rot from the inside out.
 
Can someone American explain to me why silicon valley bros have been pushing for permanent WFH shit for the last 18 months? Surely companies can just fire you and outsource your job to someone in Iowa or Oklahoma who is willing to do your job for a third of the pay?
Not a Silicon Valley bro. I assume a lot of them would prefer to move to Iowa or Oklahoma and work for 1/3 of the pay, if they could. Personally, I'd go digital nomad. But "work from home" covers many different scenarios. A lot of WFH jobs still want you within commuting distance, "just in case you have to come in for something." I've gone in for something once in the last 16 months, but rules are rules, so my dream of staking out a new workplace for every season remains just that, a dream. And some WFH jobs require regular attendance at the office for meetings, or for no reason, even if all your work can be done from home.
 
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I just want to point out that, if anyone is going to flip the second most populous state "blue," it's millions of wetbacks, not tens of thousands of coding socks.
 
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Just admit that the main reason is that the hippie dream is still alive in CA.
But instead of the hippies being penniless, powerless outsiders, they now own huge amounts of the housing stock and exert considerable influence over the body politic. And they still stick by their mantra of high taxes as a yardstick of social progressivenes, as this allows the CA state government to intrude more and more with diversity requirements, second amendment fuckery, and funding politicians to travel across the country to make veiled threats during controversial trials.
Powerlevel: Californian

Hard disagree. Most of these people aren't Californian, they're rootless cosmopolitans, which I'm not using as a dog whistle for Jews. I'm saying they're people from all around the world who came here because they went into a career in the tech sector, and if there's a tech sector job somewhere else, they'll go there just as easily.

And not to get too Inside Baseball, but the disconnect between the citizenry and the Democrat Machine is enormous, even for people on the Left.

Newsom getting recalled is going to be a coin toss, and this in a state where the legislature has a Democrat supermajority.

Republican politicians here tend to be troglodytes because Trump-style "fuck the libs" has been a winning platform for them since the days of the Vietnam War. Our two Californian presidents have been Nixon and Reagan.

There's a lot more diversity of thought here than you would think.

That being said, fuck the Bay Area.
 
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