Why Silicon Valley is Silicon Valley
I have a simple answer to the question of why Silicon Valley is the hub for all things startupy (I swear it’s a real word…). While this answer is probably glaringly obvious to those in the SF Bay area, those who have never been here (such as myself less than 2 months ago) seem a lot less likely to realize it. It’s the density of important people.
In the last few months I have met a ridiculously large number of entrepreneurs: everyone from CEOs of multi-billion-dollar conglomerates to immensely successful businesspeople-turned-investors to tons of everyday (and I use the term very loosely, because most of these people are anything but “everyday”) startup founders. I’ve received 2 or 3 job offers, had so many famous names thrown at me that I can only hope to remember a few of them. It’s been immensely awe-inspiring. How many people with such influence have I met on Long Island or in Pittsburgh? A few at best (no offense Luis). It’s a more advanced case of the Infinite Monkey Theorem. If you put a thousand entrepreneurs in a room with a thousand computers, you will almost surely wind up with a thousand successful startups, while one entrepreneur is less likely to produce one startup in isolation. To put it more succinctly:
The number of brilliant ideas increases exponentially with the number of brilliant people.
Funny how that works, isn’t it?
silicon valley is great because it houses some of the world’s best electronics firm “
i haven’t been on the silicon valley but i would really love to visit that place. i bet that it is a very exciting place to visit .”~