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Should Canadian startups move to Silicon Valley?

Thank you to Geoff Foulds for this guest post.

Does a Silicon Valley insider think it’s best to relocate to the Bay Area? Not always, says Ariel Poler.

Poler, one of the most connected and prolific Angel investors in the world, was the guest for Startup Grind Toronto’s July 9 Google Hangout Fireside Chat.

“Re-locating to San Francisco could be the wrong thing if you don’t have your core team,” says Poler. “I’ve seen single entrepreneurs who come here and try to build a team from scratch and that’s really tough.”

Finding talented people in the Bay Area is especially hard. You compete for talent against the largest pool of sexy startups on the planet. At the same time you compete with some of the world’s biggest name-brand tech companies and their offers of cushy corporate jobs.

Poler isn’t the only one to wave this warning flag. Fierce competition for talent is among Inc.’s the Top 5 Reasons To Avoid Silicon Valley.

Says Poler, “some companies might be better off moving here, but not right away.”

To illustrate, Poler points to StumbleUpon, where he served as Chairman of the Board. “Their product was getting traction, they had 100s of 1,000s of users. The product demoed really well. The business model was clear.” Not only was the core team was in place, “the team was ready to move.”  StumbleUpon was co-founded in Calgary by Garrett Camp, who went on to co-found Uber.

If you’re at that point, dithering over the move can be deadly.

You get a strong sense of just how intimate Poler expects the connection between himself and entrepreneurs he backs will be. “As an investor, I only deal with entrepreneurs I’d have dinner with… It’s difficult for me to add value for remote workers. And I don’t like airplanes and long telephone calls.”

And one last point. Poler encourages people to be skeptics when it comes to myths propagated and promoted by the tech press. One popular notion, is that when you have an opportunity that could be huge, speed is of the essence to capture it. Poler disagrees.

“Speed is over rated,” says Poler, “it’s more important to be going in the right direction. I’m not sure I’ve seen a startup that failed by going too slow.”

A big thank you to Pivotal Labs for providing the space. Pivotal’s leadership in agile development of highly-scalable mobile and web software was evident in the superb meeting room.

Michael Cayley
Michael Cayleyhttp://www.cdling.com
Having attracted over US$50-million in investment and closed over $21-million in pre-launch sales for startups in China, the USA and domestically, Michael is living the struggle of the self-funded, pre-revenue Founder in Canada. He understands the pace of global innovation. He founded & funded the Ontario Cross-border Technology Innovation Ecosystem (OCTIE) study and he designed and taught the first, post graduate level, social media course in a full time program in Canada: crowdsourcing over 100 global experts as mentors. Cayley is the Founder of Cdling Capital Services Inc. (pronounced "seedling") a ratings agency that measures risk and builds trust between Founders, Investors and Experts in the era of low cost, globally funded startups and he is the Founder & Director of Startup Grind Toronto.

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Jim Love, Chief Content Officer, IT World Canada

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