Mamdani Is Fundamentally Reimagining Violence
CBS News' 'Fact-Checks' of Trump's Address Ignore the Facts
The Presidential Address Has the Press Going on Defense...but They Seem Confused What...
Are Wisconsin Democrats in Full-Blown Panic Mode?
Maine Senate Race Shows Democrats Are Determined to Grant Illegal Aliens Amnesty
What Could Possibly Go Wrong With Mamdani's Plan for Free City-Run Babysitting?
United Airlines Is Offering Free Flight Changes for Customers Angry Over Trump's New...
Reject the Evil of Antisemitism!
Third Circuit Spikes New Jersey Ban on 'Assault Firearms' and Large Capacity Magazines
Everything Went Wrong for James Talarico This Week After His Epstein-Tied Backer Was...
Chinese Nationals Accused of Funneling $40 Million in Fraud Proceeds to Overseas Accounts
Dina Titus Campaign Under Fresh Campaign Finance Scrutiny While Carrie Buck Extends Cash...
Talks 'Have Not Stopped' Between United States and Iran Despite Strikes
Foul Play: Michigan Man Charged in Alleged Million-Dollar Sports Complex Fraud
Trump Demands Accountability As Canadian Wildfire Smoke Hits America
OPINION

Will Second Tier Cities Benefit From Virtual?

The opinions expressed by columnists are their own and do not necessarily represent the views of Townhall.com.
Will Second Tier Cities Benefit From Virtual?

Did you catch this in today’s Wall Street Journal?

In a recent Forbes ranking of tech growth in the nation’s largest 51 metro areas, the Midwest had three cities within the top 15, with Columbus in third position, followed by Indianapolis and St. Louis.

Advertisement

The whole blog they cited is here. Midwesterners are migrating and making economic choices. Detroit is dying, but places like Indianapolis are doing okay. Ironically, Detroit and the state of Michigan have deep financial problems brought on by horrible government over the past fifty years. Mitch Daniels straightened out Indiana and they are firm financial footing.

They go on to say:

The main reason is that middle America is a clear picture of how much the basics matter: Cost of living, job quality, schools, and opportunities to develop the right skills for the best jobs. The areas within the Midwest that have gotten the basics right are poaching people and companies from the areas that haven’t.

Indianapolis, Columbus, Cincinnati, Peoria and the Quad Cities, Omaha, St. Louis, Madison, Milwaukee, Minneapolis, and many other second tier cities are starting to get energized.

Entrepreneurs are finding it pays to cut their fixed costs of operation.

Newer technology allows them to actually accomplish things virtually that they couldn’t have done five or ten years ago. Now it’s not necessarily about being in one hot area with a great physical network. It’s more about leveraging an international virtual network. For many entrepreneurs it also means being really close to your customers. Being close to the source of your cash flow is more important than being close to developers. In addition, they get the benefit of cheaper costs of living, better schools for their families, and those midwestern core values that Americans gravitate towards.

Advertisement

We are knitting a midwestern quilt. It’s not about trying to steal or compete with Silicon Valley. It’s about utilizing core business strengths that have sustained us for generations. Like a prairie, it’s quiet and understated. In sum, pretty powerful.
 

Join the conversation as a VIP Member

Recommended

Trending on Townhall Videos

Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement