BCBusiness

February 2016 The New Face of Philanthrophy

With a mission to inform, empower, celebrate and advocate for British Columbia's current and aspiring business leaders, BCBusiness go behind the headlines and bring readers face to face with the key issues and people driving business in B.C.

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Institutions tend to invest in people that they know and trust, and it's a problem if a company doesn't have someone to vouch for them on their home turf. Despite that, a lot of big U.S. tech giants—Microsoft, Sony, Salesforce and Amazon—are setting up shop in Vancouver. Why is that? Silicon Valley is starved for talent; salaries have skyrock- eted and they are having a very diœcult time —nding people. The top companies try to —nd the best people globally, and are hiring them globally, but U.S. immigration policies are limit- ing their ability to bring them to the States. As a result, these companies have opened up a number of small oœces all over the world to house these people. Having a bunch of small oœces is not particularly eœcient, especially for big projects where people need to work together, so some companies are starting to consolidate their small oœces into larger ones and they are looking to Vancouver. We are the closest international city to all the largest tech companies in Silicon Valley and Seattle. We also have a great base of technical talent, are politically stable, and B.C. is a great place to live—so people want to come here. Plus, the Canadian dollar is suddenly 30 per cent cheaper, and the Canadian government has been happy to welcome these high-paying tech workers to Canada. You've had a bit of a peri- patetic career. You got into fund management after a successful career in digital media—pairing up with Don Mattrick in the mid-'80s to launch Distinctive Software, which you eventually sold to EA. But you also almost went into the restaurant business. Don and I went to high school together—and truth be known, Don and I skipped a lot of school. We had a passion for video games.¢My dad had a restaurant— Chinese smorgasbord, which I don't think even exists anymore in Vancouver—and I knew it was like a 70-hour work week with no time o˜. I had to go —gure out something because there was no way I was going to run the restaurant. Luckily for me, Don knew games. Don had the ability to intuitively know if a game was good enough and what needed to be —xed. We sold Distinctive in 1991, but it wasn't until 1995 that I had to have the hard conversa- tion with my dad that I wasn't going to run the restaurant. Thank God I couldn't cook or I'd still be there. vanedge exITs W Wurldtech (Vancouver): acquired by General Electric in 2015 for an undis- closed amount W Metafor (Vancouver): acquired by Splunk in 2015 for an undisclosed amount W Mediacore (Victoria): acquired by Work- day in 2015 for an undisclosed amount W Recon Instruments (Vancouver): acquired by Intel in 2015 for $175 million

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