fattony
Senior Member
- Joined
- Jan 28, 2013
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Your examples of Raytheon and L3 are bad analogies here. Neither are 1/20th as diverse in their businesses as Amazon which is involved in the Defense/Space/Medical/Commerce/Computer/Entertainment/Farming/Programming/.....etc...etc businesses. Amazon synergizes much more than a Raytheon or L3. Coordination of policy and different fields is more important to Amazon. Is it the #1 reason to move to DC? Not at all. But could it be reason #7 that tips a close race? Sure.
I wasn't basing it on lobbying politicians (the lunch with a Senator thing is a nice side option, but probably #58 down the list of priorities for the H2Q move).
Far higher priority is the access to the medical/tech/biotech/space agencies. As I clearly wrote in my post: "More likely, they will be able to limo over to NIH, the FDA, Goddard Space , National Institute of Standards and Technology, the FCC, the US Patent and Trademark Office, Dept of Commerce, etc. a lot quicker also." By the way, there is a lot of tech talent at those agencies.
Respectfully, you seem to have this backward. Defense contractors actually need to convince federal employees to give them money and often collaborate with them on a monthly, weekly, or daily basis. No fluff about influencing policy, I'm talking about a primary source of revenue for their primary business model. In my company (not a defense prime) something like 90% of our revenue is from federal contracts and we don't have anything more than satellite offices in the DC area. We fly to DC a lot though.
In contrast, none of those agencies you list are, to my knowledge at least, funding sources for Amazon. Amazon doesn't have thousands of employees interacting with, collaborating with, and trying to get money from federal agencies. How many Amazonians a day are even on the phone with DC, let alone on a plane going there? This is a non-issue.
And finally, if "proximity to federal employees" is priority #7 in this decision, then it will not factor in at all. That isn't how businesses make decisions (sadly I've had 6-sigma training and I know more MBAs than I would like). It is inconceivable that DC would be in a dead heat with another city (e.g. Philly) on priorities #1-6 and finally the #7 tie breaker kicks in.