The Arizona Republic

Are sun and affordabil­ity sufficient for growth?

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Sunshine and affordable homes have long spurred metro Phoenix’s growth.

On the downside, Phoenix has also long been known as an area with inexpensiv­e labor and warehouses for call centers and distributi­on hubs.

But at least part of the Valley’s original growth formula is now helping a number of startups bring coveted tech, automation and software-engineerin­g jobs to the area.

Metro Phoenix is no mini Silicon Valley yet, but Greater Phoenix Economic Council CEO Chris Camacho and representa­tives from a group of venture-capital-funded Phoenix startups said the area is near a “tipping point to become a tech hub.”

They made that prediction to Arizona’s top real-estate and growth executives at Urban Land Institute Arizona’s annual forecast on Thursday. The audience of hundreds listened closely as they described what could be a huge growth shifter for the Valley.

Camacho kicked off the panel called Phoenix Beyond the Tipping Point: More Than Sunshine and Cheap Labor by citing metro Phoenix’s techjob growth last year: 58 percent.

Brenda Schmidt, CEO of the health-care tech firm Solera Health based in downtown Phoenix, said thanks to Arizona State University and other universiti­es in Arizona, the state has the tech talent but is having a hard time keeping those people here after they graduate.

Ori Eisen, who founded Scottsdale­based ID authentica­tion firm Trusona, said the deterrent for the Valley becoming a growing tech hub isn’t attracting venture capital. It’s attracting enough engineers.

“We are paying $150,000 for jobs that we can’t fill,” he told the crowd.

That’s where the Valley’s affordable home prices come in.

Eisen said one of the first things he shows engineer and developer job candidates is a picture of a beautiful Phoenix home with a pool.

“They ask if it’s a $15 million home from Silicon Valley,” he said. “I tell

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