Vancouver Sun

Amazon posts 300 job openings in Vancouver

300 job openings hailed as ‘a great signal’ to the world about business in Vancouver

- DERRICK PENNER depenner@postmedia.com twitter.com/derrickpen­ner

Online retail and technology giant Amazon has been coy about its ambitions for growth in Vancouver, but the careers section of its Canadian website tells part of the story, with more than 300 job postings for skilled tech-sector positions in the city.

It hints at a significan­t expansion of one of Vancouver’s bigger tech players at the same time the city’s startup sector is gaining momentum and trying to draw from the same pool of skilled workers.

However, key voices in the sector view the signs of Amazon’s expansion as a welcome sight for the city’s overall industry, even if it increases competitio­n for them.

“The reality is I would rather have Amazon setting up shop here than somewhere else,” said Shafim Diamond Tejani, president of startup incubator Victory Square Labs.

“Them being here and expanding their presence creates really good (well-paying) opportunit­ies in the innovation ecosystem.”

The Seattle-headquarte­red e-commerce giant establishe­d its main Vancouver tech beachhead on several floors of the Telus Garden on Georgia Street in downtown Vancouver when the building opened in 2015.

Amazon did not respond to Postmedia’s request for an interview, but the positions the company is advertisin­g for now — most of which have been listed since the start of this year — carry such titles as software developmen­t engineer, research scientist, data engineer and manager of database administra­tion.

The roles explained in job descriptio­ns relate to the developmen­t of Amazon Web Services’ cloud-computing business, operations of its fulfilment-centre warehouses and developing systems for its recruiting infrastruc­ture.

A few of the salaries for jobs with those titles listed on the recruiting website Glassdoor range from $89,171 per year for software-developmen­t engineer I, $111,465 per year for a software engineer II to $155,553 for a senior product manager.

“This is the influx of a remarkable job engine and a remarkable business,” said Michael Dingle, an advisory partner with the consulting firm PwC.

Dingle, a former tech entreprene­ur and PwC’s practice leader in technology financing, said Amazon’s interest probably comes from a couple of directions.

Canada is attractive to the behemoth as a marketplac­e both for customers ordering books and clothes on Amazon Prime and businesses using its cloud-computing products through Amazon Web Services.

“Growth is the name of the game,” Dingle said.

Amazon has had an erratic profit picture over the past year. It posted a profit of US$197 million for its financial quarter ending June 30, compared with US$857 million for the same quarter a year ago.

The company’s revenue, however, continues an upward climb, hitting US$38 billion for the first quarter, up 25 per cent from the same period a year ago.

Major Canadian cities such as Montreal, Toronto and Vancouver have growing reputation­s as places to build technology companies, Dingle said, which is something else that draws big players like Microsoft and Amazon.

Vancouver’s geography, and the fact it shares the same time zone as bigger technology hubs in Seattle and Silicon Valley outside of San Francisco also helps attract technology firms, said Ian McKay, CEO of the Vancouver Economic Commission.

That the city is perched on the edge of the Asia-Pacific market, and overseen by government­s that have been willing to facilitate the migration of skilled individual­s from abroad, also works in the city’s favour, McKay said.

Amazon doesn’t publicize numbers, but McKay said outside estimates have the firm at about 1,000 employees locally.

“The notion of 300 job openings (at Amazon) doesn’t surprise me,” McKay said.

“This is a great signal to the rest of the world that this is a place people need to be …

“And people don’t always stay with their original employers. Sometimes they reach a level, then spin off and create startups. That’s nothing but good for a (technology sector) like ours.”

Tejani added that labour tends to be cheaper in Vancouver than Seattle and Silicon Valley, allowing companies to “build here in Canadian dollars, live in Canada, but still be able to generate (sales in U.S. dollars).”

Tejani acknowledg­ed the high cost of housing has emerged as a recruiting concern for some employers, but he looks at it as another challenge to overcome.

And Vancouver is still a cheaper place to live than other hubs such as Silicon Valley.

“I think we have all the check marks, other than affordable housing, of a great place to build a tech company,” Tejani said.

Vancouver’s tech sector still “punches above its weight, in every respect,” Dingle said, and Amazon’s hiring spree helps give it more critical mass. “I can’t help but think of the concept of a rising tide lifts all boats.”

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 ?? GERRY KAHRMANN/FILES ?? Amazon has occupied several floors of the Telus Garden downtown since the office tower opened in 2015. Outside estimates peg the number of local Amazon employees at around 1,000.
GERRY KAHRMANN/FILES Amazon has occupied several floors of the Telus Garden downtown since the office tower opened in 2015. Outside estimates peg the number of local Amazon employees at around 1,000.
 ??  ?? Ian McKay
Ian McKay

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