Silicon Beach
Technology hub in California, US
Silicon Beach is the Westside region of the Los Angeles metropolitan area that is home to more than 500 technology companies, including startups . It is particularly applied to the coastal strip from Los Angeles International Airport north to the Santa Monica Mountains ,[ 1] but the term may be applied loosely or colloquially to most anywhere in the Los Angeles Basin . Startups seeded here include Snapchat [ 2] and Tinder . Major technology companies that opened offices in the region including Google , Yahoo! , YouTube , BuzzFeed , Facebook , Salesforce , AOL , Electronic Arts , Sony , EdgeCast Networks , MySpace , Amazon.com , Apple, Inc. , and Netflix .[ 3] By some 2012 metrics, the region was the second or third-most prominent technology hub in the world.[ 4] [ 5] In the first six months of 2013, 94 new start-ups in Silicon Beach raised over $500 million in funding, and there were nine acquisitions.[ 6]
The area offers relatively easy access to LAX (Los Angeles International Airport), the biggest and most connected airport in western North America.[ 7]
As in the San Francisco Bay Area, the influx of technology companies has boosted home and office rents and real estate prices in Playa Vista , Playa Del Rey , Westchester , Santa Monica , and Venice , already high previously due to beachfront location. The effects are also spilling over into Marina del Rey and Hermosa Beach .[ 8]
Start-up pockets have also emerged in nearby Culver City , West L.A. , and El Segundo .[ 9] Other pockets include Downtown Los Angeles , Beverly Hills , Hollywood , Glendale , and the San Fernando Valley .[ 10] [ 11] The tendency of companies to congregate in these centrally-located, high income areas has raised concerns[ 12] about the feasibility of racial minorities joining the workforce, as they tend to live in further outlying areas.[ 13]
Silicon Beach is also home to start-up incubators and accelerators, such as Amplify.LA, Science, Disney Accelerator, TechStars , and Cedars Sinai .[ 14]
The Los Angeles metro area was home to 88,000 engineers in 2021, the highest number of any metro area in the United States.[ 15] [ 16] Higher education institutions in Los Angeles County graduate 6,600 engineering majors a year, the highest of any county in the United States.[ 17]
Higher education institutions headquartered in Silicon Beach include Loyola Marymount University and Otis College of Art and Design .[ 18] Other higher education institutions in the nearby Southern California region or with satellite campuses in/nearby Silicon Beach include: Pepperdine University , Santa Monica College , Art Center College of Design , California Institute of Technology , University of California Los Angeles , University of Southern California , Occidental College , Cal State L. A. , Cal State Northridge , Cal State Long Beach , Cal State Dominguez Hills , Cal Poly Pomona , and the Claremont Colleges .
List of technology companies based in Silicon Beach
Company
Year founded
Industry
Valuation
Abstract
2020
Govtech
AdColony
2011
Adtech
Acquired by Opera for $350 million[ 19]
Age of Learning
2007
Education
Bitium
2012
Cloud Computing
Acquired by Google for an unknown amount[ 20]
Branded Online
2010
Ecommerce & Online Marketing Agency
Cornerstone OnDemand
1992
Cloud
Distillery
2008
Mobile Application Development, UX/UI
Dollar Shave Club
2011
Consumer packaged goods
Acquired by Unilever for $1 billion[ 21]
Eaze
2014
Cannabis
Enplug
2012
Software
$2.5 million[ 22] [ 23]
Fair
2016
Automotive, Fintech
Falcon Computing Solutions
2014
High Performance Computing, FPGA acceleration - tools and solutions
Flexport
2013
Digital Freight Forwarding
FloQast
2013
Accounting Software
Flustr
2019
Consumer Tech, Entertainment
Fullscreen
2011
Digital Media
Gnarbox
2014
Consumer electronics
GOAT
2015
e-commerce, Fashion (sneakers)
Headspace
2010
Health
HelenHealth (ZB Technologies, Inc.)
2016
Digital Health
The Honest Company
2012
e-commerce
Honey
2012
Cashback website, online coupons
Acquired by PayPal in 2020 for $4 billion[ 24] [ 25] [ 26]
Hulu
2007
Television Streaming Services
$15.8 billion[ 27]
Hyperloop One
2014
Transportation
LegalZoom
1999
Legal
Libermans Co
2021
Investments
$400 million[ 28]
MatchCraft
1998
Digital Marketing Platform Technology & Services
Metropolis Technologies
2017
Parking and artificial intelligence company
MuteSix
2014
Performance Marketing Agency
Nasty Gal
2006
Retail
Unknown - Chapter 11[ 29]
Oculus VR
2012
Virtual reality
Acquired by Facebook, Inc. in 2014 for $2 billion[ 30]
Onestop Internet
2004
Full Service Ecommerce Agency
Ring
2012
Home Security Devices
Acquired by Amazon for $1 billion[ 31]
Riot Games
2006
Video Games
Science 37
2014
Medical technology
Scopely
2011
Video Games
$1.7 billion[ 32]
ServiceTitan
2012
Software technology platform
$8.3 billion[ 33]
Snail Games
2000
Video Games
Snap Inc.
2011
Social media
$23 billion[ 34]
Swagbucks
2007
Digital Rewards & Cash Back
Tala
2011
Fintech
Thrive Market
2013
e-commerce
TI Health
2010
Data and Analytics, Healthcare Digital Marketing
TigerConnect
2010
Messaging , Text Analytics, Communications Infrastructure
$625 million[ 35]
Tinder
2012
Social Media
TrueCar
2005
Automotive websites
$1.65 billion[ 36]
Wag
2014
Pets
WebJoint[ 37]
2014
Cannabis
Whisper
2012
Social media
Wpromote
2001
Digital Marketing Agency
.xyz
2014
Internet Domain Registry
ZestFinance
2009
Fintech
ZipRecruiter
2010
Hiring
Other uses
References
^ Machalinski, Anne (May 22, 2019). "Los Angeles Tech Scene Expands Beyond Silicon Beach" . Barrons . Retrieved July 23, 2019 .
^ Hernandez, Daniel (August 23, 2019). "Snapchat's Disappearing Act Leaves Venice Beach Searching for Its Future" . The New York Times . ISSN 0362-4331 . Retrieved August 24, 2019 .
^ "Google, Netflix, Amazon, and Apple are planning on becoming millionaires of a different kind" . January 16, 2019.
^ "Startup Genome Ranks The World's Top Startup Ecosystems: Silicon Valley, Tel Aviv & L.A. Lead The Way" . TechCrunch . November 20, 2012.
^ "Silicon Beach emerges as a tech hotbed" . USA Today . July 15, 2012.
^ "Over $500M Raised by 92 LA Startups in the First Half of 2013" .
^ Sharp, Sonja (August 21, 2019). " 'I'm not even 30, and I'm flying my own jet' — Silicon Beach elites take a seat in the cockpit" . Los Angeles Times . Retrieved August 21, 2019 .
^ Logan, Tim (January 2, 2015) "Buoyed by Silicon Beach, Westchester enjoys a housing surge" Los Angeles Times
^ Khouri, Andrew (January 15, 2016). "Bixby Land's $49-million office building sale a sign 'it's not the old El Segundo' " . Los Angeles Times . Retrieved January 16, 2016 .
^ Chang, Andrea (March 7, 2015). "Tech scene takes hold in revitalized downtown L.A." Los Angeles Times .
^ Ungerleider, Neal (October 31, 2014). "Why A Subway-Building Binge Could Transform L.A.'s Tech Culture" . Fast Company . Retrieved December 28, 2015 .
^ "Why Tech Degrees Are Not Putting More Blacks and Hispanics Into Tech Jobs" .
^ Haya El Nasser (April 29, 2015). "Job sprawl hurting minorities and the poor in suburbia" . america.aljazeera.com . Retrieved August 21, 2019 .
^ "A list of top LA accelerators and incubators" . May 17, 2013.
^ "America's Engineering Hubs: The Cities With The Greatest Capacity For Innovation" . Forbes . July 13, 2013.
^ "May 2021 Metropolitan and Nonmetropolitan Area Occupational Employment and Wage Estimates Los Angeles-Long Beach-Anaheim, CA" .
^ "Engineering" . datausa.io . Archived from the original on June 7, 2023. Retrieved June 26, 2023 .
^ Staff (June 2018). "Silicon Beach: The Next Wave" . LMU Magazine . Loyola Marymount University. Archived from the original on August 13, 2015.
^ Gagliordi, Natalie. "Opera Software acquires AdColony for up to $350 million" . ZDNet . Retrieved January 8, 2019 .
^ "Google Cloud acquires cloud identity management company Bitium" . TechCrunch . September 26, 2017. Retrieved January 8, 2019 .
^ Primack, Dan (July 19, 2016). "Unilever Buys Dollar Shave Club for $1 Billion" . Fortune .
^ Lawler, Ryan (April 17, 2014). "Digital Display Startup Enplug Raises $2.5 Million Seed Round" . TechCrunch . AOL. Retrieved May 21, 2014 .
^ Smith, Samantha. "LA Startup Goes from 0 to 100mph In Three Months" . Forbes . Retrieved May 22, 2014 .
^ "PayPal Completes Acquisition of Honey" (Press release). PR Newswire . January 6, 2020.
^ Taulli, Tom. "Why PayPal Paid $4 Billion For Honey Science" . Forbes . Retrieved January 28, 2020 .
^ Peters, Jay (November 20, 2019). "PayPal acquires the company behind the Honey deal-finding extension for $4 billion" . The Verge . Retrieved February 25, 2020 .
^ Curry, David (May 24, 2023). "Hulu Revenue and Usage Statistics (2023)" . Business of Apps .
^ Heller, Nathan (July 25, 2022). "Is Selling Shares in Yourself the Way of the Future?" . The New Yorker . ISSN 0028-792X . Retrieved November 4, 2024 .
^ Sherman, Lauren (May 26, 2017). "Can Nasty Gal Be Saved?" . BoF .
^ "Honey's Billionaire Founder Buys $60 Million Bel Air Mega-Mansion" . March 11, 2020.
^ Green, Dennis. "Amazon's $1 billion acquisition of the doorbell-camera startup Ring is the company doing what it does best — and it should terrify every other retailer" . Business Insider . Retrieved January 8, 2019 .
^ Spangler, Todd (October 29, 2019). "Scopely Valued at $1.7 Billion After $200 Million Round, With Mobile Game Company's Sights Set on M&A" . Variety . Retrieved May 29, 2020 .
^ "ServiceTitan, Software Provider For Tradespeople, Reaches $8.3 Billion Valuation" . Forbes . March 26, 2021. Retrieved September 16, 2022 .
^ "SNAP Key Statistics | Snap Inc. Class A Common Stock Stock - Yahoo Finance" . finance.yahoo.com . Retrieved March 20, 2017 .
^ "Funderbeam" . www.funderbeam.com . Archived from the original on October 26, 2016.
^ "TrueCar, Inc. Common Stock (TRUE)" . NASDAQ.com .
^ "These Young Founders Give Cannabis Brands The Opportunity To Market Directly To Consumers" . Forbes . September 27, 2018. Retrieved February 28, 2020 .
^ Porter, Martin (November 1983). "The Talk of Boca" . PC Magazine . p. 162. Retrieved October 22, 2013 .
^ Hill, Ryan (February 4, 2016) [www.triton.news/2016/02/813/ "San Diego is bringing back Silicon Beach"] [The Triton]
^ LeMay, Renai (July 28, 2008). "Silicon Beach Australia" . ZDNet . Retrieved May 30, 2013 .
^ Kohler, Alan (November 21, 2012). "Australia's "Silicon Beach" is no Entrepreneurs Paradise" . The Drum . ABC.
33°58′35″N 118°27′04″W / 33.9764°N 118.4512°W / 33.9764; -118.4512