|
The
Business Side of Paradise
Maui's
high-tech infrastructure and tax incentives make this Hawaiian paradise
an ideal place to set up shop.
By Marlene Piturro
for Office.com
What type of incentives would
convince you to relocate your business to a different city or state?
Oct. 9, 2000 In
1998, Joe Gleason sold his Michigan-based educational software firm for
$3.5 million and celebrated the sale with his wife on a Maui vacation.
"We fell in love with the place and decided to stay," he says. When surf,
sand and barhopping on this idyllic Hawaiian island got old in a few months,
he sought mental stimulation and a new challenge wouldn't a dot-com
be just the thing? Like other entrepreneurs, Gleason checked out Maui's
feasibility for high-tech business and found an excellent fit.
What makes Maui an
attractive place to set up shop goes far beyond the palm trees and the
beaches. With some New Economy foresight, Maui's economic development
board, or EDB, started an effort six years ago to build a high-tech infrastructure
to support "industry-specific synergies" in target industries. The industries
Maui's EDB wants to target include defense, environmental and natural-disaster
management, biotech and telemedicine, the arts and entertainment and Web
and software development.
"Our remote location
and small population (120,000) rule us out for factories and warehouses
with hundreds of people," says Loren Malenchek, an EDB manager. "However,
for New Economy businesses, we felt we could compete with mainland cities."
More
Than Just Beaches
Maui's competitive strategy was to get wired, laying the groundwork for
high-tech firms to flourish on an island 2,397 miles southwest of Silicon
Valley, Calif., and smack dab in the middle of the Pacific Ocean between
Los Angeles and Tokyo. The strategy is proving to be stimulant for New
Economy growth. Maui's telecommunications base includes fiber-optic cables,
SATCOM ground stations and a video-teleconferencing center.
All of the advanced
infrastructure can be found in these three complexes: The Maui Research
and Technology Park, or MRTP, the Maui High Performance Computing Center,
or MHPCC, and the Maui Space Surveillance Complex.
MRTP, which was built
on 415 acres in Kihei, Maui's county seat, was specifically designed for
the New Economy. Housing a business incubator, an advanced telecommunications
infrastructure, office and leisure facilities and support services, it
is home to more than 30 companies employing more than 350 people. The
park also contains the MHPCC supercomputer, established in 1993 by the
University of New Mexico and the Air Force Research Laboratory. MHPCC
has 1,200 users from the Department of Defense, government, business and
academia.
The MHPCC supercomputer
allows tenants to leverage its firepower to build their businesses using
scalable parallel computing. One of the tenants, Cislunar Aerospace Inc.,
headquartered in Napa, Calif., is one of the businesses taking this advantage.
A small engineering firm specializing in fluid dynamics R&D, it creates
portable wind tunnels that improve design and performance of moving vessels,
from yachts to spacecraft. Jani Palis, Cislunar's CEO, says, "The availability
of Maui's superprocessor allowed us to expand our number of clients and
provide quick project turnaround."
On top of these incentives,
capital is available to encourage pension plans and individuals to invest
in New Economy firms. There are also funds for marketing and promoting
e-commerce initiatives, a $1 million e-enterprise initiative at the University
of Hawaii College of Business Administration and $3 million in funding
to upgrade the communications infrastructure as needed.
Maui's incentive programs
aren't what made Joe Gleason invest $1.5 million of his own money in his
startup, WebNow.com. "I have no patience for that stuff. It's a waste
of time," he says. On the other hand, "the high-tech park was a dream
come true. It's a great office facility, a 10-minute commute, with excellent
telecommunications and an environment that's conducive to work."
WebNow.com allows
a small-business owner to establish a Web site in less than 10 minutes,
free of charge, and it provides other services and tools for a fee. The
firm has been so successful that it has added 25 operators to the five
it started off with in 1999 at its call center. The number of staff is
expected to grow to 70 by the end of the year. Gleason is pleased with
WebNow's growth and says, "This is the best location I could have picked."
Life
Beyond Goodies
Just how expensive is that great location? Surprisingly, living and working
in paradise has a reasonable price tag. According to the corporate relocation
firm Runzheimer International, based in Rochester, Wisc., if the cost
of living in Standard City, U.S.A., is $100, here's how high-tech meccas
compare: San Jose, Calif., $158; Seattle, $118; Boston, $118; Maui, $110;
and Austin, Texas, $95. Unlike Silicon Valley, an average house on Maui
can be purchased for $250,000, and there are lots of gradations as you
move up. While food and household items may cost more than on the mainland,
many prices have dropped since Costco recently came to town.
Paradoxically, the
greatest challenge to Maui's growth may be its high quality of life. It
attracts dropouts from the competitive, stressful, herd-driven and expensive
lifestyle of Silicon Valley, Route 128 and similar places. So assembling
core talent involves separating those willing to work from those permanently
vacationing.
To keep New Economy
companies thriving, Maui has had to expand its talent pool. To that end,
its Department of Education has awarded grants from $100,000 to $1 million
for educational initiatives and scholarships.
"There's a lot of
tech talent hanging around the cyber cafe," WebNow's Gleason says. "But
it's hard to find the right combination of technical skills and great
work ethic to form the critical mass of talent you need to run a dot-com."
The going is so tough that WebNow's chief financial officer, head of marketing
and other key people are based in Michigan.
|