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What are the Best Cities for Young Professionals?

October 5th, 2009 @ 4:22 am

11 Comments

Categories: First Jobs, Job Market, Job Search

Tags: High-tech Industry, Music, DC, Personal Finance, Financial Accounting, Finance, Jessica Stillman

Best cities for young professionals

The Wall Street Journal recently asked several experts to submit their suggestions for the next youth magnet cities. After tallying the responses, the WSJ came up with a tie for first place — Seattle and D.C. — but on his blog, Richard Florida, author of The Rise of the Creative Class and one of the experts polled by the paper, is offering his unedited submissions for best cities for single, twenty-something professionals. In it, he both names his preferences and explains at length how he arrived at his conclusions. I’ll run down his top ten below, but the post in its entirety is well-worth reading if you are considering a move.

  • New York City - The city’s size affords migrants an economic diversity that simply cannot exist in smaller places. It’s the place to be if you’re in finance, fashion, entertainment, publishing, or even indie music. Also unparalleled is the city’s mythic status, as a place to test one’s mettle against the best and the brightest.
  • Washington, D.C. - The public sector is ascendant and, in the eyes of many, Barack Obama is America’s coolest boss. These factors will only bolster Washington, D.C., a city that is already a hotbed of young talent.
  • San Francisco/ Silicon Valley - Still the world’s high-tech hot spot.
  • Chicago - If management or industry is your thing, Chicago is the place to be.
  • Boulder/ Denver - Yes, it’s smaller than the others, but it packs a real punch…. It has thriving, high-tech industries about the best outdoor recreation - from skiing to cycling - to be had anywhere.
  • L.A. - If you want a career in film, entertainment, fashion, or music, it’s the place to be. Sure, it’s crowded, pricey, and the traffic is horrible, but it has abundant sunshine, great temperatures, unbelievable beaches, and fantastic restaurants.
  • Boston - It’s the world center for management consulting with strong finance and high-tech industries. Not to mention a great place to stick around, work for awhile, and go back to grad school.
  • Seattle - A high-tech and lifestyle mecca in its own right with Amazon, Microsoft, and more. It’s also a center for cutting-edge retail with Starbucks, Costco, and REI.
  • Austin - What can you say about a place whose motto is “Keep Austin Weird”? It remains a high-tech player, with great quality of life that’s affordable. It’s the indie music capital of the universe with SXSW and Austin City Limits and a great array of local venues.
  • Raleigh-Durham-Chapel Hill - Another great high-tech, university, smart city, which boasts a mild climate, highly educated population, great outdoor activities, and a great music scene.

Some of these may be obvious (NYC good for finance? DC is the place to be for public service?) but those further down the list are a little more surprising. Also surprising: while jobs are important, according to Florida, the highest ranked factor in choosing a city is “the ability to meet people and make friends.” Do you agree that this should be central to choosing a city? And how does Florida’s list compare to your own personal rankings?

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(Image of Austin skyline at night by Kumar Appaiah, CC 2.0)

 
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  •  
    1

    S.Howard-Sarin

    10/05/09 | Report as spam

    Test your mettle

    "Also unparalleled is the city?s mythic status, as a place to test one?s mettle against the best and the brightest."

    As a resident of the SF Bay Area, I have to bow my head in acknowledgment of this statement. NYC is still tops for the test.

  •  
    2

    jstillman

    10/06/09 | Report as spam

    RE: What are the Best Cities for Young Professionals?

    I agree. When I moved from NYC to SF, I felt like everyone was on a sort of extended vacation, which has a lot of advantages, but doesn't exactly breed toughness.

  •  
    3

    ktaylo20

    10/06/09 | Report as spam

    RE: What are the Best Cities for Young Professionals?

    I would love to see a list like this that's worldwide, not just USA. Does anyone know of a good one?

  •  
    4

    ampurvis

    10/06/09 | Report as spam

    RE: What are the Best Cities for Young Professionals?

    If you are coming to Australia?
    For Career fast track and opportunities - then Sydney, Melbourne and Brisbane are equally terrific - note downside? they are all equally hopeless when it comes to $$$ for living and travel to work time.

    However, if you have made it (?) then Adelaide and Perth offer unparalled lifestyle opportunities (20 min to anywhere, some of best beaches in the world and 100's of world class wineries, fantastic restaurants at low$$).

    I have returned to Adelaide (from Brisbane) and love the lifestyle.

  •  
    5

    ah12

    10/06/09 | Report as spam

    RE: What are the Best Cities for Young Professionals?

    I've lived in melb & i think its a fantastic place with right mix of technology & lifestyle.The people are cultured,educated & right blend of all communities.Sydney is ruthless & not nourishing as melbourne. Goin down to NZ,Auckland is thriving city of its own kind.Sure the tech is not in par as with most other cities, but the city is happy with its own blend of culture & technology. Wellington is more for artistic,fashion conscious soul. I reckon melb is the place to be & Auck is the place to chill.

  •  
    6

    jstillman

    10/07/09 | Report as spam

    RE: What are the Best Cities for Young Professionals?

    Florida suggests London, Toronto, Shanghai and (as per the other commenters above) Sydney-Melbourne-Brisbane. I didn't include it in the original post but you can read about it here:

    http://www.creativeclass.com/creative_class/2009/10/01/where-the-kids-are-heading/

  •  
    7

    Romano4444

    10/07/09 | Report as spam

    RE: What are the Best Cities for Young Professionals?

    Have you heard of S?o Paulo (Saint Paul) in Brasil? No?
    Well, you're not in good labour conditions!

  •  
    8

    xceli

    10/07/09 | Report as spam

    RE: What are the Best Cities for Young Professionals?

    I moved from SF to NYC last month, that's true, people in CA are just a whole lot more laid back. Chicago is kind of in between SF and NYC, it's got the east coast FiDi look and the greens at the same time.

  •  
    9

    davidkarle

    10/07/09 | Report as spam

    This does not acknowledge cost of living

    It's not just about getting the right job, but also building up your financial strategy of which a house is very important. My family and I moved from Portland, OR to San Antonio, TX and it's been nothing but good for us economically. If you're young, think about starting somewhere you can actually get in the housing market and own something for yourself. Also consider where your specific skills may be valued more competitively. In a large labor market, you can make more money and have more job stability than in a very competitive white collar market.

  •  
    10

    DataDude1

    10/07/09 | Report as spam

    RE: What are the Best Cities for Young Professionals?

    I can't say that I am in the young professional category anymore, but having lived most of my life in and around LA I can say it has many advantages (mainly the mountains, beaches and excellent Mexican food), but more drawbacks. There is nothing quite like being able to see and smell the air you breathe. As for traffic, it is like no other place.

    I am now living in the Raleigh-Cary, NC area and can say that the music scene, number of educated people and scenery do it for me. It is also abit less stodgy than other parts of the South (as a former Californian I appreciate that!)

  •  
    11

    ktaylo20

    10/07/09 | Report as spam

    RE: What are the Best Cities for Young Professionals?

    Thanks for all the input. I actually am a born and raised Sydneysider so I know all about the "ruthlessness" here. I actually really love the work ethic and busyness of the place. It has the right mix of nice people, nice weather, and a real competitive edge to the workforce that keeps you on your toes.

    Lived in Melbourne for a few years but, and I know it sounds like a cliche, I tired of the weather! Can't handle teh beaches and winds in Melbourne. I think my skin aged 10 years living there.

    Anyone lived in Hong Kong, Singapore or Shanghai? If so, what are those places like?

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