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Quality of Life Factors into Business Location Decision

Communities that can satisfy a company's quality-of-life concerns - with regard to housing, healthcare, education, recreation, etc. - can make moving a business a pleasure.

Dec/Jan 09
Few people relish the thought of moving. Yet, if the new destination promised to improve quality of life, relocating might be a welcome event. While companies seldom base their site-selection decisions solely on quality-of-life issues - housing, schools, healthcare, amenities, crime - these factors do play an increasingly important role in this decision-making process, especially for those dependent on the talents of highly educated workers.

For companies relocating a relatively high proportion of professional talent, quality-of-life issues can even make or break the deal. Quality of life will directly impact the ability of a company to entice people to move with the job; for national recruiting, it will make the difference in whether or not they can attract the best talent.

Relocation advisors, therefore, parse the quality-of-life issue between those companies that are talent-driven, such as software firms, and those that draw labor from a more generic pool, such as assembly line workers. The importance of quality of life is directly related to the type of jobs being moved. Quality of life becomes far less important when relocating a traditional manufacturing plant, warehouse, or back office as opposed to moving a corporate headquarters, R&D facility, or IT center.

Specific Concerns
Yet even for talent-driven organizations that closely examine quality of life when considering a location, not all these factors are created equal. For instance, affordable housing and access to quality healthcare usually take precedence over lesser issues, such as cultural amenities or climate.

Other quality-of-life concerns factor strongly into the relocation decision. In today's environment of high fuel costs, another consideration is commuting distance. Once a company identifies a metro area and a work site within the community, they judge the quality of the location based on where transferees are likely to live relative to the job site. If a transferee can't find affordable housing close by, there is a good chance he or she will be unwilling to move.

Another top quality-of-life concern is outdoor recreation, especially for companies that need highly specialized or cutting-edge talent. It is critical for an area to have strong outdoor recreational attributes such as mountains, lakes, and oceans. Clean air is another important consideration to today's sophisticated workers.

Busy Beehive
When it comes to outdoor recreation and clean air, Salt Lake City, Utah, has few peers. With 11 world-class ski resorts within a one-hour drive from Salt Lake International Airport, along with five national parks, six national forests, and hundreds of thousands of acres of diverse terrain, it's little wonder that Salt Lake City is ranked as a top place to live by Outside magazine. When a company consolidation forced Amer Sports Winter & Outdoor Americas to find a new headquarters location, it made sense that the company selected Ogden, Utah (located 40 minutes outside Salt Lake City).

"There were three "Ms" that drove us to Ogden: the mountains, the money, and the mayor," says Mike Dowse, president and general manager of Amer Sports Winter & Outdoor Americas, a subsidiary of Helsinki, Finland-based Amer Sports Corp. (The company is better known for its brand names - Rossignol, Atomic, and Salomon skis, among others.) "I'm looking out my window now, and I see the top of Snow Basin where they held the Olympic downhill and giant slalom races in 2002," Dowse notes. "There is world-class skiing 20 minutes from our office and world-class trail running and mountain bike trails within five minutes of our office. Across the street is the Ogden River with its world-class kayaking. Again, it is the whole outdoor lifestyle thing."

But the outdoor recreational activities weren't the only quality-of-life issue Dowse considered. He points out that Salt Lake International Airport offers direct flights to Paris. He also lends credence to the "affordable housing" factor. "Our staff has purchased 22 homes since we moved the company to Ogden," says Dowse. "Of those, about 16 or 17 are first-time homebuyers. A lot of our people that relocated could afford to buy homes for the first time."

During the selection process, Dowse hired an outside firm to conduct due diligence on the sites being considered. An internal task force, headed by Dowse, steered the process. He also considered Portland, Oregon, but the company weighed the merits of such factors as proximity to mountains, cost of living, lease rates, and others. In the end, Ogden won out.

Lights Much Brighter
While outdoor recreation is important to some companies, the option of working in a thriving downtown environment - which offers a lower cost of living, access to public education, and short commute times - is an important quality-of-life consideration for other companies looking to relocate.

One city known for having a robust downtown as well as an educated work force and an outstanding quality of life is Austin, Texas. It was this quality-of-life mix that made PayPal, a subsidiary of eBay, select Austin for its new base of operations, according to Terence Spielman, PayPal's senior director of global operations and product development, and general manager of the company's Austin site.

"It wasn't just one quality-of-life element that drove us to select the Austin market," says Spielman. "The area's housing, healthcare, education, and cultural amenities were important factors in our decision. Plus, Austin is a talent-rich technical market. Austin has a strong educational base, such as the University of Texas in Austin. What really drove us here was a combination of the existing talent, the continued pipeline of talent, and eBay's values. eBay is very concerned with retention of its employees and wants them to have the quality of life that they want in terms of housing costs, educational opportunity, access to the environment - a space where they can live, work, and play."


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