Filed Under: Technology, Trends
Silicon Valley is fortunate to have leading
companies in large industries — media, computer/devices, and micro-processors. With lots of cash on the balance sheets, confident execs, and smart folks on the payroll some of these growth companies (Google, Apple, HP, etc.) in these industries are starting to expand out of their core business. This expansion has been pushing the pendulum to a point where the concentration of power in Silicon Valley may soon hit a wall.
Lets have a quick look at the current lineup of major industries in the Valley and the top players in those industries:
Media companies
- Yahoo (ok, 9% growth is not exactly hitting it out of the park, but there is untapped potential here — full disclosure: i work at yahoo)
Computer/devices companies (both of these companies are on a tear)
- HP
- Apple
Micro-processor companies
- Intel
- AMD
Well — when times are good folks start to expand beyond their core and these companies are expanding — especially the folks at Google — into the following industries:
For the past 4 years the pendulum has been swinging in favor of these Bay Area companies but when you expand beyond the core you inevitably start to piss off the legacy players… Once these legacy players start fighting back and the economic slowdown forces these companies to curtail their investments beyond the core will the pendulum reverse?
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