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Santa Barbara Area Economy and Jobs in Goleta

Springing to Life
Entrepreneurial spirit feels right at home in Goleta
By Andrea Estrada

A century ago, Goleta counted lemons and avocados among its greatest commodities, and businessmen with names like Hollister and Kellogg led the area's expanding economy. In 2006, much of the farm and ranch land has given way to urban development and the city's greatest commercial resources come not from trees, but from the high-tech research and development companies that have put down roots here.

“The business terrain in Goleta is changing,” said Kristen Amyx, president and CEO of the Goleta Valley Chamber of Commerce. “We're going from having some large employers clustered around a few technologies such as defense to being more of an entrepreneurial center.”

According to Dennis Cagan, president of Santa Barbara Technology Group, a private investment and consulting firm involved primarily with early stage technology companies, no fewer than 500 high-tech firms have gotten started in the Santa Barbara area, including “dozens and dozens” that have sprung up in Goleta. Their strength makes the tech industry the “highest-paying, fastest-growing and most likely component of the economy to benefit the city and county over the next decades,” he said.

Mark Mattingly, executive vice president of Pacifica Commercial Realty, described Goleta as “the economic engine of Santa Barbara,” with manufacturing and technology at the center.

“All of Santa Barbara's largest employers, outside of Cottage Hospital, are located in Goleta,” he said.

Most companies start out with a small staff of five to 10 employees and grow to include 200 or more. Considering the average occupancy rate of four people per 1,000 square feet of office space and 4.2 million square feet of such space in Goleta, Mattingly estimates that collectively the high-tech industry currently provides jobs for nearly 17,000 people.

Added Cagan, “Bargain Network alone employs 600 people.”
Goleta companies, many of which are tucked away in often nameless buildings, have attracted the attention of a host of investors - including many huge financial players such as Microsoft Corp., American Express Financial and Chase Capital Partners — that pour millions of dollars in venture capital into the area's cutting-edge high-tech research and development. Among them are Calient Networks, Intuitive Surgical, Inogen, InTouch Technologies, Infogenysis, Occam Networks and Superconductor Technologies, all founded or located in Goleta.

“There are at least 100 businesses that have received venture capital,” Cagan continued.

An entrepreneurial spirit continues to serve the technology industry as graduates from UCSB and Santa Barbara City College choose to stay in the area and other people relocate to Goleta and Santa Barbara and bring their business dreams with them.

“All they need is about 2,500 square feet of space and a roll-up door,” said Amyx.

Many use existing space, such as Asylum Research, Wyatt Technology Corp. and Bargain Network Inc., which occupy the building that formerly housed Applied Magnetics.

The biggest industry trend Cagan has noticed involves companies remaining in the area even after they've gone public or been acquired by larger firms. Rather than closing up shop and consolidating efforts into one location, many firms, such as ValuClick, which acquired Commission Junction, are choosing to maintain divisions in Goleta or Santa Barbara.

Similarly, companies established here find they can accommodate some business functions locally while assigning others elsewhere.
“InTouch technologies, for example, will grow to 200 or 300 people. It could be a billion-dollar revenue company and never leave Goleta,” said Cagan. “Sales, management, marketing, engineering and finance can be here with manufacturing and everything else going offshore.”
Continued Amyx, “We are phenomenally blessed with a healthy, cutting-edge industry and we ought to be nurturing it as we do the coast and the environment.”

She and Cagan agree that means addressing housing, and other quality of life issues. “Say a few people start a successful business. They have capital, space, and resources. But when they want to get married and have a family they look around and realize housing is an issue,” Amyx said.

Whenever you talk about business in Goleta you always end up talking about housing, she added. Every thread in the tapestry of the business community leads back to housing.

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