Quotient founder: Cities shouldn't try to be next Silicon Valley
[ad_1] That got even larger when Quotient acquired Cincinnati-based influencer marketing startup Ahalogy in June. Boal, fresh off a trip to Nunavut, Canada, … [ad_2]
[ad_1] That got even larger when Quotient acquired Cincinnati-based influencer marketing startup Ahalogy in June. Boal, fresh off a trip to Nunavut, Canada, … [ad_2]
[ad_1] Toronto is the best bet for technology companies looking to set up shop in a Canadian city, according to annual ranking from one of the world’s largest commercial real estate services and investment firms. The high concentration of tech jobs and high-quality labour from post-secondary institutions in Canada’s largest city outweighed its high real…
[ad_1] Canada is used to worrying about the country’s brightest minds in tech leaving for Silicon Valley, but lately, the job applicants have been heading north of the border instead. A July survey of Canadian high-growth firms conducted by Toronto’s MaRS Discovery District found 62 per cent of respondents have noticed a recent significant increase…
[ad_1] By Natalie Wong Silicon Valley startups are tapping into Toronto’s tech talent. Okta Inc., which JPMorgan Chase & Co. calls one of the fastest growing public software firms, opened a 60-seat office this month on trendy King Street West. Lured by a deepening pool of engineers in a city routinely ranked among the world’s…