OPEN YOUR PURSE
Everyone wants to pay you to leave the Bay Area
Thinking of moving to greener pastures? A who’s who of overlooked cities will Venmo you a little something something if you pick them.
Over the last year, Topeka,Tulsa, northwestern Alabama, and the entire state of Vermont have lured tech workers with stipends of $5k to $10k.
And now that Big Tech is embracing remote work forever, more communities are tossing their checks into the ring. Last month, Savannah, Georgia announced it will dish out up to $2k for moving expenses to a select class of remote tech workers.
Meet your municipal patrons
These locations have a few things in common: Many have seen their populations fall, and they’re betting that ponying up a bit of cash will widen their appeal.
The startup Main Street offers $10k to Bay Area workers who will move into its brick-and-mortar offices in Sacramento or Salt Lake City.
The offers are even going international: The tiny country of Estonia is handing over~1.8k digital nomad visas to freelancers and remote workers.
But you’d have better luck getting into Stanford
In its first year, Tulsa Remote -- a program offering a $10k stipend -- accepted only 1% of its 10k applicants.
One reason: Despite the hype, these remote-work programs remain tiny.
from Hustle
Everyone wants to pay you to leave the Bay Area
Thinking of moving to greener pastures? A who’s who of overlooked cities will Venmo you a little something something if you pick them.
Over the last year, Topeka,Tulsa, northwestern Alabama, and the entire state of Vermont have lured tech workers with stipends of $5k to $10k.
And now that Big Tech is embracing remote work forever, more communities are tossing their checks into the ring. Last month, Savannah, Georgia announced it will dish out up to $2k for moving expenses to a select class of remote tech workers.
Meet your municipal patrons
These locations have a few things in common: Many have seen their populations fall, and they’re betting that ponying up a bit of cash will widen their appeal.
The startup Main Street offers $10k to Bay Area workers who will move into its brick-and-mortar offices in Sacramento or Salt Lake City.
The offers are even going international: The tiny country of Estonia is handing over~1.8k digital nomad visas to freelancers and remote workers.
But you’d have better luck getting into Stanford
In its first year, Tulsa Remote -- a program offering a $10k stipend -- accepted only 1% of its 10k applicants.
One reason: Despite the hype, these remote-work programs remain tiny.
- Tulsa’s program -- one of the biggest in the US -- capped its inaugural class of acceptances at 100 people. (Only 70 actually enrolled.)
- When it launched last year, Alabama’s Remote Shoals program sought to attract just 10 tech workers.
- Vermont’s is on hold after funding 69 people at ~$3.6k each.
from Hustle
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