Trucking companies are usually based in the Midwest, but this startup is right in the middle of Manhattan - and the founder says there's a 'critical' reason why
- Transfix, an app for truck drivers to connect with shippers, is based in New York City.
- That's unusual for most trucking companies, which are often found in cities like Green Bay, Wisconsin and Omaha, Nebraska.
- Founded in 2013, Transfix CEO Drew McElroy said it was crucial for the company's success that they capture the engineering talent that's hard to find outside of New York or San Francisco.
- However, being headquartered in New York is pricier than being in the Midwest or Southeast.
San Francisco, New York, and other coastal cities are the typical hubs we think of for major corporations and startups alike.
But the $1.45 billion logistics industry operates a little differently. The biggest companies in trucking, for instance, are headquartered in cities like Omaha, Nebraska, Green Bay, Wisconsin, and Lowell, Arkansas.
That created an interesting dynamic for logistics entrepreneurs like Drew McElroy and Jonathan Salama, when they were looking for a headquarters for their trucking startup Transfix.
Transfix, which was founded in 2013, is an app that connects truck drivers to shipping companies. McElroy said that, in order for the company to flourish, they needed the best people in both logistics and technology - people who know how the trucking industry works, as well as the best data scientists and engineers.
Many new companies in the logistics space, McElroy said, don't prioritize that blend.
"It seems that most startups are a bunch of logistics guys that are going out and trying to hire a bunch of techies to do something, or it's a bunch of engineer-types and Stanford MBA-types who have never been inside a truck saying, 'We're going to fix your industry folks, don't worry,'" McElroy told Business Insider. "I personally think both of those paths are fatally flawed."
McElroy said his decade in the logistics space combined with the engineering expertise of his co-founder Salama, a programmer who was previously at Gilt.com and Microsoft, sets Transfix apart from other startups.
"What makes us special and has from the beginning is not me and it's not him, but a combination of the two of us," McElroy said. "That has been a big part of our ethos from day one."
In order to be somewhere where they could continue to attract the best in logistics and engineering, they would have to be strategic in where they located their offices. "What is absolutely critical is to get the best of everybody," McElroy said.
Locating in the Midwest or Southeast would be ideal for finding logistics talent. And, it's cheaper to operate there than in coastal hubs like New York or San Francisco. The median base salary for a software engineer in New York City is $100,000, according to LinkedIn Salary. In Indianapolis, for comparison, the median pay is $72,700.
However, McElroy and Salama decided it would be much easier to lure logistics folks to the coasts than programmers to the Midwest. So, they settled on locating their office in New York City.
"The density of technology talent only exists in New York or San Francisco," McElroy said. "We made the decision that it's easier, frankly, to import logistics talent here than it would be to import engineering talent to somewhere else."
Other logistics startups have followed suit in keeping it coastal. Convoy, another freight brokerage app, is based in Seattle. Silicon Valley, meanwhile, is home to Trucker Path, Peloton Technology, Terminal 49, and Otto.
"We think there's a ridiculous amount of opportunity here," McElroy said. "So, if we have to pay some folks a little more to be located here so we can get everybody in a room together, that makes sense to us right now."