Mississauga needs to strategize on how to entice business, white collar business, to their core if they truly want to lose this "Toronto's suburb kid brother" moniker and grow into something more than a concentration of condos. I have no idea how this would be accomplished though. They can't compete in the finance industry nor can they be a talent hub due to lack of higher education institutions.
So I guess the Canadian head offices of Microsoft, HP, Oracle, American Standard, DuPont, FedEx, GE, Honeywell, Kellogg, Office Depot, Marriott, Mattel, Pepsi, Wal-Mart, Whirpool, Western Digital, Wells Fargo, Citigroup, General Mills, Pitney Bowes, Ingram Micro, ChevronTexaco, Boston Scientific, UPS, Accenture, Canon, AstraZeneca, Bridgestone/Firestone, Electrolux, Fujitsu, GlaxoSmithKline, Hitatchi, LG, Nissan, Novartis, Samsung, Siemens, Sharp, Ricoh, Nestlé, NEC, Biovail, Ericsson, Bell Mobility, Maple Leaf Foods, Orion Bus, Panasonic, Purolator, World Vision, etc. ad nauseam. don't count as white collar now do they? (Ref:
http://www.mississauga.ca/file/COM/Our_Business_Community_.pdf)
And I guess the University of Toronto--Mississauga doesn't count as a higher education institution? Nevermind Sheridan College.
Sorry, I sometimes poorly describe what I am talking about. I should clarify then, yes, Mississauga attracts business, just not the business that is going to build a central business district. Mississauga has plenty of industrial parks.
No we are not hundreds of kms away from each other but where a company decides to place its HQ has everything to do with local talent. Markham talent certainly is not Toronto talent. If you put your head office in Markham say, you will be attracting 'B' talent. If you want 'A' talent, you locate to an easily accessible part of Toronto (or if you are RIM locate beside Waterloo University, or if you are a big pharmaceutical move to Montreal or if you are an oil company locate in Calgary) . All I'm saying is if you want the best, your company locates near the best, which Mississauga is not. The distance between Toronto and Mississauga makes a huge difference. Mississauga is going to have to come up with something other than cheap rent to compete and draw companies to places other than its industrial parks.
The distance between Mississauga and Toronto? What distance? We share a border. The distance can range from 1 m to 30 km + so I don't see the big issue. Countless people commute from Toronto to work in Mississauga, more so than people commuting from Mississauga to Toronto (although there's many going that way as well).
Transit does have more of a influence than actual city boundaries, however in the context of industry that will build a city's core, which is almost always related to finance in someway, Mississauga does not have a ready supply of talent that could support that and that is a fact. And no one at RIM lives in waterloo, but a hell of a lot of them studied there which brings us back to my point- there is a steady supply of talent that RIM and Google need located in the Kitchener Waterloo region which is why it is strategic choice for them to locate there. This really is the sort of argument that lends itself better to power point presentations rather than online building forums...
oh and doady, just because you have post secondary education doesn't mean you are talented! trust me, you should have seen the people I studied with
I hate when people bring something up, and then when their point is refuted, say it wasn't important anyway. Let's just move the goal posts every time...
In a nutshell, I think you're talking nonsense.