Flat white on a cafe table

The Savills Blog

What a flat white can tell us about a city's tech potential

This year marks the third iteration of Savills Tech Cities programme, and again a key component of our index is our popular ‘Flat White Index’. 

The best and the brightest in the tech industry tend to have their pick of roles, and may not be loyal to a particular location, so a city’s environment, nightlife and leisure offer can be as important as the remuneration on offer to them when taking a role.

It may seem a little frivolous, but the cost of a flat white and the quality of the cafés that serve them can therefore be used as a partial proxy of a city’s wider lifestyle offer (as well as an indication of where’s good for casual business networking) and help us see where’s likely to be popular with people who prioritise this.  

This year, Buenos Aires is the flat white capital of the world, followed by Melbourne then Toronto, according to the scoring of the quality of cafés and the cost of a flat white across our 30 cities.

Buenos Aires tops the ranking based on the cost and quality of flat whites, where a cortado can be found for US$1.54, the third cheapest in the world due to current exchange rates.

The most expensive flat white can be found in Shenzhen, China, where caffeine lovers can expect to pay US$4.70, largely due to the flat white’s present scarcity across the country, although the price may come down in the near future.

Tea has historically been the nation’s beverage of choice, but Chinese millennials are rapidly embracing new tastes: Starbucks has recently announced it intends to double its presence across the country in the next five years, taking it up to 3,000 outlets, so we may well see prices in China drop in future indices, as the flat white becomes more common.

New York, which tops Savills overall Tech Cities Index is 10  in the table for flat whites, while San Francisco (2nd overall) is in eighth place, and London (3rd overall) is in sixth position, showing that established tech cities are also no slouches when it comes to keeping their tech workers caffeinated, with beverages available at a wide range of outlets at sub-US$4.

Ultimately, a city is not going to succeed or fail on the basis of its café culture, but the presence of one does indicate that its wider environment lends itself to human interaction, socialising and networking – without one, a city may not be somewhere people want to live and ultimately not where tech companies want to locate.

 

Savills Flat White Index 2019

Flat White Index 2019


Further information

Read more: Tech Cities in Motion

 

Recommended articles