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NewslettersCEO Daily

30 years after the founding of ‘Silicon Alley,’ New York’s tech scene is so big it has no center

Diane Brady
By
Diane Brady
Diane Brady
Executive Editorial Director
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Diane Brady
By
Diane Brady
Diane Brady
Executive Editorial Director
Down Arrow Button Icon
February 2, 2026, 5:21 AM ET
New York City's tech scene has grown well beyond Silicon Alley.
New York City's tech scene has grown well beyond Silicon Alley.Lokman Vural Elibol/Anadolu via Getty Images
  • In today’s CEO Daily: Diane Brady looks back at 30 years of Silicon Alley.
  • The big story: FedEx CEO oversees an era of ‘re-globalization’
  • The markets: The rout that started in Asia looks set to hit U.S. markets.
  • Plus: All the news and watercooler chat from Fortune.

Good morning. It seems oddly fitting that a New York fire marshal essentially shut down a massive party to celebrate “30+ years of Silicon Alley” on Friday night, and that my son, 20, responded to that news by asking, “What’s Silicon Alley?”

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The term came out of the Flatiron and Soho neighborhoods in the 1990s where companies like DoubleClick, Razorfish and About.com were born. That was a time when the media-minded startup community in downtown Manhattan competed for mindshare, if not money, with the tech scene springing up around Stanford and Sand Hill Road in northern California. Like the battle between East Coast and West Coast rap, though, it’s a relic of another era. While Silicon Valley drew about 46.3% of all U.S. venture funding in 2024, with New York getting 13.3%, VC spending is a small fraction of startup funding and an even smaller portion of overall investments in innovation. 

“Nobody talks about Silicon Alley anymore; it’s just tech,” said attendee Stephen Messer, who co-founded LinkShare with his sister Heidi in New York in 1996, sold it to Rakuten for $425 million in 2005, and later co-founded Collective[i], an enterprise AI firm that operates on both coasts. “New York’s tech scene is so large now that there’s no center.”

Indeed, the city’s tech ecosystem now spans fintech, biotech, e-commerce, climate tech, and more, spawning brands like Etsy, Bilt, MongoDB, Ramp, Warby Parker, Datadog, Kickstarter, Tumblr, Foursquare and OpenSea. Some local tech darlings have had high-profile stumbles—hello WeWork!—while others like Bloomberg were thriving long before a bunch of young entrepreneurs set up shop downtown as the internet was taking off. Add in the fact that tech hubs have since sprung up in many other cities and countries around the world. 

Still, nostalgia can be fun. Friday’s party felt more like a throwback to the raves of my youth than a reflection of what tech has become. Instead of alcohol-fueled merrymaking with young singles in some seedy warehouse, this was a gathering of middle-aged professionals clutching cans of water and Whoop bands in an office building overlooking Wall Street. But I enjoyed running into folks like Bloomberg Beta’s Karin Klein, Indiegogo’s Slava Rubin, “sextech” guru Cindy Gallop, entrepreneur Josh Weinstein and cohost Kevin Ryan, the so-called “Godfather of NYC tech” behind DoubleClick and now Alley Corp. Prior to hitting the exit as fire department officials poured in, I picked up a souvenir magazine filled with sepia-toned photos and articles like “Ten Reasons to Be Happy After the Dot-Com Crash.” 

As I wandered around, overhearing conversations about AI, pilates, private equity, Mamdani and the new Melania documentary, it struck me that what the 1,000 or so attendees wanted most was a reason to meet up with creative people on a cold Friday night. I suspect that instinct, as much as funding, is what really fuels the tech scene in New York.

Contact CEO Daily via Diane Brady at diane.brady@fortune.com

Top leadership news

How the CEO of FedEx is navigating global change

FedEx CEO Raj Subramaniam is steering the company through Trump-era tariffs and shifting trade routes by doubling down on cost-cutting and expanding the company’s international operations with a strategy he calls “re-globalization.” Despite headwinds, he says demand won’t slow: “People want to trade and travel. I don’t think there’s any going back.”

Is weighing in on politics a no-win for CEOs?

Social media users described last week’s letter from Minnesota business leaders emphasizing a deescalation of tensions as “hollow” and not strong enough. Is weighing in on polarizing events a no‑win choice for CEO?

What 2026 IPOs could signal for an AI bubble

Economist Owen Lamb told Fortune that we aren’t currently in an AI bubble since nobody is rushing to unload overvalued stakes in AI firms. A slew of potential AI-related IPOs in 2026 countries change that.

The markets

S&P 500 futures are down 0.58% this morning. The last session closed down 0.43%. STOXX Europe 600 was flat in early trading. The U.K.’s FTSE 100 was up 0.07% in early trading. Japan’s Nikkei 225 was down 1.25%. China’s CSI 300 was down 2.13%. The South Korea KOSPI was down 5.26%. India’s NIFTY 50 was up 1.06%. Bitcoin was at $78K.

Around the watercooler

Ford CEO has 5,000 open mechanic jobs with up to 6-figure salaries from the shortage of manually skilled workers: ‘We are in trouble in our country’ by Marco Quiroz-Gutierrez

Silicon Valley legend Kleiner Perkins was written off. Then an unlikely VC showed up by Allie Garfinkle

Top energy expert says probability the U.S. will attack Iran soon is 75% as risk of major disruption to oil supply is priced in — ‘this one is real’ by Jason Ma

The Chan Zuckerberg Initiative cut 70 jobs as the Meta CEO’s philanthropy goes all in on mission to ‘cure or prevent all disease’ by Sydney Lake

Despite Airbnb CEO Brian Chesky and Steve Jobs praising micromanagers, a new survey ranks them among the most annoying coworkers by Orianna Rosa Royle

CEO Daily is compiled and edited by Joey Abrams, Claire Zillman and Lee Clifford.

This is the web version of CEO Daily, a newsletter of must-read global insights from CEOs and industry leaders. Sign up to get it delivered free to your inbox.
About the Author
Diane Brady
By Diane BradyExecutive Editorial Director
LinkedIn icon

Diane Brady writes about the issues and leaders impacting the global business landscape. In addition to writing Fortune’s CEO Daily newsletter, she co-hosts the Leadership Next podcast, interviews newsmakers on stage at events worldwide and oversees the Fortune CEO Initiative. She previously worked at Forbes, McKinsey, Bloomberg Businessweek, the Wall Street Journal, and Maclean's. Her book Fraternity was named one of Amazon’s best books of 2012, and she also co-wrote Connecting the Dots with former Cisco CEO John Chambers.

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