Spokane, Wash. (Flickr Photo / Tracy Hunter)

Smaller cities such as Boise and Spokane are seeing a surge in job postings and an influx of remote workers amid the pandemic, based on observations from business leaders and data from job websites.

Data released this week by Indeed shows the Boise, Idaho region with the fastest growth in job posts between Feb. 1, 2020 and Jan. 7 of this year (up 94.8%), followed by the Spokane, Wash. area (90.8%).

The data may in part reflect the movement of workers attracted to the quality of life in these smaller cities, said Tom Simpson, who heads the Spokane Angel Alliance and the city’s Ignite startup accelerator.

“We’re seeing a lot of people moving to Spokane still working for their companies in the Bay Area or Seattle or other places,” he said.

The pandemic-driven shift to remote work has benefitted Kaspian, a Spokane e-commerce company Simpson co-founded and sold for $75 million in 2016 (it was previously known as Etailz).

“People are more willing to just uproot and come to Spokane, and if for some reason the job doesn’t work out, they can stay here and work remotely for someone else,” said Simpson. “They can also just stay in Atlanta or Chicago or Seattle or wherever they may be, or they have a choice to come to Spokane.”

Spokane entrepreneur and angel investor Tom Simpson. (Ignite Photo)

Even before the pandemic, some Seattle-based tech companies were establishing outposts in Spokane, luring recreation-minded workers to the Eastern Washington region known for its mountains and rivers. “Grab your kayak and join us in Spokane,” touts the Spokane jobs website for Seattle-based F5.

But over the past two years there has been a huge shift toward remote work. Employees no longer need to be located at a company’s office in a big city. And that makes places like Spokane more attractive.

“We’re not necessarily outpacing traditional IT hotspots like Seattle or Portland, but we are absolutely growing faster than we ever have before,” said Michael McBride, business and industry analyst for the Spokane Workforce Council. “Various friends who’ve moved back are working for companies that don’t exist here.”

Job postings containing terms for remote work rose to 9% this December up from close to 3% prior to the pandemic, according to Indeed.

Job postings in Spokane may be growing to provide services for remote workers, said Gary Ballew, vice president of economic development at Greater Spokane Incorporated, a business development organization. Other drivers may be the demand for healthcare, which employs more than 40,000 workers in Spokane County. Aerospace and other manufacturing is rebounding, said Ballew, and fewer businesses shut during the pandemic than elsewhere and they are hiring.

Spokane is also seeing increasing tech startup activity. The booming venture capital market has pushed investors to look further afield — and further inland — for opportunities, said Simpson.

Associate director of sp3nw, Michaele Armstrong. (sp3nw Photo)

In Spokane, data analytics startup Treasury4 recently raised $3.4 million and home buying startup Doorsey raised $4.1 million. Last week, spice company Spiceology pulled in $7 million from San Francisco-based Jackson Square Ventures, which backs mainly software companies.

Parrots CEO and founder David Hojah moved from Seattle to Spokane, where he found a supportive startup community to help grow his company developing assistive tech for people with disabilities. Simpson is one early investor in the company, which will soon move into Washington State University’s sp3nw incubator in the city. 

Sp3nw launched in late 2020 to foster the growth of startups in the region’s tight-knit life sciences community. Within its first nine months, sp3nw partnered with more than 10 companies, associate director Michaele Armstrong told GeekWire.

People who live in Spokane are loyal to the region, she said. “They love that it has the town feel but that it’s a city and has the amenities.”

Companies like the lower cost of living for their workers and a stable employee base in a region with a less hectic pace of living than larger cities, entrepreneurs said at the East West Life Science Summit in September.

Here is additional data from Spokane County:

  • Tech job postings have almost doubled. Postings for online “IT jobs” increased by 98% in Spokane County from 2020 to 2021, according to data from the Spokane Workforce Council. Companies based elsewhere may be advertising for remote workers in Spokane and other markets, said McBride.
  • Computer-related employment is rising steadily. Computer-related employment has increased by 1.8% annually in Spokane County over the last five years, rising three times faster than total employment, said McBride. About 6,560 people worked in such jobs in the second quarter of 2021, rising 1.6% from the prior 12-month period, compared to a 2.3% decrease in employment overall. The data is based on place of residence, so captures some remote workers.
  • The population is growing. Recent migration patterns can be difficult to pin down, but the population of Spokane County increased on average about 6,800 per year from 2010 to 2020, when it reached 539,389, according to U.S. census data. From 2015 to 2019 Spokane was the top destination for people leaving Seattle.
  • Housing prices are soaring. In Spokane County, the average price of a home in the third quarter of 2021 was about $399,000, compared to $321,000 in 2020 and $284,000 in 2019, according to a report by the nonprofit Spokane-Kootenai real estate research committee. Housing prices have also spiked in Idaho’s Kootenai County, home to nearby Coeur d’Alene. The rise parallels rapid increases in rental prices in Boise and Spokane.
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