CaliguyNYC wrote:SATexan wrote:DFWGlobeTrotter wrote:That's interesting - I just assumed that HYD traffic slanted toward the business travel side, given the large offshore operations centers there.
Parts of North Irving (Royal Ln, McArthur/Walnut Hill blvd, Las Colinas) are hubs for H1 dependent Indian body shopping companies which have lots' of employees but generate zero business travel. Same thing with parts of Plano (Plano Pkwy, Tennyson, Legacy Dr etc). There are companies with large offshore partners such as Verizon, BCBS, Citi, Pepsi, BNSF & possibly AT&T among others. But whatever business travel is generated by the offshore/client companies is not exclusive to HYD.
As far as Indian students are concerned, visit any university in the area - UTA, UTD, SMU or some directional/religious denominational university in Oklahoma or Arkansas, you will find that the students from Telugu speaking states outnumber their DEL or BLR counterparts by atleast 8 times! After they graduate they will end up (
most of the times) in those body shopping companies. This cycle is not helping business travel to HYD which in turn affects the yields. This is precisely why, despite the burgeoning volume, HYD has not attracted many EU carriers.
This is a thread about LAX and India. Sorry for veering off topic.
Im not doubting you (although by 8 times seems a bit much). That said, I would caution a bit - the way Indians socialize, it can seem that their community is all there is. Here in NYC or in LA where I am from I hardly even notice Telugu speakers. It’s the usual Gujarati/Punjabi crowd with others thrown in the mix (I am neither). Not saying that is the actual fact of representation mix just saying things can be deceptive. The other thing i see especially after people have been here awhile is they want to stop in say BOM for shopping (especially wedding) or DEL on their way to ATQ. Many people going to BLR are actually not Kanada speakers just as most BOM travelers aren’t Marathi speakers…
Having lived in Dallas, it is completely believable that Telegu dominates the Indian community there. The numbers do suggest it. DFW has the largest Telugu speaking population in the US and Telegu speakers represent the largest dialect in DFW which is unique to every other place in the US. The numbers show completely why DFW-HYD is the largest DFW-India city pair. Not only this but DFW has the 2nd largest Malayalam, Nepali and Tamil speaking populations in the country. This has all happened in a small period of time. 20 years ago, DFW barely cracked the top 10 largest Indian population in the US. Right now its only behind NYC and the Bay Area as it has passed Chicago in the foreign born category.
Below are the populations of Indian Dialect speakers by metro area. I am only including the cities brought up in this metro area, but other than Punjabi where much of the largest speaking communities are in the Central Valley of California, these are pretty much the lists. As a side note, most of the Urdu speakers are going to be from Pakistan and most of the Bengali speakers are going to be from Bangladesh, but I have included them anyway:
Hindi
New York City: 121,837
San Francisco: 68,236
San Jose: 43,863
Dallas/Fort Worth: 38,849
Los Angeles: 35,827
Seattle: 34,896
Washington DC: 34,341
Chicago: 33,245
Houston: 28,136
Atlanta: 27,860
Philadelphia: 27,100
Boston: 22,421
Detroit: 15,029
Gujarati
New York City: 87,212
Chicago: 42,152
Philadelphia: 20,847
Los Angeles: 16,524
Houston: 16,255
San Francisco: 15,336
Atlanta: 14,317
Dallas/Fort Worth: 14,296
Boston: 11,891
Washington DC: 10,317
Detroit: 8,928
San Jose: 8,512
Seattle: 3,412
Urdu
New York City: 98,146
Chicago: 50,118
Houston: 48,512
Washington DC: 40,412
Dallas/Fort Worth: 25,177
Los Angeles: 18,141
San Francisco: 13,896
Atlanta: 11,231
Philadelphia: 10,793
Detroit: 10,157
Boston: 9,288
Seattle: 7,971
San Jose: 4,319
Punjabi
New York City: 43,829
San Francisco: 23,729
Seattle: 13,974
San Jose: 13,666
Los Angeles: 11,884
Dallas/Fort Worth: 7,678
Washington DC: 7,144
Philadelphia: 5,902
Houston: 5,881
Chicago: 5,363
Detroit: 4,816
Boston: 4,159
Atlanta: 938
Bengali
New York City: 156,749
Detroit: 33,057
Washington DC: 20,343
Philadelphia: 15,719
Dallas/Fort Worth: 13,879
Los Angeles: 11,840
San Francisco: 10,739
Atlanta: 9,069
Houston: 8,951
Boston: 6,369
Chicago: 5,557
Seattle: 4,749
San Jose: 4,756
Nepali/Marathi
New York City: 45,460
Dallas/Fort Worth: 30,502
Washington DC: 22,460
Los Angeles: 15,417
San Jose: 15,188
Houston: 13,868
San Francisco: 13,517
Chicago: 12,901
Atlanta: 12,860
Boston: 12,032
Seattle: 9,373
Detroit: 5,135
Philadelphia: 4,729
Telugu
Dallas/Fort Worth: 39,943
New York City: 36,424
Washington DC: 28,835
Chicago: 21,340
San Jose: 20,948
Atlanta: 19,700
Seattle: 18,262
San Francisco: 15,908
Houston: 14,523
Philadelphia: 12,840
Los Angeles: 10,437
Boston: 10,222
Detroit: 9,663
Tamil
New York City: 31,314
Dallas/Fort Worth: 25,222
San Jose: 21,799
San Francisco: 19,480
Chicago: 16,258
Washington DC: 15,974
Seattle: 13,801
Atlanta: 11,922
Houston: 9,719
Philadelphia: 9,320
Boston: 8,544
Los Angeles: 7,946
Detroit: 5,398
Malayalam
New York City: 40,164
Dallas/Fort Worth: 28,147
Houston: 24,829
Philadelphia: 21,523
Chicago: 16,281
Atlanta: 11,921
San Jose: 11,682
Washington DC: 9,121
Seattle: 9,108
San Francisco: 9,035
Boston: 8,544
Los Angeles: 6,348
Detroit: 4,833