OPINION
In this interlocutory appeal, Appellants challenge the trial court’s order overruling their special appearances. We affirm.
*161 I. Background
This case arises from a series of complex transactions involving the acquisition and financing of several food service equipment supply companies. Following are the allegations and jurisdictional facts relevant to this appeal.
A. Appellees’ Allegations
Appellees — Gernsbacher, Zintgraff, and the Palms — are former shareholders in what were independent food service equipment supply companies. Gernsbacher, a Texas resident, was a shareholder in Gernsbacher’s, Inc., a Texas corporation based in Fort Worth. Zintgraff, also a Texas resident, was a shareholder in Top of the Table, Inc., a Texas corporation based in San Antonio. The Palms, all Minnesota residents, were shareholders in Palm Brothers, Inc., a corporation based in Minnesota.
In 2000, Strategic Equipment and Supply Corporation (“SESC”), a Delaware corporation with its corporate offices in Arizona before 2001 and in Dallas after, acquired Gernsbacher’s, Top of the Table, Palm Brothers, and other food service equipment supply companies. Appellant Glencoe Partners II, L.P. (“Glencoe”), whose general partner resides in Illinois, was SESC’s majority shareholder. An investment group led by Glencoe financed SESC’s acquisition of the companies, and LaSalle Bank and others provided additional financing. Gernsbacher, Zintgraff, and the Palms received a collective total of $8.2 million in SESC stock plus notes made by SESC in the original aggregate amount of $9.5 million (“the Shareholder Notes”).
After the acquisitions, SESC’s nine-member board of directors consisted of three Glencoe employees, including Appellant Wray (an Illinois resident); three members of the “Glencoe Executive Network” (a group of senior executives pooled by Glencoe to serve at Glencoe’s pleasure on the boards of Glencoe-controlled companies), including Appellants Malone (a Michigan resident) and Coonrod (a Minnesota resident); and three former shareholders of the acquired companies, namely, Gernsbacher, Zintgraff, and Mike Palm. 1 Gernsbacher and Zintgraff continued to run their respective “divisions” of SESC from their offices in Fort Worth and San Antonio.
SESC failed to perform as well as expected. Appellants represented to Appel-lees in September 2001 that LaSalle Bank had demanded an immediate additional equity investment of $6 million as a condition of maintaining its relationship with SESC. Appellants decided to raise the equity investment through the sale of additional notes (“the New Notes”). The events surrounding the issuance of the New Notes lie at the heart of Appellees’ claims.
Glencoe enlisted a Chicago investment banking firm, Lincoln Partners, to prepare a “fairness opinion” concerning the fairness of the New Notes transaction to SESC’s shareholders. Appellees allege that Lincoln had extensive ties to Glencoe and was not independent and impartial, despite Lincoln’s assertions to the contrary. Lincoln furnished three fairness opinions to SESC shareholders in November and December 2001.
Appellees contend that Appellants orally misrepresented the nature and effect of *162 the New Notes in multiple SESC board meetings, in which Gernsbacher and Zint-graff participated by telephone from Texas, and that Appellants and Lincoln misrepresented the terms of the New Notes in writings, including the fairness opinions, that Appellants and Lincoln mailed to Gernsbacher and Zintgraff in Texas. Ap-pellees allege that, among other things, Appellants represented that the New Notes would be paid if SESC sold all of its assets. They further allege that Appellants later secretly changed the terms of the New Notes to make them payable in the event of a sale only if 80% or more of the holders of the New Notes approved payment. Gernsbacher and Zintgraff eventually purchased a total of $275,000 worth of the New Notes when the notes were issued in March 2002. Glencoe purchased or controlled 80% of the New Notes.
SESC sold all of its operating assets to SESC Acquisition, Inc. in 2005. SESC paid nothing to Gernsbacher, Zintgraff, and the Palms on the Shareholder Notes, and it paid nothing to Gernsbacher and Zintgraff on the New Notes.
Appellees sued Appellants and others in Tarrant County, Texas, alleging causes of action for breach of fiduciary duties, fraud, and violation of the fraudulent transfers act. The gist of their allegations is that Appellants colluded to render worthless the SESC stock and notes held by Appel-lees. Appellees seek actual damages, exemplary damages, and recession of the New Notes.
B. Special Appearances
Appellants filed special appearances, see Tex.R. Civ. P. 120a, and each individual Appellant filed a supporting affidavit. In his affidavit, Coonrod stated that he had participated in several SESC board meetings between August 2001 and February 2002; Gernsbacher and Zintgraff participated by telephone in several of the board meetings; Coonrod did not know the locations from which either Gernsbacher or Zintgraff participated in the telephonic meetings; he never telephoned Gernsbacher or Zintgraff for any SESC board meeting; he did not draft documents related to the New Notes; and he did not mail any documents related to the New Notes to Gernsbacher or Zintgraff. Malone’s, Man-etti’s, Wray’s, and Evans’s affidavits recite the same essential averments as Coon-rod’s, except Malone’s explains that he served as chairman of SESC’s board from January 2000 until early 2005 and. stated that while he did draft a letter concerning the New Notes that was sent to all SESC shareholders in January 2002, he did not draft or prepare other materials related to the New Notes.
Appellants also submitted the affidavit of Beth A. Satterfield, Glencoe Capital’s CFO and COO and SESC’s former assistant secretary. She stated that prior to each SESC board meeting, a toll-free telephone number was circulated to the potential participants, including Gernsbacher and Zintgraff, so that they could call into the meeting.
Gernsbacher testified at the hearing on the special appearances. He said that after SESC acquired Gernsbacher’s, Inc., he continued to work at Gernsbacher’s as a division of SESC and served as an SESC director. He testified that he participated in SESC board meetings telephonically. When asked whether he was in Texas during the meetings, he testified that he “presume[d] [he] was in Texas ... that’s where [he] normally [was].” ■ He further testified that “normally [the directors] had a few minutes where [they would] talk before the meetings, and [they] would discuss where people were and what they were doing.” Gernsbacher said that Appellants made misrepresentations during these meetings *163 concerning the state of SESO and the New Notes transaction.
Zintgraff testified via affidavit. He averred that all individual Appellants were fully aware that both Top of the Table and Gernsbacher’s, Inc. were located in Texas and had their principal offices in Texas and that both Gernsbacher and Zintgraff were Texas residents. Zintgraff described in detail a series of board meetings between October 2001 and February 2002, in which he participated by telephone from his San Antonio office. He stated that during the meetings, each of the individual Appellants misrepresented SESC’s financial condition and the supposedly urgent need for new capital at the insistence of La Salle. Zintgraff averred that the individual Appellants either made misrepresentations, failed to correct misrepresentations, or directed his attention to written misrepresentations concerning the New Notes during phone conferences in which he participated from Texas.
On December 21, 2007, the trial court denied all of Appellants’ special appearances. This appeal followed.
II. Discussion
Appellants argue that the trial court erred by denying their special appearances (1) because there is legally and factually insufficient evidence that they purposefully availed themselves of the privilege of conducting activities in Texas and Appellees’ claims do not arise out of any contacts Appellants may have made with Texas, and (2) because the exercise of personal jurisdiction does not comport with the due process requirements of fair play and substantial justice. 2
A. Burden of Pleading and Standard of Review
The plaintiff bears the initial burden of pleading sufficient allegations to bring a nonresident defendant within the provisions of the Texas long-arm statute.
Moki Mac River Expeditions v. Drugg,
Whether a trial court has personal jurisdiction over a defendant is a question of law.
Marchand,
B. Specific Jurisdiction
The Texas long-arm statute authorizes personal jurisdiction over a nonresident defendant who “does business” in Texas, which specifically includes committing a tort in Texas, in whole or in part. Tex. Civ. PRAC.
&
Rem.Code Ann. § 17.042(1) (Vernon 2008);
TravelJungle,
1. Minimum Contacts
When a plaintiff asserts specific jurisdiction, the minimum contacts analysis focuses on the relationship between the defendant, the forum, and the litigation.
IRA Res.,
Purposeful availment has at least three aspects.
IRA Res., 221
S.W.3d at 596;
Michiana,
In this case, the principal contacts between Appellants and Texas relevant to specific jurisdiction are the telephonic board meetings, in which Gernsbacher and Zintgraff participated from Texas and during which Appellants allegedly made misrepresentations regarding SESC’s financial condition and the terms of the New Notes. We must, therefore, determine whether the telephonic board meetings rise to the level of purposeful availment.
*165
Although the supreme court has disapproved “opinions holding that ... specific jurisdiction is
necessarily
established by allegations or evidence that a nonresident committed a tort in a telephone call from a Texas number,”
Michiana,
The circumstances of this case are markedly different from the single, unsolicited, unilateral phone call in Michiana. Instead of Michiana’s single phone call, this case involves many telephonic board meetings at regular intervals over a span of years-even if we limit the scope of relevant contacts to those in 2001 and 2002 when the parties discussed the New Notes, as Appellants argue we must. Unlike the seller in Michiana, who did not advertise or otherwise seek business from Texas residents, Appellants (according to Appel-lees’ petition) sought to induce Texas residents — Gernsbacher and Zintgraff — to subscribe to the New Notes.
One similarity between Michiana and this case — a similarity that Appellants argue negates specific jurisdiction — is that neither the seller in Michiana nor the Appellants in this case placed phone calls to Texas. In Michiana, the Texas resident placed the call to the seller in Indiana. Id. at 781. In this case, SESC circulated a toll-free phone number to the board members before the board meetings, and the board members would call that number to participate in the meeting. Appellants averred in their special-appearance affidavits that they did not know where Zintgraff and Gernsbacher were during the telephonic board meetings, and Gernsbacher conceded that he could have phoned into the meetings from any state.
But again, the differences between this case and
Michiana
outweigh the similarities. Unlike the one-time, unsolicited, fortuitous transaction between the seller and the Texas resident in
Michiana,
Appellants had a long-time, ongoing relationship with Gernsbacher and Zintgraff, whom they knew to be Texas residents and whom they knew operated the Fort Worth and San Antonio divisions of SESC.
See Burger King Corp. v. Rudzewicz,
Even if Appellants did not know that Gernsbacher and Zintgraff participated in the meetings from Texas, that ignorance alone is not enough to negate specific jurisdiction because it was foreseeable that their activity directed towards Texas residents would subject them to Texas jurisdiction. In
TravelJungle,
we held that the foreign defendant, TravelJungle, purposefully availed itself of the privilege of conducting activity in Texas by accessing the American Airline’s computer servers in Texas via the Internet even though Travel-Jungle claimed that it did not know where American’s servers were located: “By deliberately directing its activity toward AA. com, TravelJungle should have been aware of the possibility that it would be haled into any forum where AA.com’s servers were located.”
The phrase “directing their activity” leads us to a key part of Appellants’ argument. Appellants argue that the basis for jurisdiction asserted by Appellees is that Appellants “directed a tort” at the two Texas plaintiffs-a theory of specific jurisdiction that the supreme court rejected in
Michiana.
In
Michiana,
the supreme court noted that directed-a-tort jurisdiction — that is, jurisdiction based on where the effect of a defendant’s tort is felt— causes several problems.
In this case, we have focused our jurisdictional analysis on Appellants’ contacts with Texas, not whether those contacts were tortious. Thus, while Appellants’ observation that the supreme court has re *167 jected directed-a-tort jurisdiction is true, it does not unhinge our analysis.
In sum, we conclude that Appellants’ participation in the telephonic board meetings satisfies the three key aspects of purposeful availment.
See IRA Res.,
2. Substantial Connection
But purposeful availment alone will not support an exercise of specific jurisdiction.
Moki Mac,
In Moki Mac, the supreme court looked to the factual issues that it anticipated would be the primary focus at trial to determine whether the plaintiffs’ misrepresentation claims arose from or related to Moki Mac’s purposeful solicitation of Texas customers. Id. The “operative facts” of the plaintiffs suit in Moki Mac concerned a tour guide’s conduct on a hiking expedition in Arizona and whether the guide exercised reasonable care in supervising the plaintiffs son, who died during the hike. Id. at 585. The court reasoned that it was the events on the trail and the guide’s supervision of the hike that would be the focus of the trial and would serve as the overwhelming majority of the evidence presented at trial, not the representations by Moki Mac in its literature to the plaintiffs. Id. Only after thoroughly considering the manner in which the hike was conducted would the jury then assess the plaintiffs misrepresentation claim. Id. The court concluded that “[wjhatever connection there may be between Moki Mac’s promotional materials sent to Texas and the operative facts that led to [the son’s] death, we do not believe it is sufficiently direct to meet due-process concerns.” Id.
Here, in contrast to Moki Mac, Appellants’ contacts with Texas that show purposeful availment — the telephonic board meetings — are also the operative facts of the litigation. The primary focus at trial will be on the alleged misrepresentations Appellants made during the board meetings. Unlike the misrepresentations in Moki Mac, which were tangential to the plaintiffs’ core negligence claim, Appellants’ misrepresentations in this case are the core of Appellees’ claims. Appellants’ liability, if any, arises directly from and relates to their contacts with Texas. We therefore hold that there is a substantial connection between Appellants’ forum contacts and the operative facts of the litigation. See id. at 584.
Having concluded that Appellants purposefully availed themselves of the forum and that there is a substantial connection between their forum contacts and the operative facts of the litigation, we hold that the evidence was legally and factually sufficient to support the trial court’s conclusion that Appellants have minimum contacts with Texas sufficient to allow the exercise of specific jurisdiction over them.
C. Fair Play and Substantial Justice
*168
We now turn to whether the exercise of personal jurisdiction over Appellants comports with traditional notions of fair play and substantial justice.
See Guardian Royal Exch. Assurance, Ltd. v. English China Clays, P.L.C.,
Appellants contend that the burden of litigating in Texas is “simply too great to justify jurisdiction” because the individual Appellants live in Minnesota, Illinois, or Michigan and because Appellant Glencoe is a Delaware corporation with its headquarters in Illinois. Distance from the forum is generally not sufficient to defeat jurisdiction because the availability of “modern transportation and communication have made it less burdensome for a party sued to defend himself in a State where he engages in economic activity.”
McGee v. Int’l Life Ins. Co.,
Ultimately, Appellants have not identified any considerations that would render jurisdiction in Texas unreasonable or that provide them with a vested right not to be sued in Texas.
See Burger King,
III. Conclusion
Because Appellants established minimum contacts with Texas sufficient to subject them to specific jurisdiction in a Texas court and because the exercise of such jurisdiction would not offend traditional notions of fair play and substantial justice, we overrule their second and third issues and, not having reached their first issue, we affirm the trial court’s denial of their special appearances.
Notes
. Appellant Evans, an Illinois resident and Glencoe’s CEO, served as an SESC director from September 2000 through March 2002 and as SESC’s vice president from January 2000 though 2005. Appellant Manetti (also an Illinois resident) has been a member of Glencoe Capital's senior management since the summer of 2001 and served as an SESC director from November 2001 through March 2002.
. In their first issue, Appellants argue that the trial court lacks general jurisdiction over them. Appellees did not allege general jurisdiction in the trial court and have not briefed it on appeal. Therefore, and because we ultimately determine that the trial court had specific jurisdiction over Appellants, we need not address general jurisdiction or Appellants’ first issue. See Tex.R.App. P. 47.1.
