Featured Article

How Zoho became a $1B company without a dime of external investment…

…and kept its soul intact in the process

Comment

Zoho logo outside Zoho headquarters in Chennai, India
Image Credits: Zoho

The traditional startup fever dream goes something like this: You come up with a revolutionary idea for a startup in your dorm room. You quit school and take your idea to Sand Hill Road, where VCs shower you with cash. Your company grows quickly. You eventually get a valuation of over $1 billion and you go public to great fanfare.

That’s the mythology anyway, but what if there were another way? What if you could grow a $1 billion company without the outside investment, the crazy sales and marketing spend, the pressure to grow ever faster?

Zoho, a company that has a broad set of front- and back-end business software, has defied that growth and investment stereotype to great success. Zoho reports that revenue last year exceeded $1 billion — although as a private entity, it didn’t supply an exact number. Yet it has never taken so much as a penny of external investment.

By developing the company on its own terms, Zoho has been able to build a strong internal culture steeped in R&D and product development, growing slowly but steadily without having to deal with any investor interference whatsoever.

Zoho’s product catalog, which exceeds 50 products, covers everything from a traditional office suite to business intelligence, finance, sales and marketing, customer service and too many other software categories to list here. Using a freemium model to drive usage, it competes with giants like Salesforce, Google, Microsoft and Oracle yet has found a way to thrive in spite of such a harsh competitive landscape.

I spoke to founder and CEO Sridhar Vembu, along with some industry experts, to get a better sense of how Zoho has grown on its own terms, and how this “little engine that could” keeps rolling along.

Why Zoho is different

Back in 2005, Zoho launched with Zoho Writer, a product that caught the attention of TechCrunch founder Michael Arrington. Vembu said that Arrington’s article was the earliest coverage of the company. Since then, Zoho has released dozens of products, and he said the vision from the start was to slowly expand the set of applications.

“That was the plan from the beginning. We actually wanted to build a full suite. In other words, when we started Zoho Writer, we knew we’d be building a spreadsheet, a presentation application [and all of that],” he said. “But we had a sequence. We knew we could not build it all at once.”

Laurie McCabe, co-founder and partner at SMB Group, a research and consultancy firm that focuses on technology geared toward small and medium businesses, said Vembu’s vision is a big reason for the company’s success.

“Zoho has a very visionary founder with deep convictions that have put it on a very different path than its competitors,” she told TechCrunch, adding that on the product side, Zoho provides “sophisticated yet easy-to-use and integrated software for lots of functions, at a low price.”

Brent Leary, founder and principal analyst at CRM Essentials, who keeps a close eye on Zoho, said that the company has taken its own unique route to success.

“Zoho’s ability to stay to true their core principles without being swayed by outside forces is why I think they’ve been able to be as successful as they have been,” he said. “Not taking VC money or going public allowed the company to do things in a manner and time frame that didn’t erode the culture and heart of the company.”

From a numbers perspective, Zoho has over 11,000 employees spread out across the world working with a whopping 80 million users overall. More than 600,000 businesses pay the company.

Early on, Zoho concentrated exclusively on SMBs, but it’s moved up to midmarket and even the enterprise in recent years.

“SMBs still drive the business,” Vembu said, “but now as the whole platform is maturing, larger enterprises are coming to us. And so we have a very good midmarket to enterprise business that’s growing on top of the whole SMB business.”

While it offers free products that appeal to small business users who can test the product without paying, the company can funnel these users into paying customers as they reach certain user-number thresholds or require more sophisticated features. Companies that want access to the whole Zoho product catalog can sign up for Zoho One or access certain app bundles around CRM, finance, human resources and so forth.

Vembu said that while the market is shifting, SMBs remain key:

If you asked me five years ago, SMBs would have been the vast majority of our business. Today, a good 25% to 30% of our business is coming from the midmarket and enterprise. And that part is growing faster, too, so we are growing to be an enterprise company with a very strong SMB base.

Leary said the slow pace of change is consistent with the way Zoho operates more generally — not paying attention to how other tech companies operate.

“It may not be moving at the speed you typically see from most enterprise software vendors taking this path, and Zoho may do things (or not do things) in a way that is very nontraditional as they move upstream, but they have thought it out and have decided they’d prefer to do things that are more aligned with their culture than to stay true to any Silicon Valley [growth] playbook,” he said.

Capitalism with a conscience

One of the things that consistently comes up about Zoho is that it has a unique culture. Marc Benioff certainly talks a lot about responsible capitalism, something that Vembu tries to live by with his company, whether it’s how he operates internally or how he gives back to the community (and the world at large).

In particular, Vembu sees his company as a vehicle for addressing inequality in the world, either through education or jobs, even if he doesn’t see it through a political lens.

“I don’t consider myself from the political left, far from it, but I do feel strongly about issues like inequality. We need a social contract. We need to have a social compact between the rich and the poor, between the companies and the employees, all of that,” he said.

These are not just words for him. Vembu now lives in India, where he helps the local community in a variety of ways. “I moved to a rural village [in India]. I like rural living, and I also want to do projects to create jobs, create talent, all of that. So we run a school. We run a health clinic here. We are building a hospital and we also have a program called Zoho Schools of Learning (formerly Zoho University),” he said.

Zoho CEO Sridhar Vembu
Zoho CEO Sridhar Vembu. Image Credits: Zoho

The latter is a program that has been running for 17 years. It’s designed to give students the knowledge to work at a company like Zoho, which recruited 250 students last year. Zoho pays them a stipend and teaches them about various aspects of technology like programming and design. If students make it through the program — and Vembu said most do — they get a job offer from Zoho.

The company also puts its employees front and center as part of this overall philosophy. As an example, Vembu said that when the pandemic hit in 2020, he vowed to avoid layoffs no matter how it played out. He acknowledged that if the economic impact dragged out, Zoho might eventually need to cut salaries, but it never came to that. And he said his attrition rate stayed low during the “Great Resignation,” something he attributed to the way his company operates.

Leary agreed that Zoho’s employee-focused policies could lead to a more loyal workforce overall. “Zoho takes a long-view approach and lets its employees develop in a way that not only allows them to grow professionally but also as a close-knit team that seeks to impact their community in a variety of meaningful ways.”

Vembu said this is all consistent with his overall beliefs about running a company — pouring money into developing products while taking some of the profits and giving back — and he sees that as being directly related to staying independent.

“It’s also coming from us staying private because a lot of our profit we earned from business is going into this. It’s going into R&D. It’s going into more figuring out complicated technology. And it is going into all these charitable activities. One thing it is not going into is buying a private jet for myself. That’s right; it’s not going into that because I’m not interested in it,” he said, chuckling.

No company is perfect, but Zoho has managed to grow over the last 17 years without having to answer to outside investors while trying to stay true to its internal core philosophy. And that’s a pretty unusual path for tech companies to take.

Zoho’s office suite gets smarter

More TechCrunch

As part of 2024’s Accessibility Awareness Day, Google is showing off some updates to Android that should be useful to folks with mobility or vision impairments. Project Gameface allows gamers…

Google’s expands hands-free and eyes-free interfaces on Android

A hacker listed the data allegedly breached from Samco on a known cybercrime forum.

Hacker claims theft of India’s Samco account data

A top European privacy watchdog is investigating following the recent breaches of Dell customers’ personal information, TechCrunch has learned.  Ireland’s Data Protection Commission (DPC) deputy commissioner Graham Doyle confirmed to…

Ireland privacy watchdog confirms Dell data breach investigation

Ampere and Qualcomm aren’t the most obvious of partners. Both, after all, offer Arm-based chips for running data center servers (though Qualcomm’s largest market remains mobile). But as the two…

Ampere teams up with Qualcomm to launch an Arm-based AI server

At Google’s I/O developer conference, the company made its case to developers – and to some extent, consumers –  why its bets on AI are ahead of rivals. At the…

Google I/O was an AI evolution, not a revolution

TechCrunch Disrupt has always been the ultimate convergence point for all things startup and tech. In the bustling world of innovation, it serves as the “big top” tent, where entrepreneurs,…

Meet the Magnificent Six: A tour of the stages at Disrupt 2024

There’s apparently a lot of demand for an on-demand handyperson. Khosla Ventures and Pear VC have just tripled down on their investment in Honey Homes, which offers up a dedicated…

Khosla Ventures, Pear VC triple down on Honey Homes, a smart way to hire a handyman

TikTok is testing the ability for users to upload 60-minute videos, the company confirmed to TechCrunch on Thursday. The feature is available to a limited group of users in select…

TikTok tests 60-minute video uploads as it continues to take on YouTube

Flock Safety is a multibillion-dollar startup that’s got eyes everywhere. As of Wednesday, with the company’s new Solar Condor cameras, those eyes are solar-powered and using wireless 5G networks to…

Flock Safety’s solar-powered cameras could make surveillance more widespread

Since he was very young, Bar Mor knew that he would inevitably do something with real estate. His family was involved in all types of real estate projects, from ground-up…

Agora raises $34M Series B to keep building the Carta for real estate

Poshmark, the social commerce site that lets people buy and sell new and used items to each other, launched a paid marketing tool on Thursday, giving sellers the ability to…

Poshmark’s ‘Promoted Closet’ tool lets sellers boost all their listings at once

Google is launching a Gemini add-on for educational institutes through Google Workspace.

Google adds Gemini to its Education suite

More money for the generative AI boom: Y Combinator-backed developer infrastructure startup Recall.ai announced Thursday it’s raised a $10 million Series A funding round, bringing its total raised to over $12M.…

YC-backed Recall.ai gets $10M Series A to help companies use virtual meeting data

Engineers Adam Keating and Jeremy Andrews were tired of using spreadsheets and screenshots to collab with teammates — so they launched a startup, Colab, to build a better way. The…

Colab’s collaborative tools for engineers line up $21M in new funding

Reddit announced on Wednesday that it is reintroducing its awards system after shutting down the program last year. The company said that most of the mechanisms related to awards will…

Reddit reintroduces its awards system

Sigma Computing, a startup building a range of data analytics and business intelligence tools, has raised $200 million in a fresh VC round.

Sigma is building a suite of collaborative data analytics tools

European Union enforcers of the bloc’s online governance regime, the Digital Services Act (DSA), said Thursday they’re closely monitoring disinformation campaigns on the Elon Musk-owned social network X (formerly Twitter)…

EU ‘closely’ monitoring X in wake of Fico shooting as DSA disinfo probe rumbles on

Wind is the largest source of renewable energy in the U.S., according to the U.S. Energy Information Administration, but wind farms come with an environmental cost as wind turbines can…

Spoor uses AI to save birds from wind turbines

The key to taking on legacy players in the financial technology industry may be to go where they have not gone before. That’s what Chicago-based Aeropay is doing. The provider…

Cannabis industry and gaming payments startup Aeropay is now offering an alternative to Mastercard and Visa

Facebook and Instagram are under formal investigation in the European Union over child protection concerns, the Commission announced Thursday. The proceedings follow a raft of requests for information to parent…

EU opens child safety probes of Facebook and Instagram, citing addictive design concerns

Bedrock Materials is developing a new type of sodium-ion battery, which promises to be dramatically cheaper than lithium-ion.

Forget EVs: Why Bedrock Materials is targeting gas-powered cars for its first sodium-ion batteries

Private equity giant Thoma Bravo has announced that its security information and event management (SIEM) company LogRhythm will be merging with Exabeam, a rival cybersecurity company backed by the likes…

Thoma Bravo’s LogRhythm merges with Exabeam in more cybersecurity consolidation

Consumer protection groups around the European Union have filed coordinated complaints against Temu, accusing the Chinese-owned ultra low-cost e-commerce platform of a raft of breaches related to the bloc’s Digital…

Temu accused of breaching EU’s DSA in bundle of consumer complaints

Here are quick hits of the biggest news from the keynote as they are announced.

Google I/O 2024: Here’s everything Google just announced

The AI industry moves faster than the rest of the technology sector, which means it outpaces the federal government by several orders of magnitude.

Senate study proposes ‘at least’ $32B yearly for AI programs

The FBI along with a coalition of international law enforcement agencies seized the notorious cybercrime forum BreachForums on Wednesday.  For years, BreachForums has been a popular English-language forum for hackers…

FBI seizes hacking forum BreachForums — again

The announcement signifies a significant shake-up in the streaming giant’s advertising approach.

Netflix to take on Google and Amazon by building its own ad server

It’s tough to say that a $100 billion business finds itself at a critical juncture, but that’s the case with Amazon Web Services, the cloud arm of Amazon, and the…

Matt Garman taking over as CEO with AWS at crossroads

Back in February, Google paused its AI-powered chatbot Gemini’s ability to generate images of people after users complained of historical inaccuracies. Told to depict “a Roman legion,” for example, Gemini would show…

Google still hasn’t fixed Gemini’s biased image generator

A feature Google demoed at its I/O confab yesterday, using its generative AI technology to scan voice calls in real time for conversational patterns associated with financial scams, has sent…

Google’s call-scanning AI could dial up censorship by default, privacy experts warn