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The $738 million 'subscription economy' company Zuora files to go public

Mar 17, 2018, 03:15 IST

Zuora CEO Tien Tzuo filed an S-1 to take his &quotSubscription Economy" startup public.Zuora

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  • The $738 million subscription startup Zuora filed to go public on Friday.
  • Zuora, which sells software that helps other companies run their subscription businesses, saw $168 million in revenue in 2018, but had a net loss of $47 million.
  • Though not very well known, Zuora runs the subscription services behind big-name customers like HBO, Ford and Symantec.


The March madness continues as another tech startup has hopped in line for a 2018 initial public offering.

Zuora, a Silicon Valley cloud software company, filed an S-1 on Friday afternoon.

The company, which was last valued at $738 million in 2015 according to Pitchbook, sells software that helps other startups launch subscription services.

"The vision we started off with stays true to this day: We believe that one day, every company will be part of the Subscription Economy," the company wrote in its prospectus for the offering.

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Zuora was founded in 2007 by its CEO Tien Tzuo - an early executive at Salesforce - and co-founders K.V. Rao and Cheng Zou, who both spent time at WebEx.

The company itself runs on a subscription model, which accounted for nearly 72% of its $168 million revenue in fiscal 2018, which ended January 31. The rest of its revenue came from professional services like training and deployment services.

Revenue grew by 48.6% from 2017 to 2018, which was up from 22.6% annual growth from 2016 to 2017.

But like many of the companies going public this year - including Dropbox and Spotify -Zuora is still in the red. In 2018, the company lost $47 million. The company has an accumulated deficit of $258.7 million.

Zuora now claims 971 customers with a span across media, tech, transportation and other industries. Some of its big-name customers include HBO, Box, Symantec, GitHub, Ford and Delta Airlines.

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For an in-depth look at the larger tech IPO picture in 2018, read BI Prime's story on the the year ahead in tech IPOs.

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