The rise of Dropbox CEO Drew Houston, who is taking his $10 billion company public years after Steve Jobs said he would destroy it
Drew Houston is on top of the world.
On Friday, his company, Dropbox, filed its S-1, making it Y Combinator's first startup to ever file for an IPO.
The file sharing service that began as a two-person team in 2007 is now a sprawling enterprise with more than a thousand employees and a stock ticker symbol that's soon to be listed on the NASDAQ. The cloud storage giant now provides services to more than 500 million people and generates a billion dollars in annual revenue.
But things weren't always easy for Houston or his company. He struggled with his initial entrepreneurial venture and faced several obstacles getting Dropbox off the ground. Dropbox has taken 10 years of growth to get to the point it's at now.
But Houston hung in there. Despite multiple opportunities to sell his company in its early stages — including a bid from Steve Jobs in 2009 — he held on.
Here's a rundown of Houston's journey from a precocious tech-loving kid to the CEO of a billion-dollar enterprise:
Houston had his eye on tech from an early age.
As he confirmed to Business Insider in an interview last year, Houston started programming when he was as young as five years old. He began working on ideas for startups when he was only a teenager.
His first company was an SAT prep company he started while in college.
Before his junior year at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Houston took a year off to work with a former high school teacher on a test prep company. The company's goal was to help students get perfect scores on the SAT college admissions test.
After graduating, Houston hoped to get his SAT prep company into a startup accelerator — but was rejected.
Houston applied to get his startup into the first batch of Y Combinator companies in 2005.
See the rest of the story at Business Insider
Contributer : Tech Insider http://ift.tt/2rkQSwJ
No comments:
Post a Comment