![]() Its second product is called “Computer Backup.” It does what it says on the tin, for one computer or many.įor whom does Backblaze build? While the company claims that its “solutions are designed for individuals and businesses of all sizes and across all industries,” it does note a “particularly strong appeal to midmarket organizations,” or those with under 1,000 employees. The company offers “B2 Cloud Storage,” a tool that includes API access for developers looking to back up information, mesh with third-party content delivery networks (CDNs) and the like. Let’s go! How Backblaze grew to IPO scale without losing all of god’s moneyīackblaze has two main products, both of which sit atop its “storage cloud.” Or, as I like to think of it, a large bucket of online storage capacity. Finally, we’ll pick up a topic we touched on last weekend, namely specialty cloud infra providers and how they may stack up with the public cloud giants. Why? Because by offering storage, our presumption is that Backblaze has somewhat lackluster gross margins. And we’ll want to look at its gross margins. Naturally, we’re going to figure out just how the company managed to grow to its current size without losing nine figures worth of venture money. Prior to issuing $10.0 million of convertible notes (which we also refer to as a Simple Agreement for Future Equity agreement (SAFE)) in a private financing round in August 2021, we had raised less than $3.0 million in outside equity since our founding in 2007.ĭid anyone else mostly forget that you can build IPO-ready software companies without utter truckloads of external cash? Here’s a reminder. Our operations have historically been efficient with limited outside investment. The company confirmed that in its filing, stating that: Indeed, per Crunchbase data, it only raised a handful of millions during its private life. That’s because it has a track record of not losing money. So, we’re digging in.īackblaze, based in San Mateo, California, has a very limited venture capital history. It turns out that there are a few twists to the company’s filing that make it really worth our time. Read it every morning on TechCrunch+ or get The Exchange newsletter every Saturday. The Exchange explores startups, markets and money. Shares will trade on the Nasdaq under the 'BLZE' ticker. As the IPO paperwork is still at the preliminary stage, the figure of 100m is a placeholder amount that is. Cloud storage company Backblaze plans to list on the NASDAQ under the ticker BLZE, raising an initial amount of 100m (75.5m), according to a recent filing. ![]() Frankly, given how limited my knowledge of the storage-focused software company was before reading its IPO filing, I was almost ready to stick it in The Exchange newsletter for the weekend. Backblaze said it plans to sell 6.25 million shares at between 15-17 (£11-£12.50) per share in its forthcoming initial public offering (IPO), according to new paperwork filed with the market regulator. An array of hard drives Photo: Shutterstock. This time our target is Backblaze, which you may not be familiar with. It has a global physical infrastructure of nearly 200,000 hard drives and one terabit per second of network capacity, across five data centres that are interconnected by private network infrastructure.Sure, Facebook is apparently rebranding as a metaverse company - because that will fix its trust deficit - but this morning we’re jumping right back into the IPO game instead of making rude jokes at the social giant’s expense. ![]() Its Backblaze Storage Cloud service keeps over 500 billion files available on demand and is designed to store trillions more in the future. Almost half a million customersįounded in 2007, Backblaze has almost 500,000 customers worldwide. Our mission is to make storing, using, and protecting that data astonishingly easy,” San Mateo, California-based Backblaze said in the preliminary IPO filing. “Data is the digital world’s most precious resource. An array of hard drives – Photo: ShutterstockĬloud storage company Backblaze plans to list on the NASDAQ under the ticker BLZE, raising an initial amount of $100m (£75.5m), according to a recent filing.Īs the IPO paperwork is still at the preliminary stage, the figure of $100m is a placeholder amount that is likely to be revised as lead underwriters Oppenheimer & Co, William Blair and Raymond James get a better idea of investor demand and an eventual IPO price range and number of shares is set. ![]()
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