Slack raises another $160M, is now valued at $2.8B

Steven Loeb · April 16, 2015 · Short URL: https://vator.tv/n/3d3f

The workplace collaboration company has doubled its daily active users and paid seats in four months

(Come mingle with hundreds of top venture capitalists representing $10B-plus in capital under management, including Khosla Ventures, Greylock and Javelin Venture Partners, and learn from founders/CEOs including Marco Zappacosta, Co-founder & CEO of Thumbtack and Adam Goldenberg, CEO of JustFab, Slava Rubin, Founder & CEO of Indiegogo, at Vator Splash Oakland on April 22nd and 23rd. Get your tickets here!)

When Slack raised a $120 million round in October of last year, which valued it at $1.12 billion, it came out of nowhere. Now the workplace is back, only six months later, with an even bigger round, which has more than doubled its valuation.

The company has now raised a $160 million round, it was revealed on Thursday, which puts its current valuation at $2.8 billion.

Investors in the round include Horizons Ventures, Digital Sky Technologies (DST Global), Index Ventures, Spark Capital Growth, and Institutional Venture Partners (IVP). All existing investors participated in the round, including Accel Partners, Andreessen Horowitz, The Social+Capital Partnership, Google Ventures, and Kleiner Perkins Caufield & Byers (KPCB).

Slack had previously raised a total of $180 million, and this current round gives it a total of $400 million in venture capital. News of Slack's funding broke last month

What's so astounding about Slack's rise is how quickly is has happened: the Slack product only went live in February last year. 

Slack is a spinoff of Tiny Speck, is a company that was started by Stewart Butterfield, who previously started Flickr. Its first product was a Flash-based multiplayer online game called Glitch. After Glitch was shut down, Tiny Speck launched Slack in August 2013. 

The company isn't just growing its valuation at a rapid pace, but its user base as well. It is now used daily by over 750,000 people, and has over 200,000 paid seats. Both daily active users and paid seats have more than doubled since the beginning of this year.

What Slack does it similar to Yammer, the enterprise network that was bought by Microsoft for $1.2 billion in 2012. It's a workplace collaboration network that seeks to bring team communication onto a single platform. It integrates with services that include Twitter, Dropbox, Trello, Asana, Google Docs, JIRA, MailChimp, Stripe, Zendesk and others to help consolidate team data.

A few of Slacks customers include Expedia, Intuit, Citrix, Dow Jones, Motley Fool, Buzzfeed, Medium, Times of London, Rdio, Pandora, Paypal, Urban Outfitters, Blue Bottle Coffee, Sony, Dell, ITV, NBCUniversal, TV4, Shutterstock, Stripe, Braintree, Adobe, Typekit, Behance, Foursquare, Yelp, Automattic (Wordpress), eBay, Tumblr, Trunk Club, Seagate, HBO, Vox Media, Gawker Media, Eventbrite, Quora, Slate, DigitalOcean, NVIDIA, AOL, Venmo, Salesforce, Autodesk, Nordstrom, Live Nation and Airbnb.

In a series of tweets, Chamath Palihapitiya, founder of Social+Capital, explained why his firm invested in Slack.

 

 

In addition to the funding, it  was also announced that Mike Volpi, partner at Index Ventures, has joined the board of directors at Slackas an observer. The current board of directors consists of CEO Stewart Butterfield, Andrew Braccia of Accel, John O’Farrell of Andreessen Horowitz, and Mamoon Hamid of Social+Capital,

John Doerr, of KPCB, and M.G. Siegler, of Google Ventures, were named as observers in the last investment round.

Slack

Related News