> The list will include the largest saas companies and smaller startups. For now in order to get a ranking you must have in between 40 and 1000 employees
If the list intends to include “the largest saas companies” it seems strange to exclude companies with over 1000 staff.
On a related note. I always thought Xero made for an interesting case study for saas founders, as the company has went public when it had 150~ customers. That's pretty uncommon, and means that Xero's financial (including user/subscription growth) metrics are available for every year since founding.
What company out there doesn't do PDFs? Genuinely curious. I'd hesitate to say that switching to non-PDF data would raise investor confidence all that much.
One thing that’s eye opening is how many of these aren’t in the Bay Area, but are in a few other cities that never get any attention for producing a lot of software companies.
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[ 2.7 ms ] story [ 46.6 ms ] threadIf the list intends to include “the largest saas companies” it seems strange to exclude companies with over 1000 staff.
All here: https://www.xero.com/au/about/investors/financial-info/
Disclaimer: I work at Xero: API, integrations & add-on ecosystem.