Tech

ZoomInfo rockets over 60% in first tech IPO of Covid-19 era

Key Points
  • ZoomInfo priced its IPO at $21 per share on Wednesday after raising the range to between $19 and $20.
  • The tech IPO market has been dormant since the coronavirus started shutting down wide swaths of the economy in March.
  • ZoomInfo uses artificial intelligence to process data that aids corporate sales and marketing teams with customer outreach.
ZoomInfo CEO Henry Schuck on the company's business model and IPO
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ZoomInfo CEO Henry Schuck on the company's business model and IPO

In the first tech IPO since the coronavirus shut down much of the U.S. economy, ZoomInfo soared more than 60% in its Nasdaq debut Thursday, underscoring investors' ongoing appetite for high-growth subscription software companies.

ZoomInfo, not to be confused with video chat provider Zoom Video, priced its IPO at $21 on Wednesday after previously raising the expected range to $19 to $20. The stock closed up 62% at $34, valuing the company at about $13.4 billion. The offering reeled in more than $900 million.

ZoomInfo's technology helps corporate sales and marketing teams with customer outreach, integrating with sales software tools from Salesforce, Oracle, Microsoft and others. The company says it has more than 15,000 customers across all industries and estimates that it's going after a $24 billion market opportunity.

Even with businesses across the country closed, unemployment skyrocketing and gross domestic product expected to plunge by more than 40% in the second quarter, cloud software companies have largely weathered the storm and, in many cases, even benefited. Twilio, ServiceNow, Okta and Coupa have all bounced back dramatically from the initial Covid-19 plunge and are now trading near record levels. 

Warner Music Group, ZoomInfo plan IPO listings this week
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Warner Music Group, ZoomInfo plan IPO listings this week

While ZoomInfo's revenue rose by over 40% in the first quarter, the company said in its prospectus that it faces headwinds from the coronavirus in the form of "slowed growth or decline in new customer demand for our platform and lower demand from our existing customers for upgrades within our platform." The company said it closed all of its offices because of Covid-19 and plans to keep employees working from home in the second quarter and possibly beyond.

ZoomInfo, in its current form, was created in 2019 when DiscoverOrg acquired Zoom Information and was rebranded as ZoomInfo. Henry Schuck co-founded DiscoverOrg in 2007, and became CEO of the combined entity after the transaction closed. TA Associates and Carlyle Group, which were principal investors in DiscoverOrg, are the largest shareholders in ZoomInfo.

Revenue for the combined entities increased 39% last year to $336 million and 42% in the first quarter to $103.6 million. The company recorded a first-quarter net loss of $5.9 million.

Zoom Video has been perhaps the biggest tech winner since employees left the office for the home. The stock has more than tripled this year, and the company said this week that customer growth surged by more than 350% in the fiscal first quarter from a year earlier.

ZoomInfo is a very different kind of company, but it did highlight the other Zoom as a customer in its prospectus. 

"ZoomInfo has become an essential tool for Zoom Video's sales representatives to penetrate new and international markets, and today 90% of the Zoom Video sales team uses the ZoomInfo platform," the filing said.

WATCH: Zoom revenues could approach $3 billion by 2022

Zoom revenues could approach $3 billion by 2022: Analyst
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Zoom revenues could approach $3 billion by 2022: Analyst