10 Tech Startups Valued Higher Than AOL’s $4.4 Billion

By Kim Lachance Shandrow May 12, 2015
samfield | Foap.com

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By now you’ve heard that Verizon is scooping up AOL for $4.4 billion in a bid to beef up its content smorgasbord and its mobile and video advertising reach.

Yes, you read the purchase price right. And, no, it’s not an Antiques Roadshow record.

Today’s top telecom giant is indeed buying the dial-up darling of yesteryear for quite a steal of a deal — $50 a share. When you consider the astronomical sums several of the hottest tech startups are now valued at, AOL’s acquisition price tag looks a little like yard sale chump change. Ouch.

unicorn club

1. Uber

Latest valuation: $50 billion

Uber the highest valued privately-owned company in the world 120 times higher

2. Xiaomi

Latest valuation: $45 billion

Xiaomi is China’s top smartphone distributor and the world’s third largest. The Beijing-based company, founded in 2010 by eight entrepreneurs, designs, builds and sells a vast variety of consumer electronics and apps.

3. Snapchat

Latest valuation: $15 billion

Snapchat, based out of Venice, Calif., is an ephemeral photo- and video-messaging app and social networking service co-founded by former college friends Evan Spiegel, Bobby Murphy and Reggie Brown. Millions upon millions of photos and videos are shared using the app throughout the world every day.

Related: Snapchat Complies With Government Data Requests at a Higher Rate Than Yahoo, Twitter, Facebook and Google

4. SpaceX

Latest valuation: $12 billion

SpaceX revolutionize space technology 3,000-employee

5. Pinterest

Latest valuation: $11 billion

Pinterest $1.3 billion

6. Airbnb

Latest valuation: $10 billion going on $20 billion

Airbnb, a Y Combinator-launched startup, is a home rental startup based out of San Francisco. Much to the ire of corporate hotel chains it recently eclipsed in total available rooms, the company has quickly grown from a fledgling crash pad app to an astoundingly popular, one million-room-plus accommodations service. The platform hooks users up with all kinds of places to sleep, from average and swanky apartments, to deluxe and barebones yurts, to hippie-chic converted barns and everything in between. Brian Chesky, Nathan Blecharczyk and Joe Gebbia founded Airbnb in 2008. Despite an unending stream of rental disaster stories contributing to a pretty rough go of publicity lately, investors certainly don’t seem spooked. The company is reportedly raising a massive new funding round that will send its valuation to $20 billion.

Related: Airbnb and Uber Are Just the Beginning. What’s Next for the Sharing Economy?

7. Dropbox

Latest valuation: $10 billion

One of the many successful tech firms to emerge from prominent Silicon Valley incubator Y Combinator, Dropbox is a San Francisco-based cloud file storage and client software provider. Founded by Drew Houston and Arash Ferdowski in 2007, the company recently elbowed into the corporate productivity product market, more aggressively gunning for rivals Google and Microsoft.

8. Spotify

Latest valuation: $5 billion going on $8.4 billion

Spotify CrunchBase profile would value it at $8.4 billion the entire U.S. music industry

9. Square

Latest valuation: $6 billion

Square is San Francisco-based a financial services startup that offers mobile payment solutions to businesses of all sizes, from mom-and-pop shops to large chain stores. Founded in 2009 by Jack Dorsey and Jim McKelvey, Square’s two most popular products are Square Reader, a credit card reader for mobile devices, and Square Register, an app that works with Square reader to transform smartphones and tablets into mobile points of sale.

Related: Square Rolls Out New Reader for Chip-Based Credit Cards

10. Zenefits

Latest valuation: $4.5 billion

Human resources software startup Zenefits broke into the coveted billion-dollar valuation “unicorn” club last week on the heels of a $500 million funding round. The epic cash injection arrives just two years after Parker Conrad founded the San Francisco-based company. Launched in 2013, Zenefits provides owners of small and mid-sized businesses with software to fulfill their human resources needs, health insurance and payroll products included.

Related: The CEO of Zenefits Told a Prospective Employee to Join Uber — And His Reasoning Is Brilliant

By now you’ve heard that Verizon is scooping up AOL for $4.4 billion in a bid to beef up its content smorgasbord and its mobile and video advertising reach.

Yes, you read the purchase price right. And, no, it’s not an Antiques Roadshow record.

Today’s top telecom giant is indeed buying the dial-up darling of yesteryear for quite a steal of a deal — $50 a share. When you consider the astronomical sums several of the hottest tech startups are now valued at, AOL’s acquisition price tag looks a little like yard sale chump change. Ouch.

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Kim Lachance Shandrow

Former West Coast Editor
Kim Lachance Shandrow is the former West Coast editor at Entrepreneur.com. Previously, she was a commerce columnist at Los Angeles CityBeat, a news producer at MSNBC and KNBC in Los Angeles and a frequent contributor to the Los Angeles Times. She has also written for Government Technology magazine, LA Yoga magazine, the Lowell Sun newspaper,...

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