Link: Dropbox S-1 Analysis - The King of Freemium

“Founded in 2007, Dropbox epitomizes the freemium go-to-market. Dropbox has grown from 0 to 500 million users over that time period. 2% of those users convert to paid and pay an average of $9.33 per month. 90% of revenue originates through self serve channels - an astounding figure for company that generated more than $1B in revenue last year.” Original source: Dropbox S-1 Analysis - The King of Freemium

Link: Dropbox S-1 Analysis - The King of Freemium

“Founded in 2007, Dropbox epitomizes the freemium go-to-market. Dropbox has grown from 0 to 500 million users over that time period. 2% of those users convert to paid and pay an average of $9.33 per month. 90% of revenue originates through self serve channels - an astounding figure for company that generated more than $1B in revenue last year.” Original source: Dropbox S-1 Analysis - The King of Freemium

Link: Why isn't digital fixing the productivity puzzle?

“In addition, stagnant wages had implications for limiting demand growth. In our sector analysis, we found weak demand dampened productivity growth through other channels than investment, such as economies of scale and a subsector mix shift.” Original source: Why isn’t digital fixing the productivity puzzle?

Link: Why isn't digital fixing the productivity puzzle?

“In addition, stagnant wages had implications for limiting demand growth. In our sector analysis, we found weak demand dampened productivity growth through other channels than investment, such as economies of scale and a subsector mix shift.” Original source: Why isn’t digital fixing the productivity puzzle?

Link: Why isn't digital fixing the productivity puzzle?

“In addition, stagnant wages had implications for limiting demand growth. In our sector analysis, we found weak demand dampened productivity growth through other channels than investment, such as economies of scale and a subsector mix shift.” Original source: Why isn’t digital fixing the productivity puzzle?

Link: Dropbox IPO and financials

“Dropbox made $1.106 billion in revenue in the year ending in December, and lost $111.7 million on a net basis. That was growth of 31% in revenue terms, and an improvement on the bottom line of roughly half the year-earlier losses.” Original source: Dropbox IPO and financials

Link: Dropbox IPO and financials

“Dropbox made $1.106 billion in revenue in the year ending in December, and lost $111.7 million on a net basis. That was growth of 31% in revenue terms, and an improvement on the bottom line of roughly half the year-earlier losses.” Original source: Dropbox IPO and financials

Link: Dropbox IPO and financials

“Dropbox made $1.106 billion in revenue in the year ending in December, and lost $111.7 million on a net basis. That was growth of 31% in revenue terms, and an improvement on the bottom line of roughly half the year-earlier losses.” Original source: Dropbox IPO and financials