Billion Dollar Unicorns: How Will GitHub Reach Its Billion Dollar Revenue Target?

Billion Dollar Unicorn player GitHub was founded in 2008 by Tom Preston-Werner, Chris Wanstrath, and PJ Hyett to expand the open source operating system market that was developed by Linux.

GitHub's Offerings

The founders of GitHub were inspired by the need to bridge a gap that they noticed in Linux. Linux's developer Linus Torvalds had already developed Git, a tool for software version control. But the platform did not offer much in terms of allowing developers to collaborate and contribute revisions on open source projects. GitHub was developed to bridge this collaboration tool and integrate a social layer within the open-source platform.

GitHub became a very popular social engine and was soon called the “ for developers”. Today, more than 27 million people use GitHub to share code with friends, co-workers, and the developer community at large. It claims to have grown to become the largest code host in the world.

GitHub's Financials

The service is free for public projects and earns revenue by charging for private software projects. It earns revenues from three key services – the personal plan where it charges developers a subscription fee of $7 per month; the organizational plan at a fee of $9 per user per month, and finally, the GitHub Enterprise priced $21 per user per month for enterprise customers. The GitHub Enterprise is offered as an on-premise or cloud service. All paying subscribers have access to unlimited public repositories, unlimited private repositories, 24×7 support team, and user permissions. The Enterprise plan also allows companies to keep their code private. Subscription from this service accounts for half of its total revenue.

GitHub is privately held and does not disclose detailed financials. But a leak revealed that the revenues would have allows companies to keep their code private. Subscription from this service accounts for half of its total revenue from $95 million in 2015 and an estimated $131 million in 2016. GitHub is not profitable yet, and losses have been racking up at a faster pace. For fiscal 2015, it incurred net loss of $27 million, and that number grew to $66 million for the first nine months of fiscal 2016. Losses for the entire fiscal 2016 and 2017 are not known.

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