Aussie startup Culture Amp has raised US$100 million ($135.4 million) in Series F funding, giving it a valuation of US$1.5 billion ($2 billion) and making its unofficial unicorn status official once and for all.
The raise was led by TDM Growth Partners and Sequoia Capital China.
It also included new backer Salesforce Ventures and repeat investors including Blackbird, Skip Capital and Grok Ventures, along with Felicis Ventures, Index Ventures, Sapphire Ventures, and Global Founders Capital.
It means Culture Ampโs valuation has doubled since its last raise, when it secured $120 million with a valuation of US$721 million. At the time, that was equivalent to about $1.04 billion.
A unicorn, however, has a valuation of US$1 billion โ a milestone the startup hadn’t quite hit.
At the time, co-founder and chief Didier Elzinga said the business was perhaps โa larrikin unicornโ.
And while he was proud of that, he said valuations are not the be-all and end-all of a business.
โThe amount of money youโve raised is not a correlation to how successful youโre going to be,โ he told SmartCompany.
โLetโs not celebrate raising money, letโs celebrate what we do with it.โ
While COVID-19 led to more needs for Culture Ampโs employee experience platform, the past 18 months or so havenโt been all smooth sailing for the startup.
In May 2020, the startup cut 8% of its workforce โ 36 people โ as it felt the pinch of the pandemic.
Things have changed a little since then, and it’s now gearing up to hire 300 people in 2021.
It also well and truly has a membership to the Aussie unicorn club. But itโs a club thatโs quickly losing its exclusivity, with three new startups (if we are indeed, including Culture Amp) gaining access within the past months alone.
So, along with the newbie, who are the Australian unicorns?
The unicorn club
Canva
Aussie design tech darling Canva has an outrageous valuation of $19.5 billion, which it reached after raising $92.5 million in April this year.
That came off the back of a huge year of growth, which saw revenue increase by 130%, year-on-year.
The number of people using the platform every month also doubled in the 12 months leading up to the raise.
The latest raise more than doubled Canvaโs valuation. Speaking to SmartCompany at the time, co-founder Cameron Adams said heโs confident thatโs a pattern set to continue.
If heโs right, this will be a $40 billion business before long.
The investment was โa validationโ of how Canva has performed so far, Adams said.
โItโs also looking forward to how weโre going to grow in the futureโ.
Airwallex
Melbourne-born fintech Airwallex hit a $US1 billion valuation back in March 2019, becoming the fastest Aussie startup to get there, within just three-and-a-half years.
Today, itโs worth $US2.6 billion ($3.4 billion), and has some 800 employees across 12 global offices.
The co-founding team have also launched their own venture capital fund, and are planning to raise $200 million for investment into other startups connected to the Airwallex ecosystem.
Speaking to SmartCompany when Airwallex hit the magic $1 billion number, co-founder and chief Jack Zhang was nonchalant about the news.
Thatโs not how the team measures success, he said.
โItโs just a status that people recognise.โ
SafetyCulture
Queensland startup SafetyCulture boasts a valuation of $2.2 billion, after banking $99 million in funding in May.
While part of the cash was pegged for product development, partnerships and brand-building, it also created a second opportunity for employees to access some of their equity in the business.
Of a $60 million raise closed in April 2020, half was directed back to employees, some of who were able to access โlife changingโ sums, SafetyCulture founder and chief told SmartCompany.
Anearโs dentist was an early investor, pouring $10,000 into the fledgling business. Now, that investment is worth โtens of millionsโ, he said.
โTo see his equity and faith he put in us being rewarded is a fantastic thing.โ
Judo Bank
In May last year, Aussie neobank Judo raised $230 million, becoming another certified fintech unicorn.
Having started life as an SME lender, Judo secured its full banking licence in 2019 and now offers a swathe of banking services tailored to SMEs.
This particular raise came during the ongoing COVID-19 crisis, which co-founder and chief David Hornery said was changing the ways business owners think about their banking โ in particular, their relationships with their banks.
โAt the centre of Judoโs proposition is going back to relationship banking for small business, as it used to be done,โ he told SmartCompany at the time.
โThat relationship proposition really comes to the fore at times like this.โ
Go1
Edtech Go1 gained unicorn status earlier this month, after closing a huge $272 million Series D raise.
The round was co-led by Aussie VC AirTree Ventures, Salesforce Ventures and global giant SoftBank, which invested through its SoftBank Vision Fund 2.
Speaking to SmartCompany at the time, co-founder and chief Andrew Barnes said he always knew Go1 could be a large business.
Becoming a โunicornโ was never really a priority, he said. But now he’s here, itโs both โscary and excitingโ.
โItโs great for the local Australian and Queensland ecosystem, to demonstrate that we can create great success stories that grow to be global players,โ he said.
Rokt
In the same week as Go1โs announcement, the Australian Financial Reviewโs Street Talk reported that marketing tech startup Rokt had also offloaded a small parcel of shares in a sale that pushed its valuation over the US$1 billion line.
Headed up by former Jetstar boss Bruce Buchanan, the startup is already backed by Paul Bassatโs Square Peg and TDM Growth Partners.
It is also reportedly gearing up for another pre-IPO raise.
When is a unicorn not a unicorn?
There are also a couple of peculiar cases in the Aussie scene, that are perhaps unicorns but perhaps not, depending on how you look at it.
SiteMinder
Another โlarrikinโ unicorn, hotel booking software startup SiteMinder raised about $100 million back in January 2020, giving it a valuation of $1.1 million in Australian dollars.
Thatโs about US$750 million, meaning it hasnโt quite made it into the global unicorn club โ yet.
Envato
And finally, it is often speculated that digital marketplace startup Envato is valued at $1 billion or more.
However, itโs been bootstrapped since launch in 2006, and while its profitable and generating millions in revenue, no one really knows what its worth.
Speaking to SmartCompany back in 2019, co-founder Cyan Taโeed said the leadership team has genuinely never looked into it, because there has been no need to.
โIf we were about to do something which would require that, then absolutely we would do it, but we donโt have any plans in that area,โ she said.
Comments