Forbes

Boss of the Bots

DANIEL DINES CREATED THE WORLD’S HOTTEST TECH COMPANY, $7 BILLION UIPATH, BY UNLEASHING VIRTUAL ROBOTS ON OFFICE GRUNT WORK. HE’S BECOME THE FIRST BOT BILLIONAIR­E IN THE PROCESS.

- By Alex Konrad

Daniel Dines created the world’s hottest tech company, $7 billion UIPath, by unleashing virtual robots on office grunt work. He’s become the first bot billionair­e in the process.

through his fingers as he fights the mundane urge not to bark at his employees. Instead, Daniel Dines, the cofounder and CEO of UiPath, merely scowls at the digital whiteboard ahead of an October product release. One feature raises security concerns; another hasn’t been designed properly for mobile.

Finally, Dines, a Microsoft veteran who pines for the simplicity of the Windows bottom-left start button, can no longer contain himself. Looking over central Bucharest, Romania, where he hatched UiPath, Dines rousts a product executive in Bellevue, Washington, where it’s 6:30 a.m. “I want you to rethink this,” Dines says. “This feels very complicate­d to me. It should work like Gmail works.”

Interface is crucially important to Dines because his ultimate product is something invisible to the human eye. UiPath creates bots—blocks of code that automatica­lly carry out repetitive tasks. You might associate bots with Russian election ruses or customer service stand-ins, but UiPath recently garnered a $7 billion valuation by selling a more humdrum kind that can pull numbers from invoiced PDFs into accounting software, or process insurance claims—the mindless tasks that, like those of bank tellers or telephone operators generation­s ago, cry out to go the way of the dodo.

This shift—which has spawned an entirely new tech category, known as “robotic process automation,” or RPA—carries eye-popping potential. Japan’s Sumitomo Mitsui bank group, a UiPath customer since April 2017, projects that reducing employee busywork and improving accuracy will have saved it nearly $500 million by next year. Giants like Toyota and Walmart have flocked to UiPath for similar magic. Setting up virtual robots is faster and cheaper than assigning engineers to build an internal app, and it spares workers the low-tech alternativ­e: long hours creating Excel macros and filling spreadshee­ts. A UiPath bot does the task endlessly, without complaint, for up to $15,000 a year. Some companies use thousands at a time.

Dines, 47, didn’t invent RPA, but he’s adroitly positioned himself to dominate it. Two years ago, when European investors valued it at $110 million, UiPath was a littleknow­n company of 150 based in Romania that had just booked less than $5 million in revenue. Today it’s headquarte­red in a gleaming skyscraper on Park Avenue in Manhattan and employs 3,200 in more than 30 offices around the world. It generated $155 million in revenue last year and expects to double that this year. The shift has shot it to No. 3 on Forbes’ 2019 Cloud 100. In April, Wall Street investors including Wellington Management pumped in $568 million, at a valuation of $7 billion, making Dines, who owns more than 20%, the world’s first bot billionair­e.

He won’t be the last. With bots poised to create vast efficienci­es via artificial intelligen­ce (rather than just, say, generate fake pro-Trump Twitter accounts), a land grab is emerging. Blue Prism, listed on the London Stock Exchange and the category’s creator, recently raised $130 million by issuing new stock. SoftBank has invested $300 million in San Jose, California-based Automation Anywhere, which claims to be beating UiPath in artificial intelligen­ce. And tech’s cloud giants—led by Microsoft—are showing signs of elbowing in.

Thus Dines’ impatience in Bucharest. UiPath must continue to push the limits of how fast a startup can grow without collapsing on itself and simultaneo­usly serve as the face of an “industry” tarred by the risks associated with malevolent bots and the prospect of lower-skilled workers losing jobs. For Dines, who has never told his story in full until now, such talk seems too familiar, akin to the swipes people took at his old boss as software emerged as a societal game-changer. “Bill Gates used to talk at Microsoft about a computer in every home,” Dines says. “I want a robot for every person.”

The man who at once epitomizes the hottest new growth area in tech and the burgeoning hopes for entreprene­urship in Eastern Europe twirls a marker

Humility” is one of UiPath’s four main tenets, akin to Google’s early maxim “Don’t be evil,” and it’s practiced just as inconsiste­ntly. At lunch with Dines in Bucharest, the founder says he doesn’t consider himself a great coder, just a very good one. By dinnertime, he says he’s still better than anyone at UiPath.

Whichever Dines you believe, programmin­g launched him out of Romania. The son of a teacher and a civil engineer who met after both were relocated by the government of dictator Nicolae Ceausescu to a new chemical factory town, Dines grew up behind the Iron Curtain wanting to be an author, only to discover he was far better at math. He started college in 1990, a year after the Berlin Wall fell and Ceausescu’s regime ended in front of a firing squad. Bored with impersonal lectures, Dines skipped all but some math and computer science classes to play competitiv­e bridge. He supported himself as a post-Communist arbitrager of Romania’s inflationa­ry currency, buying goods when they were cheaper in Bucharest and sending them home with a markup.

While running a jobs listings business in the mid-’90s, Dines heard that coders in Bucharest working on outsourced projects for U.S. tech companies were making a relatively princely $300 a month. He borrowed a book on C++ from the library and taught himself, using a friend’s computer while he slept. By 2001, he had an offer from Microsoft and moved to Seattle, where he worked as a programmer for nearly five years. “My first years were terrible,” Dines says. “In meetings, I understood 50% to 60% of what they talked about, and I couldn’t speak anything.” It was only much later that he discovered that some words—like “folder”—were more than the names of Windows icons.

In 2005, he returned to Bucharest to start a tech outsourcin­g company, DeskOver. In keeping with the times, Dines had forsworn bridge for poker, where his management style emerged. “He took a lot of risks, so most of the time he would lose, but he liked to make a learning experience out of it,” says Marius Tîrca, who emerged as Dines’ chief lieutenant. “He’d play sometimes with the cards on their face and ask everyone how they would play his hand.”

Those lessons were put to the test after he lost his largest outsourcin­g customer in 2011. Rather than fold up his little shop, he quit chain-smoking and elevated Tîrca to cofounder and, later, chief technology officer—and they focused on the company’s side business selling software developmen­t kits, or SDKs, that helped engineers code apps faster. That proved to be a stopgap. The fundamenta­l shift came when an Indian customer showed Dines how it was building off those tools

to train software to mimic basic tasks like data entry, no engineer needed.

UiPath dispatched staff to visit the Indian company and then, it says, snatched the contract from Blue Prism, which had just coined the term “RPA” after automating back-office functions for banks. “They made it clear this was the best use of our technology,” Dines says. “Our software was completely useful in the RPA world.”

So Dines went into the virtual robot business, focusing on software programs that ran autonomous­ly without requiring the writing of new code. By 2014, the company had $500,000 in revenue—not bad in Romania —and Dines, inspired by Hacker News message boards, targeted bigger customers and Silicon Valley-style scale. He shifted the business model to software-as-a-service subscripti­ons, raised $1.6 million from European funds Earlybird, Credo Ventures and Seedcamp, and hastily renamed the company UiPath, after a technical term in the startup’s code.

Instead of competing with the big auditing and consulting firms, UiPath became their partner. Companies like Cognizant and EY already had deals with multinatio­nals to make processes like procuremen­t more efficient. As UiPath customers themselves, they could save money per client by automating some of that work. More lucrative: Dines would encourage consultant­s to introduce UiPath to their clients by letting

Dines turned down a $1 billion offer from SoftBank’s Masayoshi Son. “You’re welcome in the company,” Dines told him, “but you can only invest this much.”

the consultant­s keep as much as 80% of the overall bot-related spend in exchange for setting up and maintainin­g the program. Suddenly some of the world’s biggest companies were serving as little UiPath’s sales force. In fact, it would be two years before Dines met any of his customers face to face (Swiss Re insisted Dines fly to Zurich for a $100,000 contract).

As rival Blue Prism went public in 2016 (current market cap: $750 million), Dines was determined to take UiPath global. He had already scored U.S. clients, like a $300,000 contract with General Electric, over the phone. But Dines knew that for

bigger deals he’d need boots on the ground, first with an office in outsourcin­g hub Bangalore in 2016, then London and New York. By Valentine’s Day the next year, Dines had signed the term sheet for $30 million in investment at a $110 million valuation from Accel as executives waited at the airport to go open the Tokyo office. Dines had a parting shot for Accel’s London investors before jetting off. “Daniel looks at us and says, ‘I will make you guys a lot of money!’” Accel partner Luciana Lixandru says.

Funding secured and aspiration­s multiplied, Dines relocated his headquarte­rs—and his family—to New York two years ago. (He still spends

Dines wakes up most mornings and reads until he’s bored, an hour or more, then takes a quick nap.

about a third of his time working out of the Bucharest office, now an R&D center.) By the end of 2017, UiPath had just over $30 million in revenue, and unlike typical Silicon Valley startups, which often start selling to each other, the company claims that 60% of the biggest companies in America are clients. The global focus shows: UiPath’s sales come in about equal thirds from North America, Europe and the rest of the world.

This rapid, diverse growth quickly drew more blue-chip investors. Alphabet’s startup investment shop, CapitalG, shared the lead of its $153 million Series B in March 2018, which valued UiPath at $1.1 billion, with Accel returning for more.

That summer, as sales topped $100 million, Dines got the offer that has become a rite of passage for unicorn founders. Representa­tives of SoftBank’s Vision Fund, the $100 billion investment vehicle led by Masayoshi Son, caught up with Dines as he vacationed in France’s Côte d’Azure. Dines flew to Japan to meet with Son himself, who Dines says offered him a $1 billion investment—more dilution and board control than he was comfortabl­e with. “I told Masa, you’re welcome in the company,” Dines says. “But you can only invest this much.” UiPath chose CapitalG and venture capital firm Sequoia to colead the $225 million investment that valued it at $3 billion. “Daniel is a brilliant negotiator. He is like a crocodile in the water,” says Mihai Faur, UiPath’s chief accounting officer, who worked on the funding rounds. “He’s relaxed on the outside. Inside, he has a fire.”

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 ?? PHOTOGRAPH BY LEVON BISS FOR FORBES BY ALEX KONRAD ??
PHOTOGRAPH BY LEVON BISS FOR FORBES BY ALEX KONRAD
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