San Francisco Chronicle

‘Magic folder’ sets path for files, future

Dropbox’s 100 million users just the start as clients seek to connect smartphone­s, PCS

- By Ashlee Vance Ashlee Vance is a Bloomberg Businesswe­ek writer. E-mail: avance3@ bloomberg.net

The knock on Dropbox, as delivered by no less than the late Steve Jobs, has been that the company delivers a feature and not a fullblown product. One day, such logic holds, Dropbox’s ability to coordinate the storing of files across all manner of computing devices will be baked into a larger, more meaningful service from the usual cast of technology titans — Apple, Google, Microsoft and Amazon.com.

Perhaps. But as of last week, the San Francisco company has 100 million users that make the company’s service one seriously well-loved feature.

Dropbox lets you install a folder on your computing devices and then have any files you place in the folder synchroniz­e across all of the devices; it also lets you share these files with other people.

“The 100 million users milestone is more than just a number for us,” says Drew Houston, co-founder and chief executive officer of Dropbox. “It’s symbolic of us joining an elite handful of companies that have reached that scale. It’s also a start of the new road we are on — the road to a billion users.”

Houston notes that the last bit, the part about the billion users, would have seemed delusional when Dropbox began a few years ago. These days, though, it seems feasible, particular­ly as smartphone and tablet sales explode and people scramble for an easy way to link the devices to their home and office PC files.

“People start out backing up their photos, then they’re sharing wedding photos with their family, and then their contractor shares the plans on a house remodel,” Houston says. “Before you know it, your whole life is on Dropbox.”

Usage, staff grows

A CEO gushing about his own product does not impress, but some of the figures tied to Dropbox’s growth do.

Each day, Dropbox customers store 1 billion files. The company more or less has to help duplicate a digital version of the Library of Congress every day. By comparison, Twitter has about 140 million people issuing 500 million or so tweets on a daily basis.

“But at Dropbox, it’s not 140-character snippets,” Houston says. “It’s your tax returns and your most important stuff.”

Since the start of 2012, the staff at Dropbox’s Mission Bay headquarte­rs has grown from 90 people to 250. The company has concentrat­ed on the consumer market. The idea is to get people using the service and then sit back and watch as they install Dropbox on work computers.

The strategy has allowed Dropbox to avoid hiring tons of salespeopl­e to sell nervous chief informatio­n officers on the wonders of cloud computing. In the coming year, Houston expects some of this to change as Dropbox looks to bulk up its sales staff and release new products that are meant to cater to businesses’ security and software concerns.

Major competitor­s

The new strategy will put Dropbox in direct conflict with Box, its similarly named competitor, which has gone after businesses before pursuing consumers. Dropbox also faces plenty of competitio­n from the various online storage products offered by Apple, Google, Microsoft and Amazon.com.

Microsoft, in particular, has just started its file-syncing offensive via Windows 8, which rather vigorously encourages people on PCs, tablets and smartphone­s to store their files in SkyDrive.

No matter, Houston says.

“All of those companies have the same problem,” he says. “They want to put all your life into their ecosystem. It’s more and more places where all of your stuff can get stuck.”

Ah, the Switzerlan­d Gambit. Well played, Houston. Well played.

Unifying data junkies

Like any good, hyperbole-loving tech CEO, Houston talks up Dropbox in the loftiest of terms. We’re told that people remember the first time they used the software, much in the same way they remember their first kiss, and that the technology is the “one simplifyin­g force” we have all been looking for — a unified field theory for device and data junkies.

And things will only get better, he says.

“Today we are known as that magic folder,” Houston says. And tomorrow? “We will be the home for the most important stuff in your life that everything can plug in to.”

 ?? Dropbox ?? Mission Bay firm Dropbox lets users synchroniz­e files on all their devices through a common folder, which can also share files with other users.
Dropbox Mission Bay firm Dropbox lets users synchroniz­e files on all their devices through a common folder, which can also share files with other users.
 ?? Paul Chinn / The Chronicle ?? Dropbox co-founder Drew Houston (left) gives S.F. Mayor Ed Lee a tour of the headquarte­rs in April.
Paul Chinn / The Chronicle Dropbox co-founder Drew Houston (left) gives S.F. Mayor Ed Lee a tour of the headquarte­rs in April.

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