Zhang Yiming, chief executive officer and founder of ByteDance Ltd, poses for a photograph in Beijing, China on April 11, 2019. (GILLES SABRIE / BLOOMBERG)
Just last year, the world’s most valuable startup, ByteDance Ltd, was being squeezed from all sides.
The Trump administration wanted the Chinese firm, which owns the ubiquitous TikTok video-sharing platform, to get rid of assets while it also faced scrutiny in India.
For all the obstacles, ByteDance kept growing. Now its founder, 38-year-old Zhang Yiming, is among the world’s richest people.
Shares of the company trade in the private market at a valuation of more than US$250 billion, people familiar with the dealings have said
Shares of the company trade in the private market at a valuation of more than US$250 billion, people familiar with the dealings have said. At that level, Zhang, who owns about a quarter of ByteDance, could be worth more than US$60 billion, placing him alongside Tencent Holdings Ltd’s Pony Ma, bottled-water king Zhong Shanshan and members of the Walton and Koch families in the US, according to the Bloomberg Billionaires Index.
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ByteDance, famous for its short-video apps and news aggregator Toutiao, more than doubled revenue last year after expanding beyond its core advertising business into areas such as e-commerce and online gaming. It’s now weighing options for the initial public offering of some businesses.
“Zhang is someone who’s known for thinking long-term and not easily dissuaded by short-term setbacks,” said Ma Rui, partner at venture-capital firm Synaptic Ventures. “He is set on building an enduring, global business.”
Surging Valuation
During its last fundraising round, ByteDance reached a US$180 billion valuation, a person with knowledge of the matter said. That’s up from US$20 billion about three years ago, according to CB Insights. But in the private market, some investors recently were asking for the equivalent of a US$350 billion valuation to part with their shares, people familiar have said.
Born in the southern Chinese city of Longyan, Zhang, the only son of civil servants, studied programming at Tianjin’s Nankai University, where he built a following on the school’s online forum by fixing classmates’ computers. He joined Microsoft Corp for a brief stint after graduating, later calling the job so boring he often “worked half of the day and read books in the other half,” according to an interview with Chinese media. He went on to develop several ventures, including a real estate search portal.
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His breakthrough came in 2012, when working in a four-bedroom apartment in Beijing he created a joke-sharing app. It then turned to news aggregation before winning over more than 1 billion global users with its short-video platforms TikTok and Chinese twin app, Douyin.
In the process, it attracted big-name investors such as SoftBank Group Corp, Sequoia Capital and proprietary-trading firm Susquehanna International Group, making it a rarity among Chinese internet startups that usually get absorbed into the wider ecosystems of Tencent and Alibaba Group Holding Ltd.
Novel Concept
One of Zhang’s earliest supporters, Susquehanna has become ByteDance’s largest outside backer with a 15 percent stake, according to a Wall Street Journal story in October. The initial bet was made at the start of 2012, when ByteDance’s news app Toutiao was just a concept that Zhang had drawn up on napkins, according to a 2016 blog post by Joan Wang, who led that investment for Susquehanna’s Chinese venture-capital unit.
With TikTok facing scrutiny in the US and India, Zhang has put more effort into ByteDance’s nascent and fast-growing Chinese businesses, which range from gaming to education to e-commerce. That helped it increase sales to about US$35 billion last year and operating profit to US$7 billion, a person familiar with the results said.
Investors are eyeing the IPO of some of ByteDance’s businesses after Chinese competitor Kuaishou Technology raised US$5.4 billion in February in the biggest internet listing since Uber Technologies Inc., with its market value now nearing US$140 billion. Last month, ByteDance hired former Xiaomi Corp. executive Chew Shou Zi as its chief financial officer, filling a long vacant position that will be crucial for its eventual market offering.
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But for Zhang, it’s not all about immediate payoffs. The affable founder is known for his business philosophy of “delaying satisfactions” as he puts the focus on long-term growth -- a message he stressed again during his spiel to employees at the company’s ninth anniversary celebration last month.
“Keep an ordinary mind, that’s something that sounds easy but important to do,” he said. “Put in the plainest words, when hungry, eat, when tired, sleep.”