Atlassian
Company type | Public |
---|---|
| |
ISIN | GB00BZ09BD16 |
Industry | Software |
Founded | 2002 | in Sydney
Founders | |
Headquarters | , Australia |
Key people |
|
Products | |
Revenue | US$3.92 billion (2024) |
US$−117 million (2024) | |
US$−301 million (2024) | |
Total assets | US$5.21 billion (2024) |
Total equity | US$1.03 billion (2024) |
Owners |
|
Number of employees | 12,157 (2024) |
Website | atlassian |
Footnotes / references [1][2][3][4] |
Atlassian Corporation (/ətˈlæsiən/) is an Australian software company that specializes in collaboration tools designed primarily for software development and project management. The company is globally headquartered in Sydney, Australia, with a US headquarters in San Francisco,[5][6] and over 12,000 employees across 14 countries.[7][8][9][10] Atlassian currently serves over 300,000 customers in over 200 countries across the globe.[11]
History
[edit]In 2001, Mike Cannon-Brookes sent an email to his University of New South Wales classmates asking if any of them were interested in helping him launch a tech startup after graduation.[12] Scott Farquhar was the only one who replied, and together they founded Atlassian in 2002.[13][14][15] They bootstrapped the company for several years, financing the startup with a $10,000 credit card debt.[16] The name was derived from the Greek mythological figure Atlas,[17] inspired by his bronze statue in New York's Rockefeller Center.[18]
Initially, Cannon-Brookes and Farquhar were engaged in supporting other customer service teams, which required them to be available for calls at all hours.[19] They were also unhappy with the bug-tracking software they were using at the time. To solve these issues, they developed Atlassian's flagship product, Jira, a project and issue tracking tool, and shifted their focus to selling this software.[20] Then, in 2004, Atlassian launched its team collaboration platform named Confluence.[21]
In July 2010, Atlassian raised $60 million in secondaries venture capital from Accel Partners.[22] By June of the next year it announced that revenue had increased 35% in the previous year to $102 million.[23] The 2014 restructuring saw the parent company became Atlassian Corporation PLC of the UK whose address was registered in London though the de facto headquarters remained in Sydney.[24]
In 2013, Atlassian announced a Jira service desk product with full service-level agreement support.[25]
In November 2015, Atlassian announced sales of $320 million,[26] and Shona Brown was added to its board.[27] On 10 December 2015, Atlassian made its initial public offering (IPO) on the NASDAQ stock exchange,[28] under the symbol TEAM, putting the market capitalization of Atlassian at $4.37 billion.[29] The IPO made its founders Farquhar and Cannon-Brookes Australia's first tech startup billionaires and household names in their native country, despite Atlassian being called a "very boring software company" in The New York Times for its focus on development and management software.[14][30][31]
In March 2019, Atlassian's value was US$26.6 billion.[32] Cannon-Brookes and Farquhar own approximately 30% each. In October 2020, Atlassian announced the end of support for their "Server" products with sales ending in February 2021 and support ending in February 2024 to focus on "Cloud" and "Data Center" editions.[33]
In October 2021, Atlassian received approval to construct their new Headquarters in Sydney, which will anchor the Tech Central precinct.[34] Their building is planned to be the world's tallest hybrid timber structure and will embody leading sustainability technologies and principles.[35]
In March 2023, the firm announced layoffs of 500 employees, or 5% of its workforce.[36] In October 2023, Microsoft identified a severe zero-day vulnerability that can be exploited remotely and anonymously in Atlassian's Confluence product. It also accused Chinese state-backed group known as Storm-0062, DarkShadow, or Oro0lxy, of breaking into Atlassian customers' systems several weeks earlier. Atlassian asked its customers to look for signs of a breach, as it could not itself confirm whether their systems were affected. The flaw has since been fixed via an update that the customers would need to apply.[37]
At the end of August 2024, Farquhar stepped down as co-CEO, leaving Cannon-Brookes as the sole CEO of the company. Farquhar remains on the board and as a special adviser.[4][38]
2019 data leak
[edit]In July 2019, cybersecurity researcher Sam Jadali exposed a catastrophic data leak known as DataSpii involving clickstream data provider DDMR and marketing intelligence company Nacho Analytics (NA).[39][40] Branding itself as the "God mode for the internet," NA granted its free and paid members the ability to access real-time Jira and Confluence data from Atlassian's cloud and on-premise products, impacting thousands of Atlassian customers including Reddit, FireEye, NBC Digital, BuzzFeed, AlienVault, Cardinal Health, T-Mobile, and Under Armour.[41][42]
Ars Technica's coverage of Jadali's findings highlighted DataSpii's ability to disseminate sensitive Atlassian Jira data, including Blue Origin staff's competitor discussions and technical issues with sensors, equipment and manifolds.
DataSpii circumvented the most effective security measures, enabling the unauthorized dissemination of Jira data from the internal corporate networks of leading cybersecurity firms.[43] This resulted in the real-time leakage of Jira tickets containing the cybersecurity issues of entities such as the Pentagon, Bank of America, AT&T, and others.[44] Jadali's investigation revealed that DDMR facilitated rapid dissemination of the data to additional third parties, often within minutes of acquisition, endangering the privacy of the sensitive data collected.[45]
Sales model
[edit]Atlassian operates under the principle that "software should be bought, not sold." Instead of running a traditional sales team, they opted to build a self-service purchase experience. This was considered risky in the early 2000s, but the strategy worked better than expected when they awoke one morning to an order form from American Airlines in the fax machine.[46] While a majority of sales are made through their website,[47] Atlassian also runs a partner program where solution partners not only provide knowledge about Atlassian products but can also assist with product implementation and configuration depending on their partner classification.[48][49][50]
Acquisitions and product announcements
[edit]Additional products include Crucible, FishEye, Bamboo, and Clover, which target programmers working with a code base. FishEye, Crucible, and Clover came into Atlassian's portfolio by acquiring another Australian software company, Cenqua, in 2007.[51] In 2010, Atlassian acquired Bitbucket, a hosted service for code collaboration.[52]
In 2012, Atlassian acquired HipChat, an instant messenger for workplace environments. Then in May 2012, Atlassian Marketplace was introduced as a website where customers can download plug-ins for various Atlassian products.[53][54][55] That same year Atlassian also released Stash, a Git repository for enterprises, later renamed Bitbucket Server.[56] Also, Doug Burgum became chairman of its board of directors in July 2012.[57]
In May 2015, the company announced its acquisition of work chat company Hall, intending to migrate all of Hall's customers across to its chat product HipChat.[58] In April 2015, Atlassian announced that it had acquired Blue Jimp—the company behind Jitsi—to expand its video capabilities.[59]
A small startup called Dogwood Labs in Denver, Colorado, which had a product called StatusPage (that hosts pages updating customers during outages and maintenance), was acquired in July 2016.[60][61]
In January 2017, Atlassian announced the purchase of Trello for $425 million.[62] On 7 September 2017, the company launched Stride, a web chat alternative to Slack.[63][64] Less than a year later, on 26 July 2018, Atlassian announced it was going to exit the chat business, that it had sold the intellectual property for HipChat and Stride to competitor Slack, and that it was going to shut down HipChat and Stride in 2019. As part of the deal, Atlassian took a small stake in Slack.[65]
On 4 September 2018, the company acquired OpsGenie (a tool that generates alerts for helpdesk tickets) for $295 million.[66] In October 2018, the company announced that it was selling Jitsi to 8x8.[67]
On 18 March 2019, the company announced that it had acquired Agilecraft for $166 million.[68] On 17 October 2019, Atlassian completed the acquisition of Code Barrel, makers of "Automation for Jira", available on Jira Marketplace.[69]
On 12 May 2020, Atlassian acquired Halp, a tool that generates helpdesk tickets from Slack conversations,[70] for an undisclosed amount.[71] On 30 July 2020, Atlassian announced the acquisition of Mindville, a provider of IT service management software, for an undisclosed amount.[72]
On 26 February 2021, Atlassian acquired the cloud-based visualization and analytics company Chartio.[73]
On 19 April 2023, Atlassian announced a set of new features, branded as "Atlassian Intelligence", which integrate technology from OpenAI.[74] Then, on 12 October 2023, Atlassian agreed to buy video messaging company Loom for US$975 million, with the intention to integrate Loom's technology into its existing services.[75][76] The following day Atlassian announced the acquisition of "AirTrack" a data and asset management tool. [77]
In April 2024, Atlassian released Rovo, a set of search and automation tools that use AI.[78] On 29 August 2024, Atlassian acquired the AI-powered meeting recorder company Rewatch.[79]
References
[edit]- ^ "U.S. SEC: Atlassian Corporation Form 10-K". U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission. 16 August 2024.
- ^ Farquhar, Scott; Cannon-Brookes, Mike; Deatsch, Cameron; Beer, James (28 April 2022). "Our Q3 FY22 letter to shareholders". Atlassian. Retrieved 2 June 2022.
- ^ "Atlassian Corporation Form 8-K". U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission. 3 October 2022.
- ^ a b Biggs, Tim (26 April 2024). "Scott Farquhar to step down as Atlassian co-CEO". The Sydney Morning Herald. Archived from the original on 27 April 2024.
- ^ "Office Envy: Inside Atlassian's San Francisco headquarters". CNBC. 24 February 2016.
- ^ "Atlassian Announces Completion of its Redomiciliation to the United States" (Press release). San Francisco: Business Wire. 3 October 2022. Retrieved 4 October 2022.
- ^ Druzin, Bryce (28 November 2016). "San Francisco software firm opens Silicon Valley hub". Silicon Valley Business Journal. Archived from the original on 2 February 2017. Retrieved 25 January 2017.
- ^ "Contact". Atlassian. Retrieved 2 June 2022.
- ^ "Atlassian Announces Fourth Quarter and Fiscal Year 2022 Results". investors.atlassian.com. Retrieved 4 August 2022.
- ^ "About Us | Atlassian". Atlassian. Retrieved 27 August 2024.
- ^ "Atlassian Customers | Achieving Together What's Impossible Alone". www.atlassian.com. Retrieved 1 November 2024.
- ^ "Atlassian: Mike Cannon-Brookes and Scott Farquhar". Retrieved 24 March 2024.
- ^ "Atlassian Shareholder Letter Q2 FY19" (PDF). Atlassian. 17 January 2019. Retrieved 19 January 2023.
- ^ a b Moses, Asher (15 July 2010). "From Uni dropouts to software magnates". The Sydney Morning Herald. Archived from the original on 4 December 2013.
- ^ Asher, Moses (14 July 2010). "From Uni dropouts to software magnates". The Sydney Morning Herald. Archived from the original on 14 December 2012. Retrieved 15 May 2013.
- ^ Mckenzie, Hamish. "Hard yakka: Why Atlassian's founders are the pride of Australia's startup world". PandoDaily. Archived from the original on 17 May 2013. Retrieved 15 May 2013.
- ^ "Behind the Scenes of the Atlassian Logo Redesign - Atlassian Blog". 27 October 2011. Archived from the original on 30 October 2020. Retrieved 28 September 2017.
{{cite web}}
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- ^ Weinberger, Matt. "The co-CEOs of $26 billion Atlassian changed the way programmers work together. Now, they explain their plan to do it for everybody else too". Business Insider. Retrieved 5 May 2019.
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- ^ Bowles, Nellie (13 February 2019). "The Strange Experience of Being Australia's First Tech Billionaires". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved 18 September 2020.
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- ^ Sam Jadali [@sam_jadali] (December 5, 2019). "Multibillion dollar cybersecurity companies leaked client data including government (Pentagon) and corporate data (BofA, AT&T, Novartis, Orange, and KP) in the #DataSpii browser extension leak. See attached for heavily redacted screenshot" (Tweet) – via X.
- ^ Goodin, Dan (18 July 2019). "More on DataSpii: How extensions hide their data grabs—and how they're discovered". Ars Technica. Retrieved 5 March 2024.
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- ^ Biggs, Tim (13 October 2023). "Atlassian bets big on remote work with $1.5b acquisition". Sydney Morning Herald.
- ^ Wong, Edwin (31 October 2023). "AirTrack, maker of leading IT data quality management technology, joins the Atlassian family". Work Life by Atlassian. Retrieved 2 December 2024.
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External links
[edit]- Official website
- Business data for Atlassian Corporation: