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How FusionAuth is affected by the SVB failure

This week, Silicon Valley Bank (SVB) ran into major issues due to the Federal Reserve’s planned rate hikes. After a large drop in its share price and a couple of key industry figures telling companies to pull out their money, trading has been halted, the bank has been suspended, and the government has stepped in to sort through the mess.

As many VC backed startups are frantically trying to figure out if they’ll have access to funds provided by investors parked at SVB, FusionAuth has a dramatically different story to share.

Our history

As the founder of the company, I started the company back in 2007 with the idea of building great software that companies could actually use. I wasn’t looking for someone to write me a $90M check in hopes that I would someday figure out a product the industry needed. Instead, I built a tool based on my own needs. This tool was CleanSpeak and it is still an awesome business that provides customer value to this day. The company was immediately profitable because we had to be. How could I pay salaries unless companies purchased licenses for our software? For years, we continued to grow the CleanSpeak business and as we made money, we built out the team and company.

In 2016 or so, Daniel DeGroff and I started working on what eventually became FusionAuth. CleanSpeak was generating great revenue and this allowed us to build FusionAuth without taking on any debt or investment. In 2018, we launched FusionAuth and began selling support for it. As FusionAuth gained in popularity, we continued to add great customers, increased revenue, and hired awesome employees to help us build. To this day, we’ve built the company in this bootstrapped fashion.

The VC model

The VC model is quite different. It generally starts with a rough idea or an MVP (minimally viable product). Investors then write large checks to help the founders expand. This might include hiring more employees to help build the product or to generate leads and make sales.

VC backed companies generally run at a significant loss because they are always spending more than they are making to grow at a rate that is attractive for future investors. This spend is usually a combination of paying employees and spending on marketing. The goal is to eventually generate more revenue then the company is burning, but that can happen “sometime in the future”. This type of success is rare though and many companies will instead raise more and more money to continue covering their bills while they attempt to grow.

SVB and FusionAuth

Since we never raised money from VCs or needed any type of debt financing, SVB is not a great bank for us. Instead, we’ve been banking with Chase for over a decade. Chase is a great bank for bootstrapped and profitable businesses because they understand the fundamentals of businesses, not just large funding rounds.

While the SVB issues are going to leave a lasting mark on the tech industry and we feel for all those affected by the closure, FusionAuth is in a great position to continue providing value. We are bootstrapped and aren’t going to disappear overnight or lay off most of our employees. We are profitable, so we pay our employees and all our expenses. We always have money left over each year, which we save in case we need it.

We are still growing, despite all of the issues the world is facing right now.

Trusting your login to a third party can be a hard decision because it is a mission critical component. It’s the front door to your applications, and if it closes, your users will be angry. Picking the right company to work with can be challenging. If you need an industry leading vendor that is guaranteed not to disappear on you, FusionAuth is your best bet!

Thanks for reading and happy coding!

*** This is a Security Bloggers Network syndicated blog from The FusionAuth Blog authored by The FusionAuth Blog. Read the original post at: https://fusionauth.io/blog/2023/03/10/fusionauth-and-svb