The company disclosed that it had 30 times the amount of users compared to December results as the coronavirus pandemic forced employees to work from a home office.
The global disruption to working life reshaped the company from a corporate tool to a digital hangout space.
Eric S. Yuan, chief executive and founder of Zoom, said the crisis had driven demand for the service as people “integrated Zoom into their work, learning, and personal lives.”
The company did not disclose active user numbers.
This was in keeping with its previous practices, CNBC reported.
Zoom said it now has more than 265,000 corporate customers with more than ten employees – an increase of 354 percent compared to the same time last year.
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Some 769 customers – twice as many as a year earlier – spent more than 100,000 dollars a year on Zoom’s services.
Total revenue nearly tripled for the quarter to reach 328.2 million dollars compared to 122 million a year earlier.
The huge spike made the company raise its full-year sales forecast to between 1.78 billion to 1.8 billion from 915.0 million.
But it has not been all smooth sailing, with the tech company facing bans from governments and corporations due to privacy and security concerns.
In the wake of the criticism, Zoom invested heavily in cloud and security software, increasing the company’s cost of revenue by 330 per cent to 103.7 million.
(dpa/NAN)