homebusiness Newscompanies NewsZoho CEO Sridhar Vembu sounds alarm over global economic slowdown as September growth falters

Zoho CEO Sridhar Vembu sounds alarm over global economic slowdown as September growth falters

Vembu's warning comes in response to a noticeable slowdown in growth experienced by Zoho in the month of September, affecting various countries and a spectrum of products offered by the company.

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By Jomy Jos Pullokaran  Oct 2, 2023 5:38:08 PM IST (Published)

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Zoho CEO Sridhar Vembu sounds alarm over global economic slowdown as September growth falters
Global technology company Zoho Corporation on Monday (October 2) issued a cautionary statement about a potential global economic downturn.

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"We saw a fairly pronounced slowdown in growth in September across countries and across products. Given the geographically and product-wise diversified nature of our revenue streams, I suspect the global economy is taking a turn for the worse. Caution ahead," Sridhar Vembu, the CEO of Zoho Corporation, tweeted today.
Vembu's warning comes in response to a noticeable slowdown in growth experienced by Zoho in the month of September, affecting various countries and a spectrum of products offered by the company.
Last month. Chennai-based Zoho surpassed 100 million million users across over 55 business applications. The landmark comes less than a year since the company announced, in November, that achieved $1 billion in revenue.
The last few years have seen Zoho Corp register prolific growth on the sales and user-count front. For context, it surpassed the 1 million user-count mark in 2008. Its last 50 million users were on-boarded in only the last five years.
The company has also made rapid strides in the enterprise, or the "upmarket" segment, in India, with a 3-year CAGR of 65 percent. Zoho supports over 7 lakh businesses across more than 150 countries, with India continuing to be one of the fastest-growing among the lot.
In March this year, a new report from the World Bank warned that the global economy’s “speed limit” — the maximum rate of long-term growth without causing inflation — is set to decline to its lowest point in three decades by 2030.
The report, titled ‘Falling Long-Term Growth Prospects: Trends, Expectations, and Policies,’ provides an extensive evaluation of potential output growth rates in the aftermath of two significant global events — the COVID-19 pandemic and the Russian invasion of Ukraine.
It presents a troubling observation — nearly all of the economic forces that have driven progress and prosperity in the past three decades are diminishing.

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