From a village in Tamil Nadu to building India's largest SaaS company—without a single dollar of venture capital.
Born in a middle-class Tamil family in rural Tamil Nadu, Sridhar grew up in an environment that valued education and humility above material wealth.
Graduated with a B.Tech in Electrical Engineering from the prestigious Indian Institute of Technology, Madras—laying the foundation for his technical excellence.
Earned his M.S. and Ph.D. in Electrical Engineering from Princeton, where his dissertation focused on information theory under advisor Sergio Verdú.
Worked as a wireless engineer at Qualcomm in San Diego, gaining invaluable experience in the heart of Silicon Valley's tech ecosystem.
From a small apartment in Chennai to a global SaaS powerhouse
Along with his brother Kumar and Tony Thomas, Sridhar founded AdventNet in Pleasanton, California. They started with network management software, bootstrapping the company with personal savings.
Launched Zoho University with just six high school students, training them in computer science for two years before absorbing them into the company. Today, 15% of Zoho's workforce are ZU graduates.
Pivoted from network management to cloud-based business software. The company was rebranded as Zoho Corporation, focusing on SaaS products for businesses worldwide.
Launched Zoho One—a revolutionary suite offering 40+ integrated products at just $30 per employee per month, challenging enterprise software giants.
Zoho became the first Indian SaaS company to reach $1 billion in annual revenue—entirely bootstrapped, with no external funding ever taken.
Stepped down as CEO to become Chief Scientist, focusing on deep-tech R&D and AI development while continuing to guide Zoho's long-term vision.
Sridhar Vembu built Zoho on a radical premise: that a technology company could be both wildly successful and deeply ethical.
Zoho has never taken a dollar of venture capital. This independence allows long-term thinking over short-term growth metrics.
No selling user data. No surveillance advertising. Zoho's business model is built on customer trust, not data exploitation.
Major operations moved to villages in Tamil Nadu, proving that world-class software can be built far from urban tech hubs.
Zoho Schools of Learning trains non-elite students, showing that talent exists everywhere—if given the opportunity.
"Numbers are important, but you cannot reduce performance to a set of metrics—it's counterproductive and inhuman."— Sridhar Vembu
In 2016, Sridhar made a decision that shocked the tech world: he moved Zoho's development operations to Tenkasi, a small town in rural Tamil Nadu.
What started as an experiment became a movement. Zoho proved that innovation doesn't need glass towers or venture capital—it needs conviction, talent, and a problem worth solving.
India's fourth-highest civilian award for distinguished service in trade and industry.
Ranked 51st among India's 100 richest tycoons by Forbes.
Leading sustainable business practices across all Zoho operations.
Transformed Chennai into the SaaS capital of India.
Sridhar Vembu didn't just build a software company—he challenged where tech can be built, how it can be funded, and what it should stand for.
In a world obsessed with blitzscaling and unicorn valuations, he proved that patience, principles, and purpose can build something more valuable: a sustainable, profitable, ethical technology empire that lifts up communities while serving millions of customers worldwide.