Top Ten Unicorns Around the World

1. Uber ($68 Billion) – USA
As Americans increased their spending on transportation, founders Garrett Camp and Travis Kalanick created Uber in 2009 to lower transportation costs with crowdsourcing. Their innovation has led to expansions into carpool services, helicopter transportation, and even self-driving cars.

2. Didi Chuxing ($50 Billion) – China
Didi Chuxing scaled Uber’s revolutionary services to over 20 million rides daily, surpassing their U.S. equivalent with the population and infrastructure of China. From carpooling, private cabs, luxury transport, and bicycle sharing, Didi Chuxing has expanded horizontally to be one of the most successful private companies this century.

3. Xiaomi ($46 Billion) – China
Xiaomi is a software and electronics producer founded by eight partners in 2010. In less than seven years, they dominated the smartphone market and engineered some of the world’s most popular mobile apps, laptops, and consumer electronics. With over 8,000 employees, Xiaomi is truly one of the world’s most impressive unicorns.

4. AirBnB ($29.3 Billion) – USA
AirBnB was founded in 2007 by Brian Chesky and Joe Gebbia, and what started as a small bed and breakfast in their loft quickly turned into the roar of enterprise as existing players in the hospitality market could not meet consumer demand. With 80% revenue growth from 2015 to 2016, AirBnB has since expanded to over 65,000 cities worldwide.

5. SpaceX ($21.2 Billion) – USA
As the world’s largest, privately owned aerospace technology and space transport company, SpaceX has been pushing boundaries since its founding in 2002 by entrepreneur Elon Musk. SpaceX was the first private company to launch a spacecraft into orbit and recover it, and works with the International Space Station for cargo delivery. The manned Dragon spacecraft are positioned to lead the first instances of Mars colonization and lunar tourism for the world.

6. Palantir Technologies ($20 Billion) – USA
Palantir is the backbone of data analysis for counter-terrorism, cyber warfare, and financial institutions. Nathan Gettings, Stephen Cohen, Joe Lonsdale, Alex Karp, and Peter Thiel founded Palantir in 2004 to revolutionize data analysis for government, healthcare, and financial services, and with a valuation of over $20 billion they have stated no intentions of an IPO anytime in the future.

7. WeWork ($20 Billion) – USA
Telecommuting for work has grown 115% since 2005, and WeWork was founded in 2010 to provide shared workspaces in 16 different countries. With a valuation of over $20 billion, WeWork provides physical and virtual workspaces, employee benefits, and social events for location independent workers around the world.

8. Lu.com ($18.5 Billion) – China
Lu.com is an online finance marketplace founded in 2011 as a peer-to-peer lending platform. Since then, Lu.com has taken its place as the second largest P2P lender in China and serviced over $2.5 billion in peer-to-peer loans.

9. China Internet Plus Holding ($18 Billion) – China
The China Internet Plus Holding company was formed by the merger of two largely successful competitors, Meituan and Dianping, in 2015. Valued at over $18 billion, they are one of the world’s leaders for restaurant bookings, event ticketing and other online-to-offline services.

10. Pinterest ($12.3 Billion) – USA
Pinterest was founded in 2009, and with a valuation of just over $12.3 billion, the visual social media platform is used by hobbyists, businesses, and marketers worldwide. Pinterest serves as a „catalogue of ideas” for their highly engaged users on a variety of topics.

Credit: businessinsider.com

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