Compare / Zoom vs Uber
AT A GLANCE
FUNDING HISTORY
Zoom
Uber
BUSINESS MODEL
Zoom
Zoom uses a freemium model. Free accounts get unlimited one-on-one meetings and 40-minute group meetings.
Paid plans start at $13.33/month per user for Pro (meetings up to 30 hours), $18.33/month for Business, and custom pricing for Enterprise. Zoom also charges for add-ons — Zoom Phone (cloud phone system), Zoom Rooms (conference room hardware), and Zoom Contact Center.
The free tier is the hook. The 40-minute limit on group calls creates just enough friction to push power users to pay.
And once one person in a company pays, the whole team follows because nobody wants to be the one whose meetings keep getting cut off.
Uber
Uber is a marketplace that connects riders with drivers. You request a ride through the app, the nearest driver accepts, picks you up, drops you off, and Uber takes a cut — typically 25-30% of the fare.
The driver keeps the rest. Uber doesn't own any cars.
They don't employ any drivers. They built a $150 billion company by being the middleman with a really good app.
The model expanded into Uber Eats (food delivery, same concept — restaurants cook, drivers deliver, Uber takes a cut), Uber Freight (connecting truckers with shippers), and advertising. The advertising business is quietly enormous — Uber has data on where millions of people go every day, and brands will pay handsomely for that.
HOW THEY STARTED
Zoom
Eric Yuan grew up in Tai'an, a mining city in Shandong province, China. In 1997, he was 27 and inspired by the internet boom happening in America.
He applied for a US visa. He was rejected.
He applied again. Rejected again.
Eight times total over two years before he finally got approved in 1997. He moved to Silicon Valley with barely any English and joined WebEx as one of its first engineers.
Yuan spent 14 years at WebEx, eventually becoming VP of Engineering. Cisco acquired WebEx in 2007 for $3.2 billion.
Yuan watched Cisco slowly bloat the product with enterprise features while the core video quality deteriorated. He kept telling Cisco leadership they needed to rebuild the product from scratch.
They kept saying no.
In 2011, Yuan quit and took 40 WebEx engineers with him. He founded Zoom Video Communications with a simple thesis: video meetings should just work.
No downloads. No lag.
No "can you hear me?" No IT department required. He built the product that Cisco refused to build.
Uber
The idea started in Paris in December 2008. Travis Kalanick and Garrett Camp were at the LeWeb tech conference and couldn't find a cab.
Camp had been obsessing over the idea of summoning a car with your phone. He bought the domain UberCab.com, built a prototype, and recruited Kalanick to help run it.
The first version launched in San Francisco in 2010 as a black car service — not the cheap rideshare everyone knows today. You'd tap a button, a Lincoln Town Car would show up, and it cost about 1.5x a regular taxi.
Ryan Graves answered a tweet from Kalanick looking for an "entrepreneurial product manager" and became employee number one. He ran operations while Kalanick was still finishing up another startup.
Graves would later become CEO briefly before handing the reins to Kalanick. The app launched with just a handful of cars in San Francisco.
It worked so well that riders couldn't shut up about it.
The real inflection point came in 2012 when they launched UberX — regular people driving their own cars at prices cheaper than taxis. That one decision turned Uber from a luxury black car service into a verb.
Within two years, UberX was available in hundreds of cities and the word "Uber" had entered the dictionary.
HOW THEY GREW
Zoom
Zoom grew on one thing: it worked. In a world where every video call started with five minutes of technical issues, Zoom calls just connected.
That reliability was the entire marketing strategy for the first five years.
The freemium model did the rest. Teachers, coaches, therapists, book clubs, and small teams all started on the free tier.
When they hit the 40-minute limit, enough of them converted to paid. And every free meeting was essentially a demo — everyone in the meeting saw how good Zoom was.
Yuan obsessed over simplicity. While competitors like WebEx and GoToMeeting required downloads, plugins, and IT involvement, Zoom worked in the browser with one click.
The learning curve was essentially zero. Your grandmother could figure it out.
That turned out to be extremely important when a pandemic suddenly required your grandmother to figure it out.
Then COVID happened. In March 2020, the world shut down.
Every meeting — work, school, family, doctor, church, happy hour — moved to video. Zoom was already the easiest option.
Daily participants exploded from 10 million to 300 million in four months. The stock went from $70 to $588.
Uber
Uber's early growth strategy was beautifully ruthless. They'd roll into a new city, launch without asking permission, and deal with the regulatory fallout later.
They called it "Travis's Law" — it's easier to ask forgiveness than permission.
The playbook was simple: launch in a new city, give massive discounts to riders (sometimes completely free rides), pay drivers signing bonuses and guaranteed hourly rates, and flood the zone until the city was hooked. Then slowly raise prices and cut driver incentives once the market was locked.
They burned billions doing this but it worked — by 2016 Uber was in 500+ cities across 70 countries.
They also weaponized word of mouth with referral codes. Every rider could give free rides to friends.
Every new driver got a bonus for signing up. The viral loop was insane.
At peak growth, Uber was adding a new city every day.
THE HARD PART
Zoom
The post-pandemic hangover has been severe. Zoom's stock peaked at $588 in October 2020 and crashed to under $70 by 2022 — an 88% drop.
The company went from the most exciting tech stock on the planet to a cautionary tale about pandemic valuations. Revenue growth slowed from 300%+ to single digits as people returned to offices and competitors caught up.
Security and "Zoombombing" were early crises. In early 2020, as millions of new users flooded in, trolls discovered they could join open Zoom meetings and share offensive content.
Schools, churches, and AA meetings were disrupted. It turned out Zoom's encryption wasn't truly end-to-end as advertised.
Yuan had to halt all feature development for 90 days and focus exclusively on security fixes. It was a near-death reputational crisis.
Competition from Microsoft Teams and Google Meet intensified. Both companies bundled video calling for free into products that hundreds of millions of people already used.
Microsoft Teams integrated directly into Office 365. Google Meet was built into Gmail.
Zoom had to compete against free products from two of the richest companies on Earth.
Uber
Where do you even start? Uber might have faced more simultaneous existential crises than any company in history.
Regulatory wars. Taxi unions, city governments, and entire countries tried to shut Uber down.
London revoked their license. France arrested two executives.
Uber was banned, unbanned, re-banned, and sued in dozens of jurisdictions simultaneously.
The toxic culture. In 2017, former engineer Susan Fowler published a blog post describing rampant sexual harassment, discrimination, and HR cover-ups at Uber.
It went nuclear. Investigation after investigation followed.
Board members resigned. Executives were fired.
Travis Kalanick's ouster. After the culture scandals, a leaked video of him berating an Uber driver, and a federal investigation into stolen trade secrets from Google's self-driving car unit Waymo, the board forced Kalanick to resign as CEO in June 2017.
Dara Khosrowshahi came in from Expedia to clean things up.
The cash burn was legendary. Uber lost $8.5 billion in 2019 alone.
They subsidized rides so heavily that riders were paying less than the actual cost of the trip. The company didn't turn its first operating profit until Q3 2023 — fourteen years after founding.
THE PRODUCTS
Zoom
Zoom Meetings is the core — video calls that actually work. Zoom Webinars handles large-scale events with up to 50,000 attendees.
Zoom Phone is a full cloud-based phone system replacing traditional office phones. Zoom Rooms turns physical conference rooms into one-click video meeting spaces.
Zoom Contact Center competes with established call center software. Zoom Team Chat is their Slack/Teams competitor.
Zoom Whiteboard is a collaborative digital canvas. Zoom Revenue Accelerator uses AI to analyze sales calls.
And Zoom AI Companion summarizes meetings and drafts messages.
Uber
Uber Rides is the core product — get from A to B in someone else's car. UberX is the standard option, Uber Black is the premium black car tier, UberXL fits bigger groups, and Uber Reserve lets you schedule rides in advance.
Uber Eats is the food delivery arm and competes directly with DoorDash and Grubhub. Uber Freight is the logistics play — basically Uber for semi-trucks, connecting carriers with shippers.
Uber for Business lets companies manage employee rides and meals. Uber now also offers package delivery, grocery delivery, and even boat rides in some cities.
WHO BACKED THEM
Zoom
Sequoia Capital, Emergence Capital, Horizons Ventures (Li Ka-shing), Qualcomm Ventures
Uber
Benchmark Capital, First Round Capital, Menlo Ventures, Jeff Bezos, Goldman Sachs, Google Ventures, Saudi Arabia's Public Investment Fund, SoftBank, Toyota, PayPal co-founder Peter Thiel, Tencent