Early history Rich Barton conceived of Zillow while at Microsoft, where he founded
Expedia.com. Barton believed that a consumer-facing site could transform the real estate industry in the same way that Expedia had the travel industry. Barton told the
Seattle Post-Intelligencer, "the web [had] been around for now 9 years or 10 years, but still I couldn't get pictures of homes and complete listings and prices and addresses." "We were trying to answer a simple question. What is that house worth? What should we offer if we wanted to buy it?" In December 2004, Zillow was
incorporated in
Washington. Barton and co-founder Lloyd Frink, a former Expedia executive, self-funded the company, which operated out of a downtown Seattle office with 20 employees. Other features at the time included information about home sale history and charts and graphs comparing home value appreciation with other towns or states. By then the company had grown to 118 employees.
Expansion and growth In April 2008, Zillow launched a mortgage marketplace. Later that month, the Zillow iPhone app was released. Apps for Android and Windows Mobile soon followed. In 2010, Zillow became profitable for the first time. Rascoff was formerly Zillow's COO and VP of marketing, and before that had been at Expedia. On April 18, 2011, Zillow filed for a $51.8 million initial public offering. On July 20, the company began trading under the symbol “Z” on the
Nasdaq stock market. Zillow made its first
acquisition in 2011 by purchasing Postlets, a digital real estate listing and distribution platform. Several more acquisitions of online real estate companies followed, with Zillow purchasing Rentjuice and Hotpads in 2012, StreetEasy in 2013, and
Trulia, a major competitor, in 2015 in a $2.5 billion deal.
2015 to present Following the Trulia acquisition, Zillow began operating under the name Zillow Group, which comprised four real estate brands: Zillow, Trulia, StreetEasy, and HotPads. In April 2018, Zillow announced it would begin buying and selling homes through a new business, Zillow Offers, in partnerships with local brokerages and agents. In June of that same year, Zillow signed a partnership with
Century 21 Canada to begin listing Canadian properties on the site, marking the first country outside the United States to be covered by the company. In February 2019, Rich Barton returned to the CEO role, replacing Rascoff. In February 2020, Zillow's stock was up 18% after hitting a four-year low. In March of the same year, the company announced a cut in expenses by 25%, and paused hiring due to the
COVID-19 pandemic. In March 2021, Zillow stated it had hired about 1,500 employees over the past twelve months. The company then announced plans to increase the workforce by 40% by hiring more than 2,000 employees nationwide by the end of the year. When Barton announced the company would cease purchasing homes, Zillow owned about 7,000 houses. The division responsible for acquiring and selling homes, Zillow Offers, resulted in the company losing $420 million in the third quarter of 2021. ==Business model==