
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or


This episode of '200: Tech Tales Found' dives deep into the dramatic history of WebEx Communications, a company that revolutionized how people collaborate online long before Zoom or Teams entered the mainstream. Founded in 1995 by Subrah Iyar and Min Zhu, WebEx was born out of frustration with the inefficiencies of business travel and a bold vision for virtual meetings. In its early days, the company faced immense technical hurdles—like making real-time collaboration work over dial-up internet—and yet managed to go public during the height of the dot-com boom. But when the bubble burst in 2000, WebEx nearly collapsed under plummeting stock prices, massive layoffs, and internal despair. Against all odds, the company refocused on enterprise clients, rebuilt trust, and redefined itself as a reliable, secure platform for businesses worldwide. This resilience caught the attention of Cisco, which acquired WebEx in 2007 for $3.2 billion—a stunning turnaround that validated years of struggle and sacrifice. Beyond the corporate drama, the story of WebEx is one of human ingenuity and perseverance. It reshaped not only how companies operate but also how families connect, how education continues remotely, and how healthcare reaches underserved communities. WebEx laid the groundwork for today’s video conferencing tools and helped redefine work-life balance by reducing the need for constant travel. Its legacy lives on in every virtual meeting, family call, and remote collaboration we now take for granted. Through innovation, survival, and reinvention, WebEx proved that even in the face of near-total collapse, a strong vision can endure—and ultimately change the world.
By xczwThis episode of '200: Tech Tales Found' dives deep into the dramatic history of WebEx Communications, a company that revolutionized how people collaborate online long before Zoom or Teams entered the mainstream. Founded in 1995 by Subrah Iyar and Min Zhu, WebEx was born out of frustration with the inefficiencies of business travel and a bold vision for virtual meetings. In its early days, the company faced immense technical hurdles—like making real-time collaboration work over dial-up internet—and yet managed to go public during the height of the dot-com boom. But when the bubble burst in 2000, WebEx nearly collapsed under plummeting stock prices, massive layoffs, and internal despair. Against all odds, the company refocused on enterprise clients, rebuilt trust, and redefined itself as a reliable, secure platform for businesses worldwide. This resilience caught the attention of Cisco, which acquired WebEx in 2007 for $3.2 billion—a stunning turnaround that validated years of struggle and sacrifice. Beyond the corporate drama, the story of WebEx is one of human ingenuity and perseverance. It reshaped not only how companies operate but also how families connect, how education continues remotely, and how healthcare reaches underserved communities. WebEx laid the groundwork for today’s video conferencing tools and helped redefine work-life balance by reducing the need for constant travel. Its legacy lives on in every virtual meeting, family call, and remote collaboration we now take for granted. Through innovation, survival, and reinvention, WebEx proved that even in the face of near-total collapse, a strong vision can endure—and ultimately change the world.