Bose, a co-founder, lived the high life at company expense: When she wasn’t showing up at Paris fashion week, she was shuttling off to New York for a meet-and-greet with a prospective client. Investors gave her a lot of latitude, believing that Bose’s image was helping the firm pull in business worth $100 million.
A small social-media army made the clip go viral. BOOM, an Indian fact-checking website, says it studied more than 1,000 tweets with the hashtag #SequoiaLeakedTapes and found “evidence to suggest it is a paid trend against Sequoia Capital India.” That and a few related hashtags such as #SexistSequoia have already racked up 2,000-plus posts. One of the tweets, in Hindi, translates to: “For Sequoia, business is all about cunningly capturing Indian firms and taking their money to America.” Who’s paying the trolls? Bose has not commented on the Twitter war on her behalf. Nor has Sequoia. But the Zilingo board said in a June 3 statement that it was “pained and disappointed” by “what unfortunately appears to be paid and defamatory social media campaigns throughout the investigation period.”
However, behind the media appearances and photo ops, pressure was building. Zilingo was too small to make it in consumer e-commerce. Even the B2B business — matching up wholesale buyers and sellers — was mostly about luring firms by offering credit. There wasn’t a path to profit. The pandemic hit in March 2020, just as the startup was pivoting to two more solid businesses: building upon a late-2019, $15.5 million acquisition of a Sri Lankan software maker to offer a cloud-based system for boosting efficiency on the apparel manufacturing shop-floor; and helping global brands source more directly from Asian suppliers. According to people familiar with Sequoia’s dealings with Bose, the VC suggested to her in 2021 that she should consider bringing in an outsider as CEO. She refused.
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