Founded in 2003 and headquartered in San Francisco, DocuSign is a leading software company offering electronic signature and digital transaction management solutions globally . Its platform enables secure, legally binding agreements across devices, compliant with regulations like the U.S. ESIGN Act and EU’s eIDAS . As of 2025, DocuSign serves approximately 1.7 million clients in 180 countries, with offerings expanding into agreement automation beyond just e-signatures.

Recent Earnings & Guidance
Fiscal Q2 2026 (ended July 31, 2025):
- EPS: $0.92, exceeding the $0.84 estimate .
- Revenue: $800.6 million, up ~9% year-over-year and above the ~$780 million consensus .
- Billings: Rose 13% to $818 million .
- Client base grew 9% to over 1.7 million, with enterprise customers spending > $300k annually rising 7% .
- Full-year revenue guidance raised to $3.189–$3.201 billion, up from prior outlook of $3.151–$3.163 billion .
Founding, History & Products
Founding & Leadership:
- Founded in 2003 by Tom Gonser, Court Lorenzini, and Eric Ranft .
- Gonser’s concept emerged from NetUpdate and an e-signature startup, DocuTouch, culminating in an early asset acquisition .
Funding & IPO:
- Raised initial venture funding in the mid-2000s (e.g., $4.6 M in 2004), with follow-on rounds through 2015. Notable backers included Sigma Partners, Ignition Partners, Kleiner Perkins, and others, valuation reaching ~$3 billion pre-IPO .
- IPO completed in April 2018, raising $543 million; early VCs remained significant shareholders .
Product Evolution & Acquisitions:
- Originally focused on e-signatures, now core of broader Agreement Cloud and Intelligent Agreement Management (IAM) platform .
- Strategic acquisitions include SpringCM (2018), Seal Software (2020), Clause (2021), and AI-powered Lexion (2024) to bolster contract automation and management capabilities .
Market & Growth Outlook
Market: DocuSign operates in the digital agreement and contract management software sector, which is evolving into broader workflow and agreement automation categories. Its transition into IAM is a response to global inefficiencies in contract workflows, estimated in the trillions of dollars .
Growth Expectations:
- During the pandemic, revenue surged ~50% in fiscal 2021; recent years have seen deceleration, with ~10% growth in the latest fiscal period .
- Looking ahead, analysts forecast ~6.8% annual revenue growth and ~12% earnings growth, modest relative to broader markets .
Competitors
DocuSign competes with firms like Adobe Sign, HelloSign/PandaDoc, and other Contract Lifecycle Management (CLM) platforms (e.g., Icertis, Conga). These competitors offer similar e-signature and agreement solutions within broader enterprise ecosystems. Adobe, in particular, benefits from strong ecosystem integration and brand presence.
Differentiation
DocuSign’s key differentiation includes its large global customer base, patented e-signature leadership, integrated Agreement Cloud platform, and newer IAM capabilities leveraging AI. Its brand recognition and platform extensibility create stickiness across workflows beyond signatures.
Management Team
- Allan Thygesen (CEO) – Former Google executive, appointed in September 2022; credited with driving one of DocuSign’s highest growth and profitability quarters, particularly through AI innovation and GTM changes .
- Maggie Wilderotter – Former chair (from 2022); had previously held leadership roles (background referenced in company filings) .
Financial Performance (Last 5 Years)
DocuSign transitioned from pandemic-fueled acceleration to more moderate growth:
- Revenue: In 2024, reached ~$2.98 billion, up ~7.8% YoY from $2.76 billion in 2023 .
- Net Income: 2025 net income ~$1.07 billion, with ~$2.00 billion in equity and ~$4.01 billion in assets .
- EPS Growth: Dramatic improvement—annual EPS jumped from a loss in prior years (e.g., –$0.49 in 2023) to significant positive growth in 2024/2025 .
- Q1 2026: EPS $0.90 (beat), revenue ~$763.7 million (+8% YoY); net income surged 113.5%, with strong free cash flow margin (~30%) and non-GAAP operating margin improving ~100 basis points to ~29.5% .
- Balance Sheet: Healthy—growing assets and equity; ability to raise share repurchase by $1 billion indicates ample capital flexibility .
Bull Case
- Expanding beyond e-signatures into full IAM platform with AI could unlock new enterprise revenue streams.
- Strong recent performance—beat earnings, raised guidance, growing enterprise adoption.
- Healthy financials and margin improvements, coupled with meaningful share buybacks.
Bear Case
- Slowing top-line growth post-pandemic; modest revenue CAGR relative to peers .
- Q1 billing miss and cautious adjustments to guidance raise execution concerns .
- Competitive pressure from Adobe and others, with similar CLM ecosystems eroding DocuSign’s edge.
The stock is in a long term cup and handle bullish chart but there is more momentum in the weekly chart to the downside with lots of resistance in the $87 range. The stock should get that range on the daily chart and move lower, but the stage 4 decline on the weekly chart suggest more downside pressure.
