> When everyone in the Valley was signing 10 year leases at $10 per square foot – a bubble indicator that we’re seeing again today – the company relocated to Pleasanton, where it remains today, and instead invested in keeping its headcount up.<p>> “We don’t really agree that a short-term, mercenary mindset and incentive structure is required to hire the best talent,” Vegesna says. “We issue cash bonuses at the end of a good period, whether it’s a month, quarter, or year. It actually ends up being a better outcome for most employees. And, of course, we have free lunch and all the other typical perks. We have had extremely low employee churn...”<p>Something not mentioned in the article: according to Wikipedia[1], 90% of Zoho's employees are based in India. While I'm sure that some in the Bay Area will scoff at this, I don't think there's any question that when the business cycle turns, the ridiculously high costs of employee salaries and office space will be the undoing of countless Bay Area startups.<p>It's nice to read stories every once in a while about companies living within their means. Ironically, they're usually the ones that <i>could</i> actually afford to live large if they wanted to.<p>[1] <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Zoho_Corporation" rel="nofollow">http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Zoho_Corporation</a>