*By Michael Teich* Investors seemed to shrug off a recently tumultuous market for tech stocks and a slew of potential challenges unique to speaker maker Sonos. The company's shares soared as much as 40 percent on Thursday, the stock's first day of trading, despite pricing below their expected IPO range. Mike Groeninger, Sonos's vice president of finance and investor relations, told Cheddar the company knew what it was getting into. "Tech had back to back to back down days, Facebook had a record-setting decline, so we knew we were in a tough tech market to price new companies," Groeninger said in an interview at the Nasdaq. "I think, importantly, we set a price where we are thrilled about the long-term investors we have. We're starting today. We're much more concerned about where the stock price is three years from now than where it is today." Sonos sold nearly 14 million shares in its IPO at a price of $15 each ー the company had targeted an offering between $17 and $19. But even at the high end of *that* range, Sonos would have been valued at less than $2 billion, below the $3 billion [some analysts](https://www.marketwatch.com/story/sonos-confidentially-files-for-ipo-that-could-come-this-summer-2018-04-25) thought it would be worth back in April. It's not just struggles in the broader tech market that affect the company. After all, there's no shortage of competition in the home audio market. Though Sonos has teamed up with Amazon to integrate its Alexa digital assistant technology into its devices ー it plans to strike similar deals for Apple's Siri and Google Assistant ー the company acknowledged in its [SEC filing](https://www.sec.gov/Archives/edgar/data/1314727/000119312518223064/d403417ds1a.htm) that those partnerships could be yanked at any time. For now, though, Groeninger isn't worried. "Amazon values our seven million households," he said. "Ultimately we think they care what customers want, as we do, and we think we're delivering the best customer experience, providing unbelievable sound and quality, and complementing that with choice, and that's a winning formula." "We continue to embrace the partnerships and have no concerns about that changing in the future." Another plus: consumer loyalty. Sonos said nearly 60 percent of its customers own at least two of its devices, and 40 percent own three or more. "People look at consumer electronics, and they don't think of recurring revenue, they don't think of repeat business," Groeninger said. "Our model's about building phenomenal products that last a long time and that encourage you to buy more over time." Sonos started trading on the Nasdaq with the ticker 'SONO' at $16 a share. The stock closed up nearly 33 percent to finish the day at $19.91. For more on this story, [click here](https://cheddar.com/videos/sonos-share-soar-on-wall-street-debut).

Share:
More In Technology
JWST's Gregory Robinson Expects to See 'Universe Different' in New Images
NASA has announced that the first official full-color images will be beamed back to Earth from the James Webb Telescope on July 12. Gregory L. Robinson, the director of the James Webb Space Telescope Program in the NASA Science Mission Directorate, joined Cheddar News to discuss the anticipated image drop. “We expect to see the universe different," he said. "Webb will allow us to see much, much clearer and deeper into the universe."
The Rise of Quantum Computing
Dave Burg, EY Americas Cybersecurity Leader, joins Cheddar News to discuss the rise of quantum computing and how it can compromise existing security measures at play today, and what the timeline looks like for quantum computing to become a reality.
Meet Pepper & NAO, The Humanoid Robots
Nicolas Halftermeyer, Communications & Product Branding Director, SoftBank Robotics, and Emile Kroeger, Robotics Engineer, Humanizing Technologies, join Cheddar Reveals to unveil Pepper and NAO, the humanoid robots designed to interact with humans.
Humanoid Robots; How Robotics Will Shape Our Future
On this episode of Cheddar Reveals, Christopher Atkeson, roboticist and a professor at the Robotics Institute and Human-Computer Interaction Institute at Carnegie Mellon University, discusses what the robots of the future will look like, the role they will play in society and different industries, and if they will they ever reach human-level sentience; Nicolas Halftermeyer, Communications & Product Branding Director, SoftBank Robotics, and Emile Kroeger, Robotics Engineer, Humanizing Technologies, unveil Pepper and NAO, the humanoid robots designed to interact with humans; Cheddar gets a look at Curiosity Stream's 'iHuman.'
How the Future of Robotics Will Shape the Future of Our Planet
Christopher Atkeson, roboticist and a professor at the Robotics Institute and Human-Computer Interaction Institute at Carnegie Mellon University, joins Cheddar Reveals to discuss what the robots of the future will look like, the role they will play in society and different industries, and if they will they ever reach human-level sentience.
Truly You! Character Creator Shows Diversity in Children's Toys
When it comes to diversity in children's toys, we have come a long way as a society but we still have a ways to go. One group of students decided to take matters into their own hands. Truly You! Character Creator is a fashion illustration activity set made for youth by youth. Lindsay Buckingham, one of the toy’s creators, sat down with Cheddar News to talk all about it.
Apple Made Some Edits to iMessage for WWDC 2022
Apple revealed its plans for new IOS software, products, and more at its Worldwide Developers Conference. However, new features added to iMessage, including options to delete and edit already sent text messages, stole the show.
Load More