# Iomega Zip Drive

**Type:** work
**Status:** Draft
**Confidence:** High
**Focus:** hardware, storage, consumer computing, peripherals, 1990s PC era
**Era:** Iomega founded 1980; Zip era 1995-early 2000s
**Location:** Roy, UT
**Updated:** 2026-06-19
**Relates:** cites [Iomega Corp. 10-K Filing (March 1995)](iomega-sec-10k-1995.md)
**Relates:** cites [Standard-Examiner — Iomega Still Around in Roy (2012)](iomega-standard-examiner-2012.md)
**Pull:** *The "superfloppy" from Weber County that carried everyone's files through the gap between the floppy and the flash drive.*

## Summary

The Iomega Zip drive was a removable magnetic-disk storage system introduced in March 1995 by Iomega, a data-storage company based in Roy, Utah, in Weber County. The original Zip disk held 100 MB, dramatically more than the 1.44 MB floppy disks still standard on personal computers; later versions held 250 MB and 750 MB.

The Zip drive arrived in the awkward but important gap between floppies and the later world of cheap CD burners, USB flash drives, broadband, and cloud storage. For designers, students, offices, and home users moving files too large for a floppy, Zip disks became a familiar physical medium and, for a few years, something close to a de facto standard for removable storage. The product made Iomega briefly one of the hottest companies in tech before newer storage and a damaging reliability problem ended its run.

## Impact

Zip was the most visible "superfloppy" of the late 1990s and a genuine mass-market hit. Iomega's revenue leapt from roughly $362 million in 1995 to about $1.2 billion in 1996, reaching about $1.7 billion by the end of 1997, with around 2,000 Utah employees and a peak market valuation near $7 billion. For a stretch, OEMs including Apple, Dell, and Gateway offered internal Zip drives as factory options.

The deeper impact was cultural and practical: Zip normalized the idea of high-capacity, rewritable, pocketable personal storage during the exact years when ordinary users suddenly had large files (desktop publishing, scanned images, presentations, multimedia, games) but no cheap, universal way to move or back them up. It made large-file portability feel normal before the technologies that ultimately replaced it were ready.

## What Was Created

The Zip drive packaged Iomega's removable-media engineering (descended from its earlier Bernoulli products) into a cheap, friendly, mass-market peripheral. The original external models shipped in parallel-port versions for IBM PC-compatibles and SCSI versions for Macs and PCs, used Winchester-style "nanoslide" heads with a special air-bearing surface and a linear voice-coil motor, and were fast enough to run applications directly from the disk. The hardware had a distinctive industrial design and color and came with software to organize and copy data.

The hard problem was not exotic engineering but consumer integration: high-capacity removable storage at consumer price, size, and ease of use. Earlier removable-cartridge systems served professional niches; Zip's success was as much about media pricing (cartridges around $15-20), retail distribution, and brand marketing as about raw mechanism.

## Why It Mattered

In the mid-1990s, hard drives, scanners, and multimedia outgrew the floppy faster than affordable replacements arrived. Zip filled that gap for the PC and Macintosh world during the transition. It is a useful case study in *transitional standards*: dominant enough to matter in the lived history of personal computing, but not durable enough to become long-run infrastructure.

It also became one of Utah's best-known consumer-computing hardware stories, and today the disks are a recognizable artifact in museums, archives, and the digital-preservation world.

## Utah Context

The Utah claim is direct. Iomega was founded in Utah in 1980 and was based in Roy during the Zip drive's rise; the Roy campus remained the company's largest single site even after EMC acquired Iomega in 2008. Contemporary coverage and later filings consistently identify Iomega as a Roy, Utah company.

Iomega broadens the Utah computing story beyond software (the [WordPerfect/Novell](wordperfect-and-novell.md) and [Omniture](omniture-web-analytics.md) lineage in Utah Valley) and beyond Salt Lake City graphics. It shows northern Utah / Weber County producing a globally distributed consumer hardware product.

## People and Institutions

- **Iomega Corporation** — Roy-based company that developed and commercialized the Zip drive; founded 1980, acquired by EMC in 2008.
- **Iomega founders** — the company was founded in 1980 (legacy notes credit David Bailey, David Norton, and Jerome Paul Johnson among the founders; exact founding-team attribution should be verified against a primary source).
- **Iomega engineering, manufacturing, marketing, and channel teams** — turned removable-media engineering into a retail mass-market peripheral; marketing research and aggressive channel strategy were central to the Zip's success.
- **EMC** — Massachusetts storage company that acquired Iomega in 2008.

## Lessons for Builders

- Timing can beat originality. Zip was not the most advanced storage idea, but it hit exactly when users needed it and competitors were not yet ready.
- Distribution and price make a standard. Cartridge pricing, retail presence, and OEM bundling did as much as the engineering.
- Reliability is reputation. The widely reported "click of death" — drive heads bouncing off their end stops when misaligned, sometimes damaging disks and spreading to other drives — triggered a 1998 class-action suit (settled 2001) and permanently dented trust.
- Transitional products age fast. CD-R, DVD, USB flash drives, external hard drives, broadband transfer, and cloud storage all overtook Zip within a few years.

## Evidence

- [Iomega Corp. 10-K (filed March 1995, via SEC/EDGAR mirror)](http://edgar.secdatabase.com/1197/35278995000002/filing-main.htm) — primary filing describing the Zip product, March 1995 shipping date, and the parallel/SCSI versions. — [source record](iomega-sec-10k-1995.md)
- [Standard-Examiner: Iomega still around in Roy but not like it once was (2012)](https://www.standard.net/news/business/2012/mar/09/iomega-still-around-in-roy-but-not-like-it-once-was/) — Roy origin, 1980 founding, $1.7B 1997 sales, ~2,000 Utah employees, EMC acquisition. — [source record](iomega-standard-examiner-2012.md)
- [Hackaday: From Zip to Nought — the rise and fall of Iomega](https://hackaday.com/2026/03/24/from-zip-to-nought-the-rise-and-fall-of-iomega/) — revenue trajectory, ~$7B peak valuation, OEM adoption, click-of-death history.
- [Washington Post (1995): Iomega's Zip drive takes the pain out of backing up, moving files](https://www.washingtonpost.com/archive/business/1995/05/15/iomegas-zip-drive-takes-the-pain-out-of-backing-up-moving-files/64cec1f8-6817-495a-b8f2-fd9a1baf7cf9/) — contemporary mainstream coverage at launch.

## Open Questions

- Founding-team attribution (Bailey/Norton/Johnson) comes from internal notes and should be confirmed against an Iomega primary source or filing before raising confidence on that specific claim.
- Exact peak Utah headcount and the precise market-share figures for Zip vary across sources; the page uses the best contemporaneous numbers available.
- A short source page for the 1995 Iomega 10-K could be worth adding if other pages cite the same filing.
