Former YouTube execs chart its rise from pirate ship to king of video
From chief product officer Shishir Mehrotra to originals head Susanne Daniels, YouTube employees reflect on key moments in the platform's history.
The Lounge Booth
- The first YouTube video went live 20 years ago Wednesday.
- Business Insider spoke with former top execs about navigating pivotal moments.
- From building a new copyright paradigm to frustrations around Originals, here's what they remember.
Many former YouTube employees have a special connection to their alma mater, and a long-standing pride about having shaped the revolutionary platform, which turned 20 this year.
That was on full display last month when a reunion event for YouTube alums made it out of the LinkedIn group chat.
What was initially planned as a backyard party snowballed into a gathering of hundreds — including cofounder Chad Hurley — with some flying in from as far as Australia to attend, said Ben Relles, former head of innovation at YouTube Originals, who helped organize the event. (YouTube itself wasn't involved.)
"It had that vibe of a high school reunion," Relles said. "Looking back on it, it feels like this was a group of people that got to witness and have a small part in the way that the history of media was shaped."
YouTube was founded on Valentine's Day in 2005 by a trio of PayPal alums and acquired by Google the following year. The first video on the platform, "Me at the zoo," was uploaded exactly 20 years ago Wednesday.
To mark the milestone, we spoke with seven former YouTube execs about navigating pivotal moments in the platform's history.