Eps 1127: Interview with susan wojcicki

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Brandie Carter

Brandie Carter

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With over 1B viewers per month, YouTube is active in 88 countries and remains one of the fastest growing social media companies in the world. In 1998, five months pregnant, Susan Wojcicki rented out her garage as a part-time job in her father's garage. Today, as CEO of YouTube, she is widely recognized as the most respected female CEO and the first female co-founder of a major technology company.
CEO Susan Wojcicki spoke to Hank Green of Vlogbrothers for her latest interview, in which she discussed her thoughts on coronavirus - based misinformation - and how the platform supports creators. The Female Founders Fund recently had the opportunity to interview Susan on a variety of topics, including YouTube's role as a platform for influencers to build businesses and the role of women in social media. In an interview that lasted more than 50 minutes, the interview began with a brief introduction by Susan and a few questions from Hank Green.
That was when Hank wrote in the video description: 'What do you think YouTube as a company have in common with other social media platforms?
It is easy to say that there is a lot of competition in the world, but I would like to say that this is not really true at first. After all, we are now a $70 billion company in our own right, which could generate $60 billion or $50 billion in annual sales, and that is simple.
We started Google in 1998 when Larry Page and Sergey Brin and their friends needed a shop, and we had to rent to them to pay the mortgage and rent. They wrote that Google bought YouTube back in 2006, but it has been 10 years since that acquisition.
She became Google's first marketing manager, taking over the website's nascent video-sharing platform and later as vice president of content marketing.
Don't bother with the softball requests, but tell Wojcicki straight away that game makers on YouTube feel like second-class citizens. If you want live, premium scripted content, it's all in the form of YouTube Live, "she says.
Later in the interview, she notes that YouTube is currently trying to improve the monetization of gaming creators to teach advertisers who do not understand the comparatively new scope how important gaming content is on the platform. When she became CEO in 2014, she said, she put together the first team to work exclusively on projects related to games and creatives. This team, based on feedback from the named creators, is responsible for things like the newly introduced Super Stickers, a new feature on YouTube Live and much more.
Wojcicki's interview is gaining attention amid growing discontent among creators, who are frustrated at being demonized at every turn, deprived of their livelihoods without much help from YouTube, and want to hear what they will do to fix it. Top YouTubers like Jake Paul have said they are leaving YouTube because Paul says it has become a "disappointing" experience to be a part of, while PewDiePie has urged YouTubers not to put all their eggs in one basket to generate YouTube revenue, but instead to diversify. Some mainstream media have called for content to be further moderated or restricted.
In a recent interview with 60 Minutes, YouTube CEO Susan Wojcicki explained her desire to limit the amount of time her children spend on YouTube. Stahl has not pushed for the upcoming COPA changes, which will reduce authors' revenues by 90% when content is made for children, and how she intends to help authors. Esther, a first-rate educator who founded one of the largest online video distribution companies in the world, knew that if she challenged herself early on and challenged her daughters early on, they would grow into independent, critical thinkers.
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YouTube CEO Susan Wojcicki says she won't allow her children to watch the main page in a new interview. It was one of many big names to take the stage at the International Monetary Fund's annual meeting in New York. IMF chief Christine Lagarde and other senior officials from the IMF and World Bank.
In a recent interview with the Guardian, YouTube CEO Susan Wojcicki said her children's access to YouTube's main page was limited. It turns out she doesn't use YouTube too much, according to a new interview. She is, she says, an entrepreneur who has carved her way into the ranks of one of the world's most powerful female CEOs. Since taking the helm of YouTube in 2014, its shares have more than doubled.
Susan's first major decision was to leave her garage and move the company to Mountain View. Before we talk about her nationality, you must know that she has both American and Polish nationality. It has zero investment, which includes a $1.5 million investment in Google and $500,000 in venture capital. The university has teamed up with her and added her to the Google search bar on its website.