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YouTube is a video sharing platform where users can upload, share, and view videos. It aims to give everyone a voice and show them the world.
YouTube has raised $12.0M across 2 funding rounds.
Key people at YouTube.
YouTube was founded in 2005 by Steve Chen (Founder) and Jawed Karim (Founder) and Jamie Pullman (Creator & Co-founder) and Peter Hirsch (Founder, The Leading Edge Network) and Chad Hurley (Founder).
YouTube has raised $12.0M in total across 2 funding rounds.
YouTube has raised $12.0M across 2 funding rounds. Most recently, it raised $8.0M Series U in March 2006.
| Date | Round | Lead Investors | Other Investors | Status |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Mar 1, 2006 | $8M Series U | — | ARTIS Ventures, Sequoia Capital | Announced |
| Oct 1, 2005 | $4M Series A | — | Sequoia Capital | Announced |
YouTube was founded in 2005 by Steve Chen (Founder) and Jawed Karim (Founder) and Jamie Pullman (Creator & Co-founder) and Peter Hirsch (Founder, The Leading Edge Network) and Chad Hurley (Founder).
YouTube has raised $12.0M in total across 2 funding rounds.
YouTube's investors include Artis Ventures (AV), Sequoia Capital.
Key people at YouTube.
YouTube is the world’s leading video-sharing platform that enables effortless uploading, sharing, and viewing of videos globally. It builds a product that serves billions of users, including individuals, creators, brands, and media companies, by solving the problem of accessible, scalable video distribution and discovery. YouTube’s growth momentum is evident in its massive user base of over 2.5 billion monthly active users and its role as a primary platform for video content consumption, entertainment, education, and marketing[3][6].
YouTube was founded on February 14, 2005, by three former PayPal employees: Steve Chen, Chad Hurley, and Jawed Karim. The founders combined their expertise in software engineering and design to create a user-friendly platform initially conceived as a video dating site but quickly pivoted to a broader video-sharing service. The idea emerged from their frustration with the difficulty of finding and sharing videos online, inspired by events like the 2004 Super Bowl incident and the Indian Ocean tsunami. Early traction came from viral user-generated content, and the platform rapidly grew, culminating in its acquisition by Google in 2006 for $1.65 billion[1][2][4][5][6].
YouTube rides the trend of digital content democratization and the rise of video as a dominant communication medium. Its timing was crucial, coinciding with expanding broadband internet access and the rise of social media. Market forces such as increasing mobile device usage, demand for on-demand entertainment, and influencer-driven marketing favor YouTube’s growth. The platform has profoundly influenced the broader ecosystem by enabling new forms of content creation, distribution, and monetization, shaping internet culture and media consumption worldwide[1][3][6].
YouTube’s future likely involves deeper integration of AI for content recommendation, enhanced creator tools, and expansion into emerging formats like live streaming and virtual reality. Trends such as short-form video, personalized content, and global internet penetration will shape its journey. As it evolves, YouTube’s influence may grow beyond entertainment into education, commerce, and social interaction, continuing to redefine how video content shapes society[3][6].
This trajectory ties back to YouTube’s founding mission: to make video sharing accessible and impactful for everyone, a vision that has transformed global communication and media.