SAN JOSE, CALIF. -- Once derided as Google's folly, the home of cheesy cat videos and the money-losing stepchild of an otherwise wildly profitable company, YouTube is emerging as a model for the more nimble, faster-paced company Google co-founder Larry Page hopes to foster as he takes the reins as CEO.
That's quite a shift. While YouTube was a cultural phenomenon when Google bought it in 2006, it was bleeding money -- losing nearly half a billion dollars as recently as 2009, by one estimate. And while YouTube wasn't Google's Siberia, it wasn't exactly a mecca for many ambitious Googlers.
But now, YouTube's revenue has grown dramatically. Many Google employees increasingly see it as an attractive place to work, with a less bureaucratic environment that lets them run with their ideas. Page, by all accounts, is looking to inject that same energy into Google, spurring the mother company to innovate more quickly in its rivalry with fast-moving Facebook.
"YouTube has proven it can flourish in a model where there is more autonomy, and in that way I think it is an example and a potential model for other areas of the business," said new YouTube CEO Salar Kamangar, who as Google's ninth employee has worked closely with Page and co-founder Sergey Brin since Google's earliest days. "Larry is really focused on making sure that Google has a culture where impatient people can be successful, where we are doing bold things on the technology side that matter for end users. And I think YouTube is a good example of where, if you're an engineer, you can get things done quickly and you can have a big impact."
New focus on revenue
The shift comes as the online video site is increasingly focused on revenue. Analysts disagree as to whether YouTube is profitable, and Google won't disclose YouTube's finances except to say revenue more than doubled in 2010. Critics of its $1.65 billion purchase have melted away.
"No one would fault Google for making the acquisition of YouTube at this point," said Kenneth Sena, an analyst with Evercore Partners who has issued some of the most bearish estimates of YouTube losses.
Now Kamangar, who designed Google's tremendously profitable AdWords advertising program, is pursuing an ambitious agenda to reorganize YouTube's videos around topics -- much like niche TV channels -- rather than individual videos.