Audio By Carbonatix
YouTube CEO Susan Wojcicki is stepping down after nine years in the role.
In a blog post, she said she had "decided to start a new chapter focused on my family, health and personal projects I'm passionate about."
YouTube's chief product officer, Neal Mohan, will take over as head of the Google-owned video platform.
"The time is right for me, and I feel able to do this because we have an incredible leadership team in place at YouTube," Ms Wojcicki said.
Ms Wojcicki added she would continue to work at YouTube in the "short term" to "support Neal and help with the transition."
In her blog, she praised Mr Mohan's work launching YouTube TV, as well as leading YouTube Music, Premium, and Shorts.
At the invitation of Sundar Pichai, chief executive of Google's parent firm, Alphabet, Ms Wojcicki confirmed she would to "take on an advisory role across Google and Alphabet."
"This will allow me to call on my different experiences over the years to offer counsel and guidance across Google and the portfolio of Alphabet companies," she said.
Legacy
Ms Wojcicki became involved with Google when the founders, Sergey Brin and Larry Page, set up shop in the garage of her home in Silicon Valley in 1998, becoming the company's first marketing manager a year later.
A Google employee for nearly 25 years, she was among the first 20 employees at the tech giant - listed at number 16.
During Ms Wojcicki's tenure at YouTube, she has faced public criticism over the platform's handling of content moderation, the spread of misinformation, and ongoing concerns over child privacy.
Fact-checking organisations around the world say that YouTube is not doing enough to prevent the proliferation of misinformation on the platform.
When she joined the online video platform in 2014, it had just hit the milestone of one billion users. It currently hosts 2.5 billion users worldwide - with many YouTube creators, also known as YouTubers, carving profitable careers out of their individual channels.
Jimmy Donaldson, better known as Mr Beast, was YouTube's highest-earning content creator last year.
The young American made £45m ($54m) in gross revenue in 2022, more than any YouTube creator in the history of the platform - according to recent estimates by Forbes magazine.
thank you @SusanWojcicki for all your amazing work over the years to make YouTube home for so many creators ♥️ pic.twitter.com/T2t2NUqRsW
— YouTube Creators (@YouTubeCreators) February 16, 2023
Ms Wojcicki is the latest in a series of high-profile tech executives to leave long-standing roles.
Her departure follows Jeff Bezos, who resigned as CEO of Amazon in 2021, Facebook's Sheryl Sandberg stepping down in 2022 and Twitter CEO Parag Agrawal, who left the company last year as part of a shake-up instigated by new boss Elon Musk.
Latest Stories
-
December in Ghana is alive – Creatives say the issue is amplification, not activity
12 minutes -
Jubilee Park comes alive as thousands gather for Sonnie Badu’s ‘Rhythms of Africa’ concert
24 minutes -
NDC not considering third-term bid for Mahama – Suhuyini
26 minutes -
4-year presidential term has limited Ghana’s development – Alhassan Suhuyini backs 5-year proposal
31 minutes -
Mahama’ rising popularity is giving NPP sleepless nights – Suhuyini
36 minutes -
STC, Metro Mass buses to feature smart monitoring and cashless systems in 2026 – Transport Minister
42 minutes -
Suhuyini: Electioneering period reforms possible, but campaigning can’t be legislated
48 minutes -
Lack of regulation fuelled motorcycle accidents – Transport Minister
60 minutes -
NSA scandal: AG hints at plans to file civil suit against suspectsÂ
1 hour -
Trade and industry set for stronger growth in 2026 – Ofosu-Adjare
1 hour -
UG commissions innovation enclave to drive youth entrepreneurship
1 hour -
Black Sheep Foundation honours 255 teachers in maiden Christmas initiative
1 hour -
Screams for help and panic as tourists rescued from fatal Laos ferry disaster
1 hour -
University renaming aimed at national unity, not politics – Nortsu-Kotoe
1 hour -
US court sentences Ghanaian citizen over $200 Snapchat sextortion scheme
2 hours
