Evan Williams (Internet entrepreneur)

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Evan Williams
Ev-Williams-2013.jpg
Evan Williams at XOXO Festival, September 2013
Born Evan Clark Williams
(1972-03-31) March 31, 1972 (age 52)
Clarks, Nebraska, United States
Residence San Francisco, California, US
Nationality American
Occupation Internet Entrepreneur
Years active 1993–present
Known for Blogger
Twitter
Net worth Decrease US $1.71 billion (December 2015)[1]
Board member of Twitter[2]
Spouse(s) Sara M. Williams
Children 2
Website www.evhead.com

Evan Clark Williams (born March 31, 1972) is an American computer programmer and Internet entrepreneur who has founded several Internet companies. Williams was previously Chairman and CEO of Twitter, one of the internet's top ten websites.[3]

Early life and education

Williams was born in Clarks, Nebraska, as the third child of Monte Williams and Laurie Howe.[4] He grew up on a farm in Clarks, where he assisted with crop irrigation in summers. He attended the University of Nebraska–Lincoln for a year-and-a-half, where he joined FarmHouse Fraternity, but eventually left to pursue his career.[5][6][7]

Career

Early career

After leaving school, Williams worked at various technology jobs and start-up firms in Florida, at Key West, and in Texas, at Dallas and Austin, before returning to his family farm in Nebraska. In 1996 Williams moved to Sebastopol, California in Sonoma County to work for the technology publishing company O'Reilly Media. He started at O'Reilly in a marketing position but eventually became an independent contractor writing computer code, which led to freelance opportunities with companies including Intel and Hewlett-Packard.[6]

Pyra Labs and Blogger

Evan Williams and Meg Hourihan co-founded Pyra Labs to make project management software. A note-taking feature spun off as Blogger, one of the first web applications for creating and managing weblogs.[8] Williams invented the term "blogger" and was instrumental in the popularization of the term "blog".[9] Pyra survived the departure of Hourihan and other employees, and was eventually acquired by Google on February 13, 2003.[10]

In 2003, Williams was named to the MIT Technology Review TR100 as one of the top 100 innovators in the world under the age of 35.[11] In 2004, he was named one of PC Magazine's "People of the Year", along with Hourihan and Paul Bausch for their work on Blogger.[12]

Odeo

Williams left Google in October 2004[13] to co-found Odeo, a podcasting company.[14] In late 2006, Williams co-founded Obvious Corp. with Biz Stone and other former Odeo employees to acquire all previous properties from Odeo's former backers.[15] In April 2007, Odeo was acquired by Sonic Mountain.[16]

Twitter

Among Obvious Corp.'s projects was Twitter, a popular, free social networking and micro-blogging service. Twitter itself was spun out into a new company in April 2007, with Williams as co-founder, board member, and investor.[17] In October 2008, Williams became CEO of Twitter, displacing Jack Dorsey who became chairman of the board.[18]

By February 2009, Compete.com ranked Twitter the third most-used social network based on their count of 6 million unique monthly visitors and 55 million monthly visits.[19] As of February 2013, Twitter had 200 million registered users.[20] It gets 300,000 new users a day and it is ranked 12 in the world by similar web as of August 2015 and receives more than 300 million unique visitors and more than 5 billion people in traffic a month. 75% of its traffic comes from outside of Twitter.com. On 4 October 2010, Williams stepped down from the CEO position, explaining "I’ll be completely focused on product strategy", and appointed Dick Costolo as his replacement.[21]

Following the announcement of Twitter's initial public offering (IPO) in 2013, the company was valued at between US$14 billion and US$20 billion. One media report anticipated that Williams, with a 30 to 35 percent stake in the company, would see his personal wealth grow from US$2 billion to US$8 billion in the wake of Twitter's stock flotation.[22]

Medium

On September 25, 2012, Williams created a publishing platform called Medium (at Medium.com). It was initially available only to early adopters, but was opened to the public in 2013.[23]

On April 5, 2013, Williams and Stone announced that they would be unwinding Obvious Corp as they focused on individual startups.[24]

XOXO Festival

Williams presented at the 2013 XOXO Festival in Portland, Oregon, and explained his understanding of Internet commerce.[25] During his XOXO session, Williams also likened the Internet to "a lot of other major technological revolutions that have taken place in the history of the world," such as agriculture, and asserted that the Internet is not a utopia.[25]

Personal life

Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found. Williams is a pescetarian.[6] He lives in the San Francisco area with his wife, Sara, with whom he raises two children.[26][27]

References

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  2. https://investor.twitterinc.com/directors.cfm
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  4. http://www.omaha.com/money/twitter-co-founder-evan-williams-success-doesn-t-surprise-those/article_5968322b-2c74-5c7a-97b8-414df1a8e413.html
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  14. Carson, Nicholas (13 April 2011). "The real history of Twitter", Business Insider
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External links

Speeches

Interviews

Business positions
Preceded by Twitter CEO
2008–2010
Succeeded by
Dick Costolo