Youku was founded by
Victor Koo (Gu Yongqiang), former president of Chinese Internet portal
Sohu. Initial funding for the site came from 1Verge, a fund raised by him. A beta version of the site was launched with limited geographic reach in June 2003, and the website was formally launched in December 2003. In 2007, the company received $25 million in funding from venture capitalists. In December 2009, the company announced that it had raised a total of $110 million in private equity funding. Major investors include
Brookside (Bain) Capital,
Sutter Hill Ventures,
Maverick Capital, and Chengwei Ventures. The company initially emphasized user-generated content but has since shifted its focus to professionally produced videos licensed from over 1,500 content partners. (keeping in mind that YouTube is banned in China). In 2008, Youku partnered with
Myspace in China. Later that year, Youku became the sole online video provider embedded in the
China Edition of
Mozilla Firefox. In January 2010, Youku and competitor
Tudou announced the creation of a video broadcasting exchange network, under which Youku and Tudou will cross-license professionally produced video content. Youku recorded gross revenues of 200 million RMB in 2009. On 8 December 2010, Youku was listed at the
New York Stock Exchange for its first time. The stock closed at $33.44 on its first day of trading giving the company a market capitalization of approximately $3.3 billion. For the first 9 months of 2010 Youku reported revenue of $35.1 million and recorded a loss of $25 million during this period. YouKu.com seems to have no relation to the Chinese domain youku.cn. Victor Koo was once an employee of Bain & Company, one of the most prominent management consulting firms in the world. In December 2018, the company announced a layoff of the president of the unit Yang Weidong due to his assistance to the police in investigation about the case of seeking economic benefits. The mobile app of Youku was banned in India (along with other Chinese apps) on 2 September 2020 by the government, the move came amid the 2020 China-India skirmish. According to Quest Mobile, Youku had 374 million monthly active users in December 2017, increasing to 448 million by December 2024. In its financial report for the quarter ending December 2023, Alibaba reported a $1.2 billion loss from Youku’s operations, which was written off in support of the streaming service.
Merger On 12 March 2012, Youku and
Tudou two of the biggest online video companies in China announced plans to merge, creating one of China's biggest video sites. Prior to the announcement of the merger, Youku was the #11 website in China, and Tudou was #14. The company's name was changed to Youku Tudou Inc. The chairman of the board is
Victor Koo, the founder of Youku. The company had a stock listed on the NYSE, YOKU before being acquired by
Alibaba Group on 6 November 2015. In December 2016 it reported it had 30 million subscribers. It was expected that the integration of subscription data from Youku-Tudou with Alibaba's buyer profiles would help the e-commerce company construct more specific customer profiles and enable better targeted advertising.
Shift to professional content At the time of the company's IPO in 2010, the company already had a large library of professionally produced, licensed content due to the lack of appeal of user-generated content within China at the time. This could be seen in the success of IQiyi launched in 2010 in China, which caused Youku issues around 2015 which prompted a buyout by Alibaba. In 2015, Alibaba bought the YouTube-like service in an all-cash deal and had previously spent $1.22 billion on an 18.3 percent stake in the company. The deal valued Youku at around $5.1 billion, so the total offering was around $3.5 billion. Alibaba intended to take full ownership of the company
. Due to this, the company shifted away from user-generated content gradually and since at least 2019, the company only serves professionally produced content similarly to Hulu. However since 2019, China has seen a large explosion of user-generated video in BiliBili and Douyin. ==See also==