====================== The Root of All Evil ====================== A quote from the book _Measure What Matters_ by John Doerr, quoting Cristos Goodrow, VP of Engineering for YouTube: "In September 2011, I sent a provocative email to my boss and the YouTube leadership team. Subject line: 'Watch time, and only watch time.' It was a call to rethink how we measured success: 'All other things being equal, our goal is to increase [video] watch time.' For many folks at Google, it smacked of heresy. Google Search was designed as a switchboard to route you off the site and out to your best destination as quickly as possible. Maximizing watch time was antithetical to its purpose in life. Moreover, watch time would be negative for views, the critical metric for both users and creators. Last (but not least), to optimize for watch time would incur a significant money hit, at least at the start. Since YouTube ads were shown exclusively before videos started, fewer starts meant fewer ads. Fewer ads meant less revenue. "My argument was that Google and YouTube were different animals. To make the dichotomy as stark as possible, I made up a scenario: A user goes to YouTube and types the query 'How do I tie a bow tie?' And we have two videos on the topic. The first is one minute long and teaches you very quickly and precisely how to tie a bow tie. The second is ten minutes long and is full of jokes and really entertaining. I'd ask my colleagues: Which video should be ranked as our first search result? "For those at Google Search, the answer was easy: 'The first one, of course. If people come to YouTube to tie a bow tie, we surely want to help them tie a bow tie.' "And I'd say, 'I want to show them the second video.' "And the Search cohort would protest, 'Why would you do that? These poor people just want to tie their bow ties and get to their event!' (They were probably thinking: This guy's insane.) But my point was that YouTube's mission was fundamentally divergent. It's fine for viewers to learn to tie bow ties, and if that's _all_ they want, they'll choose the one-minute manual. But that's not what YouTube was about, not really. Our job was to keep people engaged and hanging out with us. By definition, viewers are happier watching seven minutes of a ten-minute video (or even two minutes of a ten-minute video) than _all_ of a one-minute video. And when they're happier, we are, too."