Who are Reddit's decision-makers?
- CEO
- Steve Huffman
- CTO/key exec
- Chris Slowe, CTO
- Founded
- 2005
- Employees
- 2,200+ reported
- HQ
- San Francisco, CA
- Notable
- 121.4M DAUq and $2.2B 2025 revenue
- Steve HuffmanCo-founder and CEOCo-founder; returned as CEO in 2015Sets product, community, monetization, and public-company strategy.
- Jen WongChief Operating OfficerCOO since 2018Leads business operations, revenue, and market expansion.
- Drew VolleroChief Financial OfficerCFO since 2021Owns public-company finance, investor reporting, and capital allocation.
- Chris SloweChief Technology OfficerEarly Reddit engineer; CTOLeads engineering and technical platform direction.
- Ben LeeChief Legal OfficerExecutive teamOwns legal, policy, regulatory, and governance matters.
Who leads Reddit?
Steve Huffman leads Reddit as co-founder and CEO, with Jen Wong operating the commercial business, Drew Vollero running finance, Chris Slowe leading technology, and Ben Lee managing legal and policy. The mix reflects a public platform company where product, revenue, safety, and regulation are intertwined.
Who actually makes buying decisions at Reddit?
Buying decisions typically split by function. Ads and measurement vendors face revenue and marketing leaders; infrastructure, AI, data, and reliability vendors face engineering and finance; safety, privacy, and policy products involve legal, trust, security, and executive review.
How is Reddit organized as it scales?
Reddit is organized like a public consumer internet company with engineering/product, community, ads, finance, legal/policy, people, and go-to-market groups. Public reporting and platform risk make cross-functional approvals important for any material vendor.
As of June 2026.Sources:Reddit managementSequoia Reddit profileReddit FY 2025 results
Reddit — frequently asked questions
