Draft:V Pappas

V Pappas (also known as Vanessa Pappas), is an Australian-American businessperson who was the chief operating officer (COO) at TikTok. Pappas previously held executive positions at Next New Networks and YouTube, and has served on the board of directors of Simon & Schuster and the board of trustees of the Paley Center for Media.

Early life and education
Pappas was born in Darwin, Northern Territory, and raised in Brisbane, Queensland. They lived in Australia until the age of twenty. Their father is Greek. After receiving their first computer at approximately age 10–12, Pappas realized the potential for online communities and began learning basic coding in high school. They earned Master of Arts degrees in media from the University of Queensland and The New School, graduating from the latter in 2007.

Career
Early in their career, Pappas was the director of entertainment programming for Next New Networks, starting in 2007. The company was acquired by YouTube in 2011. Pappas became YouTube's first head of audience development, and later the global head of creative insights. They also created the YouTube Creator Playbook, described as a blueprint for how to be successful on YouTube. Pappas was with YouTube for approximately eight years; their division has been credited for popularizing the term "creator" and making the site a destination for both influencers and advertisers.

Pappas was recruited to run TikTok in the U.S. in 2018 and worked at the platform for approximately five years. They first joined the parent company ByteDance as a strategic advisor, and became TikTok's general manager for the U.S. one month later. In July 2019, Pappas was promoted to the role of general manager for North America, Australia, and New Zealand. Pappas was appointed TikTok's interim global head in August 2020, taking over the lead role at the company after U.S. President Donald Trump had issued an executive order to ban TikTok. Pappas was a vocal opponent against the threat of the ban. In 2021, Pappas was appointed chief operating officer (COO), a role Pappas held until they stepped down in 2023. During their tenure, Pappas was seen as a public face for TikTok in the U.S., and represented the company at a U.S. Senate hearing in late 2022. They also helped launch TikTok's Content Advisory Council and Creator Diversity Collective to address issues related to online safety and diversity, respectively. Under their leadership, TikTok saw significant growth; in September 2021, Pappas announced that TikTok had surpassed 1 billion active users, becoming the fastest social media platform to reach this milestone. Pappas continued to advise TikTok after resigning from the role of COO.

Board service and recognition
Pappas was included in Bloomberg's 50 Most Influential list in 2021, as well as Vogue Australia list of 21 "Australian women who defined 2021". They were also named Digital Executive of the Year by Adweek in 2021, and included in Fortune 2022 list of the most powerful women. Pappas was included in Los Angeles Business Journal LA500 list in 2022 and 2023, and ranked second on Fast Company Queer 50 list of "LGBTQ women and nonbinary innovators in business and tech".

Pappas has served on the board of directors of Simon & Schuster, as well as the board of trustees of the Paley Center for Media.

Personal life
Pappas identifies as "being both a woman and non-binary". They came out as non-binary in 2023, and use the pronouns they/them and she/her. Pappas is pansexual and has two children.

After leaving Australia, Pappas lived in London for four years, then moved to the U.S. They lived in New York City while working at YouTube, and relocated to Los Angeles to work for TikTok.