Yahoo! was originally called 'Jerry's Guide to the World Wide Web'.
Yahoo! Started as 'Jerry's Guide to the World Wide Web'
Before Yahoo! became one of the internet's most recognizable brands, it had a much humbler name: "Jerry's Guide to the World Wide Web."
In early 1994, Stanford University doctoral students Jerry Yang and David Filo were supposed to be writing their electrical engineering dissertations. Instead, they spent their free time doing what many early internet users did—surfing the web and bookmarking interesting sites. The difference was they decided to organize and share their discoveries.
From Jerry's Guide to Jerry and David's Guide
What started as "Jerry's Guide to the World Wide Web" quickly expanded to "Jerry and David's Guide to the World Wide Web," acknowledging both founders. The site was essentially a curated directory of their favorite websites, organized by category—a critical tool in the pre-Google era when finding anything online was genuinely difficult.
The traffic was explosive. In just months, their little side project went from zero to over 1 million hits per day in 1995.
The Midnight Rebranding
By April 1994, Yang and Filo realized their clunky name needed an upgrade. Late one night in their trailer on Stanford's campus, they brainstormed alternatives.
The duo wanted to create an acronym similar to "YACC" (Yet Another Compiler Compiler), a Unix tool beloved by programmers. They settled on "Yet Another Hierarchical Officious Oracle"—which conveniently spelled YAHOO.
Around midnight, they cracked open an online Webster's dictionary to check the word's meaning. A "yahoo" is defined as someone rude, loud, and uncouth—from Jonathan Swift's Gulliver's Travels, where Yahoos were brutish creatures. Yang and Filo found this hilarious and fitting. The name stuck.
Why It Mattered
That quirky rebranding decision transformed a student project into a global brand. Yahoo! became the face of the early internet—a portal to the web's chaotic expanse. At its peak in the early 2000s, Yahoo! was valued at over $125 billion.
From Jerry's Guide to internet giant, the company's origin story reminds us that even the biggest tech brands often start as dorm room experiments with terrible names.