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Vinay Hiremath
Co-Founder and CTO, Loom
Vinay Hiremath is the co-founder and former CTO of Loom, a video messaging platform that was recently acquired by Atlassian.14 He now serves as the Head of Engineering & IT for Loom at Atlassian.2
Some key points about Vinay Hiremath:
- Career background:
- Co-founded Loom in 2015 and served as CTO until the Atlassian acquisition2
- Previously worked as a Software Engineer at Backplane from 2012-20132
- Graduated from the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign2
- Role at Loom:
- As CTO, he oversaw Loom's architecture and technology development2
- Led major system shifts and improvements in areas like upload efficiency, build systems, and service architecture2
- Acquisition by Atlassian:
- Loom was acquired by Atlassian for $975 million in October 20234
- Hiremath is now leading engineering and IT efforts for Loom as part of Atlassian2
- Leadership philosophy:
- Emphasizes the importance of user-generated content in driving product adoption and innovation3
- Focuses on balancing product expansion with specialization3
- Personal traits:
- Describes himself as someone who loves "building stuff that goes into the internet and making things go really fast"2
- Has experience in both technical and people management roles, having briefly served as Loom's interim VP of People2
Vinay Hiremath's LinkedIn username is vhiremath4.2
Highlights
Software engineering is not enough. And it was never very hard just medium/easy hard. If we are all being really honest, it just took a lot of time and there was enough of a skill cliff and money on the other end that people poured their lives into it. They declared themselves geniuses because they focused on some software niche and the market rewarded them.
I don’t have answers but I will say if a retard like me can learn mechanical and electrical, you can too. And the AI tools we will have will allow us to create much larger systems end to end with fewer people. Just bite the bullet and do actually hard things.
What is hard shifts over time. If someone says “you can’t actually learn / do all of A, B, and C”, that’s usually a good indicator that doing all 3 is the bare minimum for doing something hard. Because most people are (unfortunately) lazy/complacent/not curious and have low self esteem. They play themselves before they even try.
Was already happy giving up a majority of my acquisition pay out and following my gut. Didn’t care that people called me a fool. But reading stories like this makes me feel complete. We need more people doing hard things - congrats Adam you are a beast.

