Date worked for Amazon: 1996 — 2001
What she's doing now: Susan Benson served as a board member at Town Hall Seattle, a nonprofit devoted to arts and education, until 2016.
Benson was part of Amazon's editorial staff (employees wrote all the first reviews) and she would eventually win the title of editor in chief. She told Stone that, in the early days, the assumption was that employees wouldn't even take a weekend day off of work.
She and the rest of the editorial team were responsible for crafting witty messages for site visitors, recommending new products that they might be interested in, a job that became nearly obsolete when Amazon built an algorithm called Amabot that automatically generated recommendations in a standard format.
According to Amazon's first employee, Shel Kaphan, Benson was the one who got Amazon on Netscape's "What’s New' and "What’s Cool" pages when she worked there.
"...because the name started with an A, it was above the fold so lots of people saw it," Kaphan said in an interview with the Y Combinator blog. "That was, in my opinion, a super important connection for us. It might have happened without the personal connection, but who knows, maybe not."