We’re celebrating a fun anniversary at Automattic today, our 20th, with a fun look-back. Gosh, it’s been quite a journey, and it still feels like we’re just getting started in so many areas.
In 2005, being a remote-first company was anathema to investors and business leaders* at the time; it was a scarlet letter that combined with our embrace of Open Source and the relative inexperience got us some funny looks and a lot of skepticism. I will be forever grateful to the true contrarians who bet on Automattic in our earliest days.
Even when it was clearly working the first few years, there was always the dismissal of “that won’t scale” that loomed like a remote startup Great Filter. These days I hear from friends who run incubators or do seed investing that almost every company they look at taps into remote talent.
It makes me think about what uncommon things Automattic does today that will be standard in the coming decades. We do our best to balance idealism with pragmatism, because even if you are on the right side of history, being too early can be as bad as being wrong.
I can’t predict everything that will change over the coming decades, especially with AI making the next few years particularly hard to predict. Still, I do know a few things that won’t change: everything flows from our people, open source is still the most powerful idea of our generation, growth is the best feedback loop, and no matter how far away the goal is, the only way to get there is by putting one foot in front of another every day. People will always want fast, bug-free software; instant, omniscient customer service when they need it; and experiences so intuitive that they usually don’t. And once they’ve had a taste of freedom, it’s hard to return to their previous state. (For more, see our creed.)
Our industry is highly cyclical, and I feel fortunate to have gained the perspective of a few bubbles and crashes, along with all the emotions that go with them. It’s undeniable we’re in the very early days — the command-line times — of an AI era, and though it will probably have its own bubble and crash cycles, it feels as significant to me as anything since we started. It’s more important than ever that we fight for open source and the freedom-enhancing side of technology. I’m committed to doing whatever I can to democratize publishing, commerce, and messaging, but there are many other areas of the human experience to cover… pick one to work on! It’s hard and rewarding work.
When I was working on an early version of one of our internal stats systems, it was really important to me that it showed rolling windows of the last 24 hours (daily), 168 hours, 4 weeks, and of course yearly. The rolling was important so you could see the impact of your changes as soon as possible. Then I felt called to add another: decade.

Some thought it was silly at the time, and it’s true that it initially served mainly as a way to display the cumulative number. But I wanted every time someone looked at one of these stats pages that they were reminded that we’re building for the long term. Our users and customers deserve nothing less. And now we have some statistics with 20 years of history, it has some useful comparisons as well!
In Ten Years of Automattic, I wrote:
There’s a lot more to do, and I can’t wait to see what a “20 Years of Automattic” post says. I’m a lucky guy.
Now we know! I’m still a very lucky guy, and can’t wait to build, learn, and share alongside a talented crew of like-minded hackers, dreamers, and doers.
* I’ll note that pioneers like Bob Young (Red Hat), Stephen Wolfram (Wolfram Research), Jason Fried (37Signals), and Mårten Mickos (MySQL) were big inspirations. Also, the entire Open Source community and most projects operated at least partially this way, which is why it seemed so natural to us as a second-generation Open Source company.
I have been using the platform since 2007, built successful web businesses, and raised a family paving my own way thanks to your creation. Much love and respect!
Congratulations, Matt!
20 years is an incredible milestone, and it’s truly inspiring to witness such dedication and impact over the years. Your journey is a testament to resilience, passion, and consistent excellence. Here’s to the legacy you’ve built—and all the success yet to come!
Wishing you many more years of continued success and fulfillment.
Cheers!
Been using your platform since 20015—built a few web businesses, supported my family, and found my path. Just wanted to say… thanks a ton. Respect!
Congratulations! Can you name the first 10 people who joined Automattic? I’d love to know more about the original team behind it all.
Congratulations on the company’s 20-year milestone, Matt — what a journey.
It got me thinking about the next 20 years. One thing I’ve always missed from the early blogging days was the beauty of pingbacks. You’d publish a post, someone else would riff on it, and you’d get that little notification letting you know the conversation had evolved. It was organic, thoughtful, and created a real sense of community.
Then the spammers joined in and ruined the idea. And then came social networks, and most of the dialogue shifted there away from blogs. But with AI now in the mix, I wonder: could we reimagine something like pingbacks—only smarter? Back then, spam buried the system. Today, though, we have the tools to filter that noise. Imagine an agent-based system that could track and connect conversations across platforms, blogs, newsletters, and forums—surfacing meaningful threads wherever they’re happening.
It feels like the idea just arrived too early the first time. Maybe now, we have the technology—and the need—to bring it back, better.
Matt, congratulations on reaching such an incredible milestone. Wishing you even greater success in the next 20. Keep dreaming, keep building.
Regards,
Deepak Kundu
Mazal tov! xoxo
Congrats, 20 years of Automattic!! What you built changed the internet, but more than that, it reflects the vision and integrity you’ve carried from day one. Proud of you.
Congrats Matt! You have an important role representing creators in this next era of the Agentic Web. Good memories of my blogger efforts 2006-2010 as I post this.
Happy anniversary, Automattic! WordPress has been at the heart of my freelance career since 2014, and I’m so thankful for the freedom and possibilities it’s brought into my life. Cheers to many more years!
Happy Birthday Automattic! Very proud to be part of the company during this huge milestone. Congrats Matt.