[2] Wang's first full-time job out of college was as a salesman of apparel snap fasteners, although he "wore an ill-fitting $90 suit and didn't know how to pronounce Christian Dior.
[3] Wang launched his business career during the mid-2000s, where founded Tudou in January 2005 (a few months before YouTube), citing the tightly regulated nature of television content in China and his hope to "bridge the huge gap between those people who have creative ideas and talent, but cannot get their work out to the audience" as his primary reasons.
[7] In an interview with the Wall Street Journal on March 12, 2013,[2] Wang announced his new project, Light Chaser Animation Studios, to produce animated feature films targeting the rapidly growing Chinese movie market, which grew by 30% in 2012[8] and is widely expected to overtake the U.S. market in size by 2020.
At 24, Wang wrote the novel Waiting for Summer, loosely based on his early experiences studying and living in the United States.
[10] In the same year, Wang wrote the libretto for the San Francisco Ballet's critically acclaimed RAkU, a story about a "triangle of obsession" taking place in the Tokugawa Era.