CEE PEE GEE'N | DailyVee 077
16:57

CEE PEE GEE'N | DailyVee 077

Gary Vaynerchuk 13.10.2016 58 878 просмотров 1 206 лайков

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Today's episode of DailyVee is just an overview of the hustle that you have to put in on a day-to-day basis. I'm really trying to focus on bringing value to everyone and working on my strategy for the DailyVee. Watch all of my journey as an entrepreneur HERE: https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLfA33-E9P7FA-A72QKBw3noWuQbaVXqSD — ♫ "Don't Cry" bu Jura Kez - htps://soundcloud.com/jura-kez — Thank you for watching this video. I hope that you keep up with the daily videos I post on the channel, subscribe, and share your learnings with those that need to hear it. Your comments are my oxygen, so please take a second and say ‘Hey’ ;). — ► Subscribe to My Channel Here http://www.youtube.com/subscription_center?add_user=GaryVaynerchuk — Gary Vaynerchuk is a serial entrepreneur and the CEO and founder of VaynerMedia, a full-service digital agency servicing Fortune 500 clients across the company’s 5 locations. Gary is also a prolific public speaker, venture capitalist, 4-time New York Times Bestselling Author, and has been named to both Crain’s and Fortune’s 40 Under 40 lists. Gary is the host of the #AskGaryVee Show, a business and marketing focused Q&A video show and podcast, as well as DailyVee, a docu-series highlighting what it’s like to be a CEO, investor, speaker, and public figure in today’s digital age. Make sure to stay tuned for Gary’s latest project Planet of the Apps, Apple’s very first video series, where Gary will be a judge alongside Will.I.Am, Jessica Alba, and Gwyneth Paltrow. ---- Follow Me Online Here: Instagram: http://instagram.com/garyvee Facebook: http://facebook.com/gary Snapchat: http://snapchat.com/add/garyvee Website: http://garyvaynerchuk.com Soundcloud: https://soundcloud.com/garyvee/ Twitter: http://twitter.com/garyvee Medium: http://medium.com/@garyvee Planet of the Apps: http://planetoftheapps.com Podcast: http://garyvaynerchuk.com/podcast Wine Library: http://winelibrary.com Subscribe to my VIP Newsletter for exclusive content and weekly giveaways here: http://garyvee.com/GARYVIP

Оглавление (4 сегментов)

Segment 1 (00:00 - 05:00)

- I'm a 40-year-old successful functioning human being, if I lost this right now I'd be like... What? (upbeat piano music) One thing that I continue to want to do is bring value in this DailyVee strategy, I guess this execution, video series. No place to sit. - [Man] Yeah, it's very small there. - [Gary] Let's go see what Pret. Pret is. Good man, how are you? - [Man] Busy morning? - [Gary] I just flew in from Chattanooga. - [Man] Oh really? - And I had a quick meeting with the team at my house. Marcus. (upbeat piano music) - [Man 2] How's it going? - [Gary] Good. I figured that's why he's here. - [DRock] Yeah. - [Parnev] Gary? - [Gary] Yes? - Parnev. - [Gary] Parnev, how are you? - I've shot you a couple emails. - How are you? - Very good. - Yeah. You got it. Alright, man, good to see you. Monday. - [Elevator] Ballroom, going up. - Sure, yes. How are you? - Hey, I'm Janine. Nice to meet you. - Janine, How are you? - Thank you for joining us. - Thanks for having me. - Yeah. - Is there a green, hey! - [Reid] Good to see you. - [Gary] Good to see you, brother. - [Reid] How you been? - [Gary] Really well. - [Reid] Thanks for coming. - [Gary] Great to see you. Of course. - Hey guys. - [DRock] How are you? - I'm Reid. DRock, nice to meet you. - And Tyler. - Nice to meet you, Tyler, finally. Alright. - Oh, this is not Schmidt. This is Tyler Babin. This is actually in my phone he's Other Tyler. Just my State of the Union of CPG and retail convergence over the next 20 years and how to drive those results in whatever shape or form. - Yep. Yep and then your same story on how do you market to the century that you're in-- - Yeah. - and how do you connect with those stories. Exactly. - Hey. And how much time do I have? - You've got an hour. - [Gary] Awesome and what's the max Q& amp; A I can do? Why am I talking so light? I think I'm getting serious. I think it's interesting as today's episode unfolds. There was a lot of CPG talk. That's consumer package goods. My plan is to build a private equity firm on the back of my agency to take advantage of the fact that every one of these companies won't do it fast enough. - [Both] Right. - Nothing else to say. So that's all I know how to talk about is obviously media is where I started and all I'll leave that in 'cause that matters but direct to consumer, eCom, smartification of items like that all plays, the punchline is how we are you gonna sell of bar of (censored) or bottle of (censored). Every one of those products, how they sell today versus how they sell 10 years from now is an interesting conversation. More importantly, how they can sell today differently than they're selling it today. This is not just a futuristic thing. These people in this room are the people that have the most black-and-white way to prove ROI in a company yet they're not getting the support. - They have to fight for resources for that. - Is it in here? - Yeah. - [Gary] Yeah, I'm ready. We can walk in, right? You know seven or eight years ago, I just really decided that my quickest route to the New York Jets and I think the moral of the story I'll go into my version of it but what I want you to get out of it is look if you want something to happen, you can't just visualize it. This is "The Secret" shit. You need to actually have a plan of how you're gonna get there and, more importantly, the bigger your ambition is the more patience you have to deploy against it. The more work you have to put against. It's just the way it is. Obviously, your talent is a variable. Great, you're gonna crush it and make it in six months, do you. That's fine, just not how I see it. And so the audacious wants and needs of buying, at least from a business standpoint, a professional football team even back then when the Jets were worth a billion I knew this was a $5, $6, $7 billion execution and so even though I did great in the wine business, even though Crush It! had popped and I was building the GaryVee thing like and even though I'd invest in Facebook, Twitter and Tumblr at that point, I still had this self-awareness even though everything was showing me with my investing that I can make a lot of money that way I still had the self-awareness that for me what I thought was going to be my best opportunity was to go and not start a brand, because there's a lot of that right now, you guys know a lot of people that are starting a cookie brand, making a new peanut butter, making a new soap. That's just not me. I just don't think that I'm going to invent a maple syrup

Segment 2 (05:00 - 10:00)

a honey that's gonna become a huge business. What I thought I could do is-- - [DRock] On that, why didn't you invent an app? Anything, you were there. - The reason I didn't invent an app is because it just I don't think that's my position. I don't get off on, excited or dream about the idea of starting an app, a wine app. I mean people were throwing tens of millions of dollars at me. Start a wine app, build the wine Facebook they used to say back then. TheVino has done extremely well. Great app. It's just not, I'm not an inventor. You know? I'm a communicator, I'm a business builder and I think you know the idea of creating the next Cap'n Crunch versus buying Cap'n Crunch when the company that owned it didn't manage it well and wanted to sell it off, there was just no comparison. I was more excited about that evolution and look, look at my career. I jumped into my dad's business and exploded it even the first two years ago, even though I started VaynerMedia and even though I got us clients and was a part of it, those first two years I was like eh. Even my kids like those first two years, you know? It's just the way I'm wired and so I just became very in tune with myself of like if I've got this big of a dream, it's gonna take a big play and I thought the biggest play was go out buy, build an agency, learn corporate America at scale, meet people, eventually hire them, build teammates, you know, and really understand it. I think there's never ever enough work put into really understanding the landscape. I got to taste shit and so I wanted to taste it and I was willing to burn my 30s, into my 40s on it. I was willing to in the prime of my career put in the work, have the humility to go and do client service, eat shit, have clients do all that. I was willing to do that and now I'm further along. I'm on second, third base of like this amazing journey and I just generally believe my ability to buy a brand for $5, $10, $15, $20 million and then build it for three, four years and then flip it for $300, $400, $600 is very real. You have to understand how big business works. A lot of you are young and entrepreneurs. If I was to go do that, then eight years from now I'll still be 48, there'll be billions of dollars and investors asking me to do that again and letting them make some of the money along the way and so this my friends is the television and the television is the radio. Go read what happened to the biggest brands in the world from 1957 to 1965 and go look at the biggest brands being built during that era. Every time there is an actual attention revolution, enormous money is made and enormous money is lost. (audience applause) Thanks for having me. - Yeah. Take care. - [Gary] Hello, can you hear me? Yo, I'm late. I'm just getting out now. Anything else I miss? So, I have a 3 o'clock that I'm late for, that's the only update? Okay. That was good. - [DRock] That was a really good talk. - [Gary] Yeah. You guys, are we gonna go in or can we sit here? They'll probably, what do we have, five? We just need one or two seats, right? We've been trying to make this work the schedule. I have to go to Helsinki in like five minutes. - What's over there? - There's a big conference. They do one of the biggest Europeans digital conferences so lot of fancy-schmancy digital people are speaking and me and so I'll fly in talk and come back. I'll be back Friday morning. I'm a 40-year-old successful functioning human being, if I lost this right now I'd be like... What? This is it. This is it and the one thing we all trade on is attention. Before you tell me how delicious your beer is or how awesome that code is how great you are, you need my attention. And too many companies have got away from that very simple thing. That sign above that taxi's is still priced like it's 15 years ago, yet that dude's looking at his phone. Right, I mean look what he's doing? That guy right there having a cigarette 20 years ago would have saw that Blue Moon, I mean this is amazing. Look what we're doing. He would have saw that (censored) ad on that but he's not and that's overpriced. - So how do you get attention? - You do it where, you don't get it, you just go to where it is and you figure out how to bring people value within it. Got it? I mean that's it. I mean like what's that guy doing? I mean this is happening in our face. I mean what do you think he's doing? You're not selling to him on this outdoor media.

Segment 3 (10:00 - 15:00)

You're not. And yet, outdoor media is up 12% in cost in the last 10 years. Why? Because media buying companies (censored) they have their business to run. To buy a banner ad on a desktop computer environment below the fold on a website that you don't know is insane. - [Man 5] And even so, right here, right here. - No worries. - [Man 5] You're gonna see it and you're not gonna do anything about it, embrace engagement. - By the way, and I'm being dead serious about this, I don't need to click it, I would pay for seeing it. They don't see it. Sure. So, our media capabilities have ex-- Thank you. - I'm an Venezuelan, I work in Pfizer-- - Very nice, what's your name? - Carmen. - Carmen, nice to meet you. - I never do this. I swear to God. I'm a grown person. I'm so excited and I can not even touch the camera. - Thank you. - And I look so awful! - You look amazing. - [Woman 2] Cheese! - Cheers. - I believe everything you say. - Thank you. - Never complain, I work very hard and we immigrants, we get the job done. - You got it. - Bye. Bye-bye. When we start a toothpaste company and our direct to consumer business is doing $80 million in five years 'cause last mile delivery is there and all this, (censored) is gonna care. And they're gonna be like shit, we have to be direct to consumer and they're gonna say okay, now we have to be director to consumer but the problem is Walmart and CVS and Walgreens are gonna say you can't do that 'cause we make money on the sale so they're gonna say (censored) well we're doing this new toothpaste and Walmart and Albertsons and Publix is gonna say no way. If you do that we're gonna eliminate your core brands from our store and there's gonna be a conflict and it's gonna be a game of who blinks first. Meanwhile our little startup continues to grow. That in the next 20 years is gonna be why so many huge brands die. This is what always happens. Brands turnover all the time. Nobody sat around thinking Nike was vulnerable to Under Armour, that's not what we think until it happens and this is happening very, very quickly because the punchline is and this is the one that you really need to debate for yourself, your living your life one way as a human by the show of hands that you had but then you put on your business jersey and you have your business card and you work as a brand and your acting and allocating dollars in a different way. You're eliminating the comments of, many of you in this room have said to me but Gary my target demo isn't on these platforms yet you are the target demo and you are on these platforms and so are every single person you know. Do you not live in the world? Do you not go out like this is happening. This is happening at scale and everybody is stunned and so listen what's gonna happen is, the real punchline is the Dollar Shave Club is what's gonna happen. Every company in here, J& amp; J, all of you, you're gonna go and do M& amp; A. You're gonna buy these things and you're gonna spend way too much money on something that you had way more money then to begin with and all you needed was a slight culture change. You can reach more people, more targeted at a lower cost than running a commercial for 30 seconds in between an event on television. And that's it. Sunday night football is $670,000 in media to get a 30 second spot that nobody watches. So, you know, I think what's gonna happen is entrepreneurs are gonna continue to build things, they're either gonna sell to bigger companies or because of the way democracy of distribution of information and sales will change, they're gonna hold out longer 'cause the stakes are gonna be higher or big companies and to spend more money on brands like you guys that pop and it's gonna be the same old thing with a different version but the opportunity has never been greater. - This is huge now, right? - What's that? - For anyone that wants to start, it's massive. Today-- - This is it, man. I mean this is it. Like I'd literally rather somebody right now come up to me and punch me in the face and steal my wallet but as long as I have my phone, right, like it's crazy. It's good to see you. Talk to you soon. My man, great to see you. - I appreciate it. - My pleasure. Alright, I'll see you guys later. Yeah, nice to meet you. - It was a pleasure to meet you. - [Gary] Real pleasure. I'll talk to you soon. - Definitely. - [Gary] Yeah, bye guys. - Safe travels. - Which one? This one? (light music) - Putting yourself in the best position to succeed. I know I can do it. I know that I can buy Lucky Charms, Peter Pan Peanut Butter, KSwiss sneakers, Bridgestone Tires, like a brand that exists and make it 2018'd out, 2019'd out and explode it's top line growth. It's what I do. I'm great at seeing something already, understanding what it

Segment 4 (15:00 - 16:00)

did to get there and knowing exactly what to do to go for the next place. I know how to do that in marketing more than anything and marketing of a product is what comes most natural to me. It's what I do best. Good at speaking. Good at making videos. I can play a little ping pong. I'm good at stuff. But I'm great at storytelling, marketing. Understanding the arbitrage and the whitespace in the marketing world and selling shit. This would be very satisfying to watch this little rant episode whenever this is one day when I'm in execution mode in that and so that's why I did it. And that's why today's talk is important. Some may watch today's talk, you'll see a good chunk of it and you'll say oh he did that and it was smart. He'll get clients from that. True. Way more important, I'm weeding out the people that agree and disagree with me about where the world is going in the next 10 years and I'm building relationships with the ones that agree with me because they can become integral pieces and parts of building this ultimate machine. (light music)

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