#QOTD: If you could live forever, how long would it be?
#timestamps:
0:00 Intro
2:17 - How do I help my interns develop critical thinking and taking ownership?
5:21 - What would you be doing in 2016 if you were 12 year?
7:45 - How does one leverage content from magazines to throw jabs at a customer who’s attention is generally not there?
11:27 - Were you too soft to start a mobile development shop?
13:37 - How can meditation increase self-awareness?
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Gary Vaynerchuk builds businesses. Fresh out of college he took his family wine business and grew it from a $3M to a $60M business in just five years. Now he runs VaynerMedia, one of the world's hottest digital agencies. Along the way he became a prolific angel investor and venture capitalist, investing in companies like Facebook, Twitter, Tumblr, Uber, and Birchbox before eventually co-founding VaynerRSE, a $25M angel fund.
The #AskGaryVee Show is Gary's way of providing as much value as possible by taking your questions about social media, entrepreneurship, startups, and family businesses and giving you his answers based on a lifetime of building successful, multi-million dollar companies.
Gary is also a prolific public speaker, delivering keynotes at events like Le Web, and SXSW, which you can watch right here on this channel.
Find Gary here:
Website: http://garyvaynerchuk.com
Wine Library: http://winelibrary.com
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Оглавление (6 сегментов)
Intro
- On this episode, it's a good one. I like it actually. That's what this episode's about. It's a really solid three episodes in a row, killer. (hip hop music) - [Gary] You ask questions, and I answer them this is The #AskGaryVee Show. - Hey everybody, this is Gary Vay-ner-chuk and this is episode 227 of The #AskGaryVee Show. I gotta tell you, what's today, Wednesday? - [DRock] Yep. - Three episodes in a row, India. Get over here. Don't be scared. I know the table's small of some weird reason all of a sudden. - [India] Tiny. What happened to your, oh, it was broken. - It was broken. You saw that with Simon. It was a good episode. A lot of great feedback from Simon episode, India. Lot of people were excited to see you again. Did you see all the tweets of like, "Wait, India still works at Vayner. " - No. - People thought you got fired, I loved it. - Fired? - Well, yeah, you'd clearly if you were not to be anymore it would be more about you being fired. - Right. - Yeah. Tyler, am I doing one tomorrow? - [Tyler] What? - #AskGaryVee tomorrow? - [Andy] Yes. - [Tyler] No. - No? - [Tyler] I don't know. - We go to sneak one in because I think I can go five days this week. That'd be huge. - [Tyler] Let's do it. - Alright, fight for it. Yes, so all things are good. I'm very focused. I feel the shows have been really good this week. Like from the quality of the content. I don't think I've been as entertaining but I think that the answers have been strong. Obviously, the saltiness, oh by the way, we have to do one tomorrow 'cause I have to make my Jets prediction. - [Tyler] (inaudible) - I have a strategy of not doing predictions this year. It didn't work week one so I'm gonna give a protection tomorrow against Chris Sacca's Buffalo Bills. India, let's get into the show. - [India] Alright. - Yo. What's up with the videos? - Yeah, they're obsessed with them. - Who? Do we only do videos now? Did we agree to do that actually? - [Andy] We've always tried to aim for more videos? - Alright, we're gonna do a lot more videos if you want to get in the show, use the hashtag #AskGaryVee and submit more video questions. I'm in to it.
How do I help my interns develop critical thinking and taking ownership?
- Hi Gary, this is Jelle from Belgium. First off, I want to start by thanking you for putting out all that content. I've been an entrepreneur for over five years now and I feel like that I am becoming a better businessman, a better entrepreneur thanks to your content and insight so thank you for that. This is my question. I've been working to get with a few interns for couple years now and they're always around 21-years-old and I feel that they're lacking two important skills. The first skill is critical thinking or self-criticism. They should think about what should I do first and what next. Why am I advising this? Is what I produced really good enough? The second skill is taking ownership. When all given tasks are finished do they start thinking about what the next best step could be? Do you have any idea how I, as a boss, as a guides, can help them develop their skills? Thanks. - Jelle, listen, I think that the answer to your question is the critique that you are putting on them. You are critiquing them for this kind of thoughtfulness, critical thinking and then action and taking the initiative in being on the offense. My answer to you is you need to do the same with you as a boss and you need to audit yourself to do that. Meaning there is no reason that you should be in a scenario where you're struggling with 21-year-old interns for long period of time because the truth is if you put the time and effort to really audit them and really spend time with them and then decide for you whether you're right or wrong as the judge and jury, as the boss, that they're good or they're not good you could speed up this process very quickly. So my answer to you is go deep and spend more time with them whether that's virtually or in reality or in real life where these interns are. Figure out if they're good. Give them very detailed feedback at scale. Suffocate all the excuses and then make a decision whether that person should be in your organization or not. For me, if I wanted to know if anybody here should be in my organization or not it would literally take me two days. Just make it the thing you do today. Today you should decide if these interns are capable, have the talent and the capacity to deliver on your expectations or not. Have you been clear in them and move forward so I think the answer to your question is in the same way that your upset with them that when their task is done, they're not doing the next thing. I'm upset with you which is if you slept last night you could've allocated some of those hours to auditing your interns and giving them clear feedback and making the decision if you wanted them here or not. Let's do it. - Buster.
What would you be doing in 2016 if you were 12 year?
- Question for you. Now I know what you did at age 12, 13, 14, 15, 16 getting involved in wine and selling sports cards but what would you be doing if it were 2016 and you were 12, 13, 14 and 15 and 16? Appreciate your answer, appreciate everything you do, thanks. - Buster, Buster honestly what I would tell you is to give you the answer that you're looking for which is what I do what should you be doing? How should you be thinking about things? Reverse engineer your strengths, right? You like the NBA you should hit up Dunk first of all and have him put you on but besides that I think that you need to figure out what you're good at and what would you want to do. I would basically be today, I'm trying to think. There'd be so many things I'd be doing today. I give a lot of that advice, I would've made bank on Snapchat filters. I think that one guy who did the Pokémon GO consulting. I think that was super smart. Having the internet to buy and sell. I'm a salesman. Buying and selling, uh, just buying stuff on you know in Asia and re-marketing in the US. I think I'd be doing pretty much everything I was doing at scale. So because when I was growing up sports cards were what people collected, I would just be focused on whatever that version is now. Sneakers, I'm telling you right now, I would be, my stories of Toys "R" Us and garage sales would be waking up, you know, at one in the morning and standing in line at a SoHo sneaker store to get that thing, flipping like I would be doing a lot of that. I think the truth is, Buster, I'd be focusing on what I was strong at. What I think I'm really good at is buying and selling. I did that with stuff my whole life. Now, I do it with people's attention and the end consumer's attention. That is my strength that I would double down on that. You, my friend, need to figure out what you're best at? Is that making content on social media? Is that being a charismatic personality that I think was shining through the question? Is that being a salesperson, buying selling stuff? Connecting with people? When you're 16 you have time. Like, Jesus, remember when you were bored? Remember when you could do that? Andy, do you remember when you're like, "I'm bored. " You don't have that kind of time when you grow up and so I would take advantage of that time because that is the asset. - [India] That's good. - 'Member being bored? - Yeah. Was good times. (laughter) - From Brandon. - Brandon.
How does one leverage content from magazines to throw jabs at a customer who’s attention is generally not there?
- Hey Gary. My name is Brandon and I'm social media manager for a digital magazine app in mid-town Manhattan called Zineo. Looks a little something like this. My question for you is how do we leverage content from 5000+ magazines to throw jabs at a millennial customer who's attention is typically away from magazines? Thanks so much for your answer. You keep answering questions, I'll keep asking them. - Brandon, I have a couple things. One you're avocado ambassador, I need to figure out what that means. You're also a Mets fan but I didn't see any Jets love and I'm very concerned that you might be one of those rare people that are Mets and Giant fans who I hate oh so much. I didn't fully get the context of the question. I'm not sure if you guys got it. Obviously, you guys picked it. I didn't fully understand what the objective was of the magazines. Was he referring to how we make micro digital context that actually gets people to care about a magazine? Meaning like buying a subscription to a mag, I mean actually I'm very curious while we're here, where is your magazine life right now? Andy K? - [Andy] Zero. - Zero? - [Andy] 100% - [Gary] Nothing. - [Gary] Zero. - [Gary] Dunk? - 5%. - [Gary] What magazine would you consume? - Back home from Sweden. - [Gary] Swedish magazines that you read? - Fashion magazines, yeah. - [Gary] That you'll at? - Look and read. - [Gary] So that comes to your home and you'll do that? - Yes. - [Gary] And that's 5% of your world you think is your gut? - 2. 5, yes. - [Gary] 2. 5, got it. DRock? - [DRock] None. - Zero. Other Tyler? - [Other Tyler] Maybe like 2 or 3. - Like what do you consume? - [Other Tyler] Like photography and design magazines a little bit. - You'll flip through it [Other Tyler] Yeah. - How about compared to 24 months ago? Even less? - [Other Tyler] Yeah, even less. - Dunk, compared to 24 months ago even less? - [Dunk] Same. - Same. India? - I subscribe to a couple. - [Dunk] No, less. - Less. India? - Same, a couple. - What do you have? - The New Yorker and then like an art magazine. - Playgirl? - No. (laughter) Why do you tease me? - 'Cause I like you. So, the New Yorker? - Yes. - And do you read that? - Yeah. - And, it's not just collecting. Do you think you read as much New Yorker today as you did 24 months ago? 36 months ago? - The same. - 'Cause there's a scenario where you like it. Like, weekend morning coffee kinda thing or? - Subway magazine. - Perfect subway magazine, got it. Look, I think, that's obviously a small focus group, (Gary stammering) and I don't know Brandon so that where I'm gonna have to go. If you're talking about the notion of what kind of content can we put out, jabs, in an ecosystem that is going to get millennial's excited about then going in to the magazine world and subscribing to a magazine, I think it's a lost cause. I really do and I think the magazines that have anybody's attention right now, I bet you if we could take these three wonderful people's brains and put them here and dissect how they cared about the photographer magazine, the New Yorker and these Swedish magazines it had a lot more to do with those brands did to them 10, 15 years ago and that's the problem. They thought those were cool magazines when they were in junior high. They were around in the house. The New Yorker is an iconic thing. I think it's a very difficult proposition and as digital and mobile devices have become more magazine-ized A. K. A. photos have become such a foundation of the way we consume the internet versus written words of a decade ago I think you're fighting an uphill battle, my friend. - Sometimes you got to hear that, you know? - Yeah, just yeah. - Hey Gary. I'm Sam I'm from Nigeria, I'm living in San Francisco--
Were you too soft to start a mobile development shop?
- He said I'm soft. - And my question for you is were you too soft to start a mobile development agency, brah? Was that too hard for you, blah? (laughter) - [India] Brah! - That's amazing. I love that whole, are you, do you lift, bro? So did he say am I too soft to start a mobile? - [India] Development agency. - I want to say, I want to fight you is really what I want to do but I think, yeah, I mean, look, to answer it in a straight way the reason building a development shop in a genre is not interesting to me is that if I was to build a development shop in a meaningful way, right now, I would build a messenger development shop way before I'd build a mobile app shop, brah. Because I don't care about 2016 legacy software. To me, the reason I built the company I built is that, unlike, a VCR or a video game console or a cell phone or virtual reality, messaging is tried-and-true. The mechanism that delivers it gets killed eventually. Right? So the guy caveman Rick who took a rock and carved it into the cave he was messaging and communicating, right, but the platform of the day, where the eyeballs were, were inside the cave and the smoke signals and the written word and a telephone and a television and a movie theater and a cell phone and a VR world and apps within cell phone and so brah, the reason I didn't go with a mobile developing shop is it was just too small and I needed to win the communication game infrastructure that I can deploy against any mechanism that delivers the story, brah. (laughter) - Every episode we have to have a question that gets you a little fired up. - You found it. That's awesome, by the way, thanks for the question.
How can meditation increase self-awareness?
- GaryVee! What's happening, man? My name is Bo Muchoki. I'm a real estate agent and a motivational blogger and I have a question for you about self-awareness. You've spoken a lot about this topic and how to gain self-awareness. You've also touched on how meditation is a trend that's really gonna take over and be in every household in the near future so what are your thoughts on how to gain self-awareness through meditation. I, myself, gained a lot of self-awareness and clarity on who I am and what my actual goals are through meditation so what are your thoughts on how meditation can help you gain self-awareness? Thanks. - Bo, thanks for the question. I think the answer is, I believe. I believe you. There'd be no reason for you to make this video and lie. I believe that there's a lot of people that are gonna gain it. I'm a very, very strong advocate for way more discovery by the human race around understanding the brain and mental health, mental fitness, mental, mental. I promise you that when it's all said and done for me people will realize that was the game that I won. That that's the gift that I was given. That was where I had all-time skills. It's just we've grown up in a world and I, for the last 40 years, where that wasn't the conversation. People can tell if you're pretty or good at athletics. Nobody rolled up on me and were like, "Yo, bro your brain is on point. " Right? I'd say that because when I say brain I mean the mental pillars of emotional intelligence that are the foundation of everything I've been talking of last four years. You could tell me I'm good at school. Memorizing something and regurgitating. That's not what we're talking about. It's having that centering, having that place, that energy that allows you navigate through all adversity. Not getting too high in your highs and not getting too low in your low. It's balance. It's the contradictions that make me me. I want awesomeness for everybody but I want to punch all of you in the face too because if you want to compete with me, you're gonna lose and it's all that stuff. Sorry, India. And that's all that stuff and so it's all of that foundational stuff that we need a lot more for and if meditation through a process is what unlocks people to be happier, to be more grateful, to deploy more empathy to do all the tried and true cliché things that would make the world awesome, awesome then we would be in a really, really good spot. And I don't believe that there's Nirvana and it's gonna be perfect but moving anything just a little bit really works. We've had world wars. We've had in epidemics. We've had enormous atrocities. We continue to do them in the world today. There's genocide and people are confused and so yeah I'm all 'bouty, I don't even know why I said that but I was thinking about Master P the other day. I'm all about, all about people understanding that mental health, meditation all these things have a lot of upside and that we do not understand anything about the brain currently. Just an enormous, vast opportunity for us over the next century to learn more about this and I'm excited and grateful that my great, great, great-grandchildren will live in a world where that will be understood far more in a substantial way. In the way that people died from disease that we so easily navigate through today, all these unhappy people, and all these tragedies, and all these negatives that are completely, completely coming from the fact that the mental status of that person isn't in the best place it could be are gonna be an amazing challenge for our race, for our world, for who we are as humans. And I'm really into it and I really bank that is where so much of my happiness comes from. I'm actually quite sad that I'm not to be able to see it where it's gonna be 100 years from today unless somebody figures out technology and I'm into it. I'd be pumped to be a buck 40. I will Yoda this fuckin' world up. And so that's that. - [India] "I will Yoda this shit up" as a t-shirt. - I would love to look like Yoda. - [India] So not how long he lived, just what he looks like? - The punchline there is like if you told me I could live to 840 and it would be like Yoda or Crane from Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles where I'm just a brain in a machine but I know what's up, I'd be into that. - [India] Either option or you want Yoda over the brain? - Well I'd probably take Yoda only because he's still like a complete thing and bad ass cane I'd be like, "Hey, India. " You know? Yeah, you're still there. Yeah, you're still around. - That's everything. - We'll because if I figured it out, I'd pass it on to you. - Oh! Thank you. - You're welcome. - I'd prefer you'd live. - Oh, that's nice. - Yes. Question of the day, this is actually an interesting question because I actually think this last little rant is not for everybody. If you could control it, if I told you, "Pssst, weird thing, India is a genie from the future "and can make anything happen. " In the comments section and just go, you can justify, you can do whatever you want but just a number's fine by me if you could control it at what age do you want to die? How long live? What number? Andy? On the spot, let's go, quick. Let's go. - 120. - [Gary] Dunk? Infinity is the only non-answer allowed. - 140. - [Gary] 140. - [Dunk] Yeah. - Other Tyler? - [Other Tyler] 150. - [DRock] At least 500. - I'm like 100. - 100. Yeah, you're so, you're so that. I would've bet the farm on that. You're counter-culture. You're like, "Oh, I don't know. " Mine's, I think mine would be 888. You keep asking questions, I'll keep answering them. - (hip hop music)