# #‎AskGaryVee‬ Show Episode 114: Meeting Deadlines in the Workplace

## Метаданные

- **Канал:** Gary Vaynerchuk
- **YouTube:** https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PufcLrY3bL0
- **Дата:** 01.07.2015
- **Длительность:** 11:54
- **Просмотры:** 45,179

## Описание

#QOTD: Have you ever done jury duty? If so, tell me your story.

#Timestamps:
0:00 Intro
1:30 - If your kids wanted to join the family business, would you start them at the bottom?
3:51 - Do you work on your birthday?
4:49 - How do you handle people missing deadlines they set?
6:09 - What are your thoughts on 3D printing technology and the potential to integrate it with social media?
7:55 - Are you ever scared before you do something BIG? Anything at all? It doesn't even have to be business related.

#LINKS
LISTEN TO THE PODCAST https://itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/the-askgaryvee-show/id928159684?mt=2
MY NEWEST MEDIUM https://medium.com/@garyvee/what-social-media-experts-are-doing-wrong-55805fe7867b
MY NEWEST KEYNOTE https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Rpi9PBr1hA0

--
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 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
Facebook: http://facebook.com/gary
Twitter: http://twitter.com/garyvee
Instagram: http://instagram.com/garyvee
Medium: http://medium.com/@garyvee

## Содержание

### [0:00](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PufcLrY3bL0) Intro

- [DRock] There he is. Right there. (laughing) - On this episode, I sneak out of jury duty to bring you the show. (hip hop music) ♫ Gary Vee ♫ You ask questions ♫ And I answer them ♫ This is ♫ The #AskGaryVee Show ♫ Hey everybody, this is Gary Vay-ner-chuk and this is episode 114 of the #AskGaryVee Show. Today was a show that was not supposed to happen. As you guys know, yesterday I mentioned that today would not happen. But it's a little bit of a curveball. This is a very special jury duty edition of the #AskGaryVee Show. I saw an opening, a big opening, they gave us for lunch. I e-mailed the gang. (dinging sound) And here we are. And I guess that's it. First, big love to the VaynerNation. So many lurkers came out. So many of you talking about the awesome energy of episode 113. I agree. Instant classic, India, in my opinion. And I guess we should get into it. So India, let's get into (mumbling) the show. - Damn it. - [Voiceover] Gerald asks, "If your kids wanna

### [1:30](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PufcLrY3bL0&t=90s) If your kids wanted to join the family business, would you start them at the bottom?

"join the family biz, will you start them at the bottom? " - Gerald, if the kids wanna go into the family business, which is really interesting to me. I'm super curious what ends up happening with Misha and Xander. Honestly, at that point, as I project 15 to 20 years out, I feel the empire is gonna be at such a level, that it's gonna be (mumbling). Crap, the family business in 20 years may actually be the Jets. Yes, 100% I will actually, 1000% make them start from the bottom. I'm gonna throw a curveball. And I know little Xander, little Misha, you're watching this right now. Probably in five to seven years from now where you can comprehend this, but I need ya to see this and know your dad is not bullshitting you. Not only will I make them start from the bottom, or let me rephrase, I'll make them start from the appropriate place that their education or skillset as a young entrepreneur or executive created, just like I would treat you or DRock, or anybody else. But here's the way more interesting part. I won't let them ascend to being number one, at least while I'm alive, unless they ascend to be number one. I think the thing that I'm most proud of both in Wine Library and with VaynerMedia is we have friends and family involved in both businesses. And the levels that people play in are actually all over the place. This is something you guys know. You know so many of A. J. 's dear friends are involved in the company. And you know that there's just different levels. We're not gonna get into names. But like, people are playing at different levels. And obviously, kids are different. And I could be, conceivably, completely full of shit because I'm not completely quantifying the enormous amount of love that I'm going to gather in them over the next years. But I have a funny feeling that my respect for meritocracy and capitalism is gonna force me into that game. And number two, I'm thrilled to write them a nice check, more than 99% of people deserve, for them to go do their own thing if they don't like it. If you don't like it Xander, go do your thing. Misha. (siren blaring) - [India] Right. - [DRock] Let's move over this way. - Oh, you're mixing it up, huh? I like how DRock's mixing it up. You better have kept the gray as we kinda moved. Alright. - [India] Alright, from Ginson. - Did we get my green on green? Did we get my, give me the color now. I went super Peppermint Patty up on 114. So you like this, right India? - That's my favorite color. - Nice, awesome. Alright, DRock, let's go.

### [3:51](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PufcLrY3bL0&t=231s) Do you work on your birthday?

- [Voiceover] Ginson asks, "Do you work "on your birthday? " (spitting) - Couple things, my man. Number one, I hate my birthday. My 40th birthday is coming November 14th of this year. That was a little bit of a specific drop, mainly 'cause I want the entire VaynerNation to buy me a lotta gifts, Jets jerseys of random rare players are at the top of the things that I like, medium. I've worked on every birthday of my entire life, all of them. Literally, even some in my teenage years, 'cause they happened to fall weekends when my dad was draggin' my ass to the store. But since I became a full-time professional at 22, I've worked every birthday. I've given a talk. I gave a speech, the RE/MAX convention for Thank You Economy came out during my birthday. Like, gave a speech on my birthday. Yeah, absolutely, that was a silly question. 100% all in. You wanna do what you love on your birthday. I'm lucky enough to be doing what I love.

### [4:49](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PufcLrY3bL0&t=289s) How do you handle people missing deadlines they set?

- [Voiceover] Ben asks, "How do you handle "people missing deadlines they set? " - Ben, this is an interesting kinda question. Poorly, because usually I... Let me break this down, actually. The way I struggle, the way I react to people who set their own deadlines and miss them are predicated into the A and B bucket that I put them in, meaning, either I put you into a bucket where you're a hardcore executor, you're extremely reliable, you're on your shit, you're T's and I's and everything, and that's what I value in you because that's what you're great at, if you miss a deadline, I am pissed, 'cause that's what you do. Now if you're in the magic category, gray, stumbling all over yourself, calling out sick randomly. Weird, but you got magic and you make stuff happen, well I kind of think you're gonna miss your, I actually don't even believe you in the first place when you set a deadline. And so then I'm okay with another two or three days. So I think it predicates completely on where I have you bucketed. And then are you actually executing on that bucket. So that's how I react to that question. - [India] For Cameron... - Let's move it around. Oh, look at me now. (laughing) I like the Citi bikes stuff. Alright. - [DRock] You wanna get on the bike? - I don't bike. - [Voiceover] Cameron asks, "What are your thoughts "on 3D printing technology and the potential

### [6:09](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PufcLrY3bL0&t=369s) What are your thoughts on 3D printing technology and the potential to integrate it with social media?

"to integrate with social media? " - I'm a big fan of 3D printing. I think if you play it out at scale, 3D printing is one of the most disruptive things going on that I think a lotta people talked about and it's not the hot topic right now, which makes me feel like in 2019, 2022, it's gonna pop and everybody's gonna be like, "What? " It's kinda like the Internet itself, right? After the dot com bubble burst in '01 on Wall Street, people kind of didn't realize the Internet was only growing and would really be a factor. Same thing with 3D printing. It got a lotta pizzazz. Now it's a kind of soft period. Everyone's talkin' about the Ubers and the Airbnb's. I think it's gonna really rear its head in five to seven years. How it integrates into social is not interesting. I'm not trying to be disrespectful. I don't think that's interesting. I think what's interesting is if you sell a physical good, between five and 100 dollars, I think you have real disruption coming up in five, 10, 15, 20 years. Like, nobody's buying a screwdriver in 15 years. You're making one. And that's intense. And then 3D printing gets into a real intense place, including people arguing about gun control in a world where people can be printing guns in their home. Like, who gives a shit about gun shows and permits. I'm printing it in my basement. So society will evolve. We will always adjust. You go show somebody who lived 150 years ago all the intensity we deal with, they would have thought that we woulda killed ourselves off by now. Humans have a funny way to adjust. I'm in on team human. But don't get it twisted. 3D printing is a massive disrupter. And over the next two decades, will rear it's head for all of us. - [India] Last one from Clinton. (mumbling) - Come back. It's a little warm. I kinda like the shade.

### [7:55](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PufcLrY3bL0&t=475s) Are you ever scared before you do something BIG? Anything at all? It doesn't even have to be business related.

[Voiceover] Clinton asks, "Are you ever scared "before you do something big? "Anything at all? "It doesn't even have to be business related. " - Clinton, the only thing that I'm scared of, really, in a public setting, or that might sound big. This is what the #AskGaryVee Show is for, right? We gotta show the 360. This is probably gonna be one of the more vulnerable things that I've said on the show. I'm setting it up, but you're all gonna be like, "What? " I am actually scared of reading in public because I'm come to learn in the last three or four years, I am atrocious reader. I really struggle with it. As a matter of fact, one of the big shifts in 2015 that I've made is I'm making a lot more five and seven minute meetings with my staff because I don't read fast enough for the value of my time. Even when I read to Misha, believe it or not, I'm like a quarter of an inch hesistant. Like, if I had to create the greatest story off the top of my head, right now, for Misha, I feel cozy and calm. Reading Goodnight Moon, I'm like (humming). I'm just a terrible reader. Like in Passover, reading the things on the table. I don't like to read. It's funny, when I started getting asked to do TV shows, one of the reasons I didn't want to do a TV show was read off the chiron. And even when I did my wine web radio show on Sirius for nine months, my first commercial read was a disaster, probably the worst thing I ever did publically. Guy came in, Sam Benrubi, big ups. Father of many of the employees at VaynerMedia came in, he's like, "Do what Howard Stern does. "He can't read either. "Just read it and then do your thing. " The second read was insanity 'cause I read it, I knew what the Stella Artois, ironically a VaynerMedia client now, what that ad wanted to get off. And I did an incredible read. So I'm very improv. I know what I'm good at. I'm stunningly not scared of most things. I'm scared of snakes, somewhat of heights. I really am, ultimately, scared of dying. And weirdly enough, the first thing that came to mind was I really don't wanna read in public. Badly. That is probably at the top of the list, believe it or not. And that's kind of intriguing to me. It's a funny kinda thing. That's it? That's it, huh? That was a nice, concise show. If you think about the feedback yesterday, everyone's like, "That's a long one. " Fun show. I'm really glad I'm continuing it. Super excited. I saw a bunch of you saw what I put out on Instagram. I'll go to the official term tomorrow, but I'm gonna do a Kickstarter-like thing, probably tomorrow or next day. And so be ready for it where I'm adding at least 100 to 200 questions to the #AskGaryVee book that's coming out early next year that have never been answered before. And I'm gonna do some sorta thing where people that are watching the show, if they preorder, I don't know if I'm gonna do 50 or 100 books. They get an automatic entry and will be in the book and then get a special call with you, India, to make sure the, - [India] Wow. - [Gary] to make sure that the question is on point. Appreciate all the support. Big ups to everybody on Facebook who's tagging people in the comments. That means the world to me because you're tryin' to pass on the show. Glad I ran out of the courtroom to bring you episode 114 of the #AskGaryVee Show. And I felt tight with the questions today. Question of the day. Have you ever done jury duty? And if you have, tell me your story. You keep asking questions. I'll keep answering them. Psst, podcast peeps. I know you weren't expecting a show today. 114, it's about to come at you. Yeah, it's hot. India, give me the podcast exclusive (laughing). Keep that laugh, DRock, let's go. (hip hop music)

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*Источник: https://ekstraktznaniy.ru/video/19567*