Saturday, 11 January 2014

Gary Vaynerchuk

Ultimately, when your compass is oriented toward the consumer, and achieving actual business results, it will lead you to great things. So don’t be fearful when you enter a new environment. As long as you’re grounded in ideals that drive value toward the consumer and revenue toward your company, you’re I have never worried about the bottom line. I have always focused on the top-line revenue. I have never been on the defense. I have always been on the offense. Speed has always been more valuable to me than profit. It was always about growing the base, growing the company, and moving quickly. I never cared what my parents or teachers thought. I always paid my dues. The amount of 23-25 year old entrepreneurs who are being introspective right now is laughable. I never worried about the short-term effects on my life because I just knew there was no other choice. With me there was only one gear. I just had to do it because my business is my life. It’s my blood. It’s my oxygen. I just wasn’t worried about work/life balance when I was 24. I never cared what my friends thought. I never once envied anybody. I couldn’t have cared less about any 27-year-old contemporary who worked on Wall St. and make $200k and drove some fucking fancy car. I really didn’t give a fuck. Want to know something kind of sick? I actually preferred for them to think that they were beating me, because I knew how it was going to net out. I always wanted to beat everybody. (Even dear friends) I always thought of entrepreneurship as war. Kendrick Lamar speaks to my soul. I always wanted everybody I competed with to succeed… as long as I succeeded a little bit more than they did. I always wanted legacy. I was always concerned with how I’d be looked at in the long term. I wanted entrepreneurs to read about me in schools one day. I was just always more concerned with the legacy of it, than the currency of it. And I know I use that phrase a lot. In fact I think I’m turning Legacy>Currency into a cliché for people that follow me. Sorry about that. Wait a minute. No I’m not. I had a lot of patience. (Still do) I felt zero entitlement. I think one of the things that most attracted me to entrepreneurship was that nobody was entitled to anything. Even with all of the success I’d had, I loved the idea of starting an agency four years ago with nobody in the agency world knowing who I am, nobody respecting me, and nobody thinking I’d be able to do it. I prefer to be underestimated. I love it. I prefer the climb. Starting over is attractive, not a negative. I don’t like stuff. Matter of fact, I hate stuff. I don’t want planes. I don’t want cars. I don’t want watches. I don’t do it for any of that stuff. That’s it for now. — Gary Vaynerchuk is an entrepreneur.

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