The School of Greatness - 702 Change Your Mind about Failure with Gary Vaynerchuk
Episode Date: October 5, 2018“ANYTHING CAN BE TAUGHT, BUT YOU CAN ONLY GO SO FAR WITHOUT NATURAL TALENT.” Everyone thinks they can be a great entrepreneur. But is that what you’re best at? If a rabbit is trying hard to be a... frog, it may make a decent frog. But it would be a much better rabbit. To be successful, you have to combine your natural talent with hard work. Even the most dedicated football player can’t make it to the NFL without innate skill. That’s why I’m revisiting a conversation I had with a person who was born to be an entrepreneur and who has spent his life pursuing it: the legendary Gary Vaynerchuck. Gary Vaynerchuck is CEO of the full-service advertising agency VaynerMedia and is a venture capitalist who has invested in companies like Snapchat, Birchbox, Venmo, and Uber. He’s a 5-time New York Times bestselling author and a sought-after public speaker. Gary makes the argument just putting in the time and energy it might not be enough to make a successful business. Learn how to deal with failure in entrepreneurship on Episode 702. In This Episode You Will Learn: What you need to be a successful entrepreneur (1:30) The thing you need to be okay with when you’re an entrepreneur (2:30) How to find out what you’re naturally best at (3:10) What to ask the five people closest to you (3:40)
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This is 5-Minute Friday!
Welcome everyone to today's show. Our guest is the legendary Gary Vaynerchuk.
That's right, Gary runs VaynerMedia, which is one of the world's hottest digital agencies.
He's also a prolific angel investor and venture capitalist,
investing in companies like Snapchat, Facebook, Twitter, Tumblr, Uber, and Birchbox. He also
hosts the Ask Gary Vee Show and is a public speaker that delivers keynotes all over the world
at a number of different events. I need to be smart about, I have to go look back
at how we titled it
but I know what I said
which is
it can be taught
but you can only go so far
because of natural talent
you know it's fun
to have this conversation
with you
because you're such an
athletic freak
you know most people
don't lay on the couch
and say I'm going to be
on an Olympic team
and then pull it off
I think that I could play basketball every day, every day of my life from the time I
was 15 and putting 15 hours a day. And I think I'd be really good. I'd have a much better handle.
I'd be, I'd shoot better. I would have been more competitive with you on the boat that day.
But would I've been good enough to be in the NBA? Absolutely not.
Maybe D3.
Maybe.
College. Maybe. And I do think right now that be in the NBA? Absolutely not. Maybe D3. Maybe. College.
Maybe.
Maybe.
And I do think right now that everybody thinks they can be an entrepreneur.
And so my point was it's much more talent than the current conversation.
I don't think you can read The School of Greatness and my books and all these other books and watch Skillshare's and watch Chase Jarvis and listen to Ferris and read Branson and even go to business school
and have mentors and go to Y Combinator
and then all of a sudden just because of that
you become a great entrepreneur.
I think of it like the music industry.
Think about all the kids that are born into,
you know, you're Clive Davis's grandson
or you're Whitney Houston's daughter
or you have nothing but access.
You're in the studio all the time.
You learn the business.
But if you don't have the chops, if you don't have the vocals,
you're only going to go so far.
Right.
Same thing with football players or in athletics too.
You see some children of former NBA or NFL stars who excel,
but then others who don't do anything.
Here's the punchline.
It's much more talent than people realize i see it every day and the video i made was like look you have to be okay
that by pouring in 18 hours a day and learning everything might only allow you to build a
business that makes a hundred thousand dollars a year right there is an absolute misconception
that the american dream is entrepreneurship and everybody can do it the difference between entrepreneurship and football
is everybody who's listening right now or watching can start a business so for me i have to do this
yeah that's why i was failed school it's why i sold baseball cards when i was 14 so for me i'm
okay with the failures the losses along the way. It's my natural state.
I just want people who are listening to find
their natural state and not
force into the current narrative. So how does someone find
out what they're best at? And what are you best at?
You know, I'm best at selling.
I'm best at using my words
to make things happen. Whether that's selling me,
whether that's selling my agency, whether that's
selling a bottle of wine, whether that's selling a book.
I'm good at that.
I'm good at storytelling to make a transaction happen.
How one finds it, I don't know.
And I think about this a lot.
I think about self-awareness, I think about EQ,
I think about finding that.
I've been talking more about finding the five people
that are closest to you to tell you the truth.