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@biird
I guess it's a lot like Warren Buffet's view on stocks. Gotta be able to handle the storms, stick around, patiently nurture what you have while keeping your eyes open to what's going on around you.
Patience really is a virtue. :)
Great video as always... I took your advice and started branding myself about one week ago and I'm getting a ton of feedback! First video blog, 100 views, and 20 emails within 24 hours… Thank you!!
- Adam DesAutels
All of the rap/hip-hop artists you mentioned were the young kids coming up. More, I would think, they were like Mark Zuckerberg, than most of the names you mentioned.
I think there's a certain level of 'old man on the mountain' that many people are a little afraid of.
Scoble et al have built their brands over the past decade - but who is the next generation of (as Chris Brogan calls them) Social Media Rockstars?
I think you're on target - I'm just not sure who the names will actually *be* 5 years from now.
And there I thought I was the only one to notice that.
Here's what I like about your shiz:
While everybody in the podcasting and vlogging scene is on some story telling stuff you go all in and make it personal. You talk about your job, your game, your hustle and yourself...
WLTV is something like Reasonable Doubt to me. A classic, a benchmark and a ~daily source of inspiration.
If you ever drop by Zurich, Switzerland feel free to holla at me. Peace!
@geechee_girl
Just like Gary says, too much emphasize on monetization and too little on love for what you're doing might do exactly that.
I think its up to as actual user authorities (we are all authoritites in the social media realm), and the opinionleaders (such as Gary) to together do our best to preserve what we have to the greatest possible extent.
I agree whole heartedly with you on the positioning of new media. I really do. However I still think that we all have to be able to keep our feet on the ground. Stay connected, stay sincere, and don't come off like a commercial all the time. Consumers are able to see through a marketing pitch like glass and if we get too high on ourselves or too car salesman, they'll just say goodbye. Gary, great post...and keep up the great work. I never miss a new vid post from you anymore!!
Keith Burtis
there always will be a 'my generation'generation that will implement apps that are there for them @ that specific time; and those will/can not be the same as we use now, the choice will be in their hands.
like your view though...;)
One key point:
Successful branding is the result of making an emotional connection with your 'audience' that is completely honest to your DNA and personal experiences. Hip-hop connected with what was happening 'in the streets' in a way that was in tune with the artists' internal DNA... and they translated it into honest communication/music that struck a nerve. Nothing works better in life than communicating things that are totally honest, genuine, and true. People can tell the difference. You've connected with people because of your genuine passion with wine and your ability to communicate it. It's real, we can see it.
Now, if you connect this GV video with the one you made the other day... 'know yourself'... you have the two key elements necessary for social networking to 'work.' In a secondary way... It's a content issue. The social networking phenomena-turned-useful-communication only grows exponentially if people but 'personal content' into it whole-heartedly. This requires being yourself 24/7... you. always you. no denying it's you. EVER.
Two basic elements that drive the system. Well done, GV.
I don't think this is much different than the creation of the PC. It was a paradigm shift from mainframes. Tehn we had a bunch of youngsters, Jobs, Gates, Allen, Wozniak who embraced the new technology. Gates and Allen created MS-DOS as IBM did not see the money in software, hardware ruled in their mind. Jobs was looking at better computer experiences. These guys did it for the love of the technology, creating the new 'in thing'. They wanted to be the legend in their own circles. Now the web is everywhere and being a geek is cool. Youngsters think it is cool to be a techie, 20 years ago when Gates up and coming it was not so cool to be a geek. I think there is some correlation to RAP, but it my mind it is that it became mainstream, and of course like rap prior generations do not understand it.
Thank you, Gary.
it will be so awesome to see in around 20 years who is doing what.
like when BIZ Markie went on that reality show not too long ago. who knew way back in the day that something like that would happen!!!
the future will be crazy weirdness radool!!!
YoUUUU are a madman. Gotta love pulling White Lion out too.
Loved the insight you brought here. The hip-hop reference can actually - in meeez opinion - be projected to the hip-hop world today AND the need for patience. How so? Not much money in selling records through record labels anymore. Few made money in the past. Only the Madonna's.
Back to hip-hop...How did MC Hammer pull more coin out of da record label when he signed? He actually had that social currency - that patience. He was already selling records after his local shows and making money. So he had leverage.
So today, I see the hip-hop, rock groups, whatever will - with that patience - the patience to build an audience, and not be afraid to give away a lot of FREE songs so they will build the social currency for people to pay them directly, not labels, not promoters for live shows.
That's why the record labels, for fear of extinction, are desperately trying to lock up ALL the artists' REVenue. They need the artists' concert money. LIVE NATION is kickin' butt.
And so is Gary Vay-ner-chuk. You're definitely rockin' da mic.
Mark Fitzpatrick
If your analogy holds up, there will be big mainstream successes (like Will Smith, the Beasties, Dre, LL, Ice T, Ice Cube, Queen Latifah). There will be people who can carve out a niche for some hardcore fans (like KRS One, Eric B. and Rakim, 2Live Crew). And there will be short-term players and fads who have their one moment and then disappear (anybody still listen to the Fat Boys, Whodini, EPMD, Dana Dane, Egyptian Lover, Schoolly D?). But yeah, it's worth staking your personal branding claim now, in the web gold rush.
The question I have is: will it play out the same way, with these people climbing out of nowhere, to be courted by a few big, monolithic media companies? Because the whole idea of monolithic media companies is also under attack right now. In the end, I think yeah, the big guys who've always done it will mostly come out on top in the end again, once they learn the new rules and modify their game. And of course, they will be always hungry for new people with talent and traffic.
But I think the one sure thing is: 10 years from now, we'll all be sitting around the breakfast table, eating our SuperGalatic Laser Cheerios while we're absorbing our virtual brain implant newsfeed. We'll read about something or other, something none of us ever predicted in 2008. And we'll all be saying, "Why didn't I think of that?" Because that's the one true prediction - nobody can really predict out past the singularity.
Oh yeah, the other sure thing is: in 10 years, I'll be digging into those 2005 Bordeaux that I've cellared.
Peace out and as we said in the '80s, word up, homey!
The question I have is: will it play out the same way, with these people climbing out of nowhere, to be courted by a few big, monolithic media companies? Because the whole idea of monolithic media companies is also under attack right now. In the end, I think yeah, the big guys who've always done it will mostly come out on top in the end again, once they learn the new rules and modify their game. And of course, they will be always hungry for people with talent and traffic.
But I think the one sure thing is: 10 years from now, we'll all be sitting around the breakfast table, eating our SuperGalatic Laser Cheerios and reading the virtual brain implant newsfeed, while we're charging up the hoverpack in the garage. We'll be reading about something none of us ever predicted in 2008. And we'll all be saying, "Why didn't I think of that?"
Oh yeah, the other sure thing is: in 10 years, I'll be digging into those 2005 Bordeaux that I cellared. Peace out.
The groups mentioned selling a lot of records in 1985 and most of the groups selling records today weren't around at all in 1985. And the groups mentioned didn't wait 15 years to be successful and it's not a matter of patience, either...if they weren't hits quickly, the label dropped them.
There's a lesson in there somewhere...but I'm not sure the lesson is the lesson Gary thinks it is.
[viddler_video=7151d651]
;-)
Mary
So true. I've often considered this the "early days" in so many ways. I'd just like to say AMEN to patience! Too many people expect popularity to come quickly and easily. As you've said, it takes sustained effort over YEARS.
Thanks for this Garyvee, I needed to be reminded that the seeds I plant today are the Redwoods of tomorrow.
I've almost watched every WLTV episode!!!
You, Leo Laporte, Kevin Rose, iJustine, and MC Chris are all riding the tech wave.
Serious here! The "2.0" slangology is soooo 1990s. You need to rebuild THAT brand!
My parents used to always say, "when you grow up you won't listen to that crap ass rap." But low and behold, I'm older now and lovin' it more than ever. So too with the games. Are you sure you're not from Texas GV? Straight from the hip common sense! Yee haw!!
What's so wrong about Jay-Z? Ever listenend to Common's new album? Kanye's? What about Lupe Fiasco's last two discs?
If hip hop were in such a bad state, there wouldn't be room for work like that.
I think the important point you are making is something that holds for all of media:
It's hard to filter out the good content from all the crap that's out there - regardless of genre and medium. And that is probably one of the skills our generation has to pass on to the next generation: filtering out the good stuff. Personal branding - if honest and sincere - will help us differentiate just that.
Patience is good. Stubborness is also good. A sense of humor, priceless.
Any way you look at it....you're the man for making the comparison GV. Keep rockin it.
But you're saying there will be a dozen people who will become household names and that there is a 0.0000001% chance any of today's bloggers getting famous. The music industry is a terrible comparison... The chances of doing well, let alone making it big, are so infinitesimally small that almost everyone blogging today will end up poor and penniless (if this is a true comparison to what the hip-hop industry is really like).
I love the concept of intelligent people becoming the stars of tomorrow. I'm entirely in agreement on that point, but it's on an emotional level. The masses aren't gathering on Twitter and reading intelligent and interesting blogs. Heck, they aren't even reading... They're watching YouTube videos of Miss South Carolina making all of America look stupid.
Lastly, hip-hop came up from the poorest ghettos in the Bronx. Twitter is coming from a 35-45 wealthy demographic. It was bumped from ghetto blasters while people in the hood danced on cardboard on street corners. It hit the charts when the well-off top-40 listening kids picked it up.
Scoble, Zuckerberg, Winer, Vaynerchuk, and Young, are the heroes of today's bloggers. They'll be iconic in the blogosphere a few years from now. But unless there is a worldwide movement towards reading and watching intellectually stimulating videos on bleeding edge technology, we won't be compared to hip-hop ten years from now.
Having been part of the 1st internet boom in the 90's, I would also add that the barrier of entry is MUCH lower. If you've got any game at all, any talent...you can crush it.
Great meeting you at blogworld this year as well!
@dennysugar
interesting article called "screenagers" about new generation. discussed with my parents over thanksgiving and they were really surprised. it would do us all some good to understand the coming generation.
www.growingleaders.com/files/Screenagers.pdf
Keep up the good work Gary
- Doc
"Accelerate on the gas, Move fast" -Busta
"Hustle" -GaryV
The obstacles to entry is zero, Just time.
This is a great lesson for any age Gary.
I always here these 2 things, I'm to young or I'm too old.
The I'm too young = gonna take years to make it (instant gradification)
The I'm too old = That'll be too hard to learn.
I gotta say, you can kill it at any age you just gotta have passion, drive and the motivation to learn new things, technology and embrace it.
http://Twitter.com/PawLuxury
"When you get a couple Bill-E, send me a couple Mill-E" -Gary V
A White Lion, Beastie Boys reference in the same blast. lol . Awesome.. Great message and I'm listening & putting it into action. I have a twelve year old & I SEE it.. It's crazy with how fast they interact and they LIVE it.
Gary - you are right on! We are at the beginning of innovation for Media OF the people BY the people. It's about being yourself people!
People ask me the "secret" to getting "followers." They aren't so much followers as people who know they have some thread of commonality - regardless of differences!
Massive engagement.
Be real.
Be personal.
And have an enormous thrist for red wine - OOPS - I mean ...
Have an enormous thirst for learning from ALL.
Have PASSION!
Gary - keep giving us your "bottom line" style.
Aloha!
Arleen Anderson
Yes, you can tweet me!
http://www.twitter.com/AlohaArleen
Cheers!
Keep them coming
Harp
God I miss old Hip Hop...