Gary Vee runs 7 businesses doing $10M+ each
Chapters13
Gary reflects on technology, OpenClaw, and the evolution from a laptop-free phase to a highly integrated information-automation workflow that supports CRM and relationship-building.
Gary Vee reveals how he runs multiple eight-figure ventures through deep relationships, quick 15-minute meetings, and a relentless, long-term, people-first strategy.
Summary
Gary Vaynerchuk (Gary Vee) lays out the operating system behind his empire on My First Million. He details how he currently oversees about seven ventures (Vayner Media, Vayner X, Vayner Sports, ECR group, V Friends, Wine Library, and more), with each unit valued in the tens of millions. Central to his approach is hiring relentlessly strong people and treating relationships as the primary business asset. Nick Dio, his VP of Relationships, is highlighted as a key catalyst for opportunistic deals and mutually beneficial introductions. Gary also discusses his preference for long-term, “long-term greedy” thinking over short-term gains, and he candidly revisits leadership faults he’s corrected, such as his previous poor firing style and his journey toward “kind candor.” The conversation dives into his daily rhythm (8:00–10:00 p.m. workdays, 15-minute meetings, no lunch breaks), the importance of a strong internal culture, and the distinction between being a creator and an operator at scale. Embedded anecdotes—from launching Fly Fish Club to missing early investments like Whatnot—illustrate how instinct, timing, and people matter more than perfect financial planning. The episode blends practical tips (time-blocking, using admin support, and keeping a “relationship graph”) with high-level philosophy about entrepreneurship, philanthropy, and the future of creator-led brands in AI-driven markets.
Key Takeaways
- Gary Vee’s empire hinges on hiring A/B players and leveraging deep, long-term relationships to fuel growth across eight-figure ventures.
- Nick Dio, VP of Relationships, acts as a scalable bridge between Gary and opportunities, maintaining his network to source deals and placements.
- 15-minute meetings, with 60% decision-making and 70% decisive action, dramatically compress Gary’s workflow and maximize impact.
- Kind candor replaces blunt candor; Gary rebranded his leadership style to prioritize honest feedback delivered with care, improving retention and performance.
- Gary treats long-term value as the north star, often investing personal resources and building businesses that align with his family and legacy goals.
- Key businesses Gary runs or co-founded include Vayner Media, Vayner X, Vayner Sports, V Friends, Fly Fish Club, Wine Library, and Empathy Wines, each contributing to a diversified empire.
- Gary’s future bets emphasize creator-driven brands, AI-enabled ecosystems, and IP-rich ventures (e.g., V Friends) over traditional flat investments.
Who Is This For?
Entrepreneurs and startup founders who want a blueprint for building and scaling multiple ventures through relationship-led growth, scalable leadership, and time-efficient operations. Viewers will gain concrete tactics for hiring, delegating, and prioritizing long-horizon value over short-term wins.
Notable Quotes
""The real reason is because of the 50 people from Ryan Harwood or Kalin or Claude or JT... and I’ve got another one coming that I’ll announce next year.""
—Gary names his core team and network as the backbone of his scaled enterprise.
""15-minute meeting has been gangster for me, gamechanging for me. I do think I’m getting three days of work in one day.""
—He highlights a key productivity hack that enables rapid decision-making.
""Kind candor... it became the ethos of our company because I think candor a lot of times is used as an excuse to be a dick face and suppress people.""
—Gary explains his leadership pivot toward compassionate honesty to improve culture and performance.
""Long-term greedy... you’re going to play a totally different game than short-term greedy.""
—A central philosophy that guides his business choices and investments.
""I’m not a motivational speaker. I might actually be a weirdly good operator at scale.""
—Gary reframes his public persona as a practical, scalable operator rather than just inspiration.
Questions This Video Answers
- How does Gary Vee manage multiple businesses without losing focus on any one venture?
- Who is Nick Dio and how does his role impact Gary Vaynerchuk’s deal flow?
- What are 15-minute meetings and why are they a game changer for busy founders?
- How does Gary Vaynerchuk apply long-term thinking to brand-building and investments?
- Can you replicate Gary Vee's 'kind candor' leadership style in a growing company?
Gary VaynerchukVayner MediaVayner XVayner SportsV FriendsFly Fish ClubNILLive ShoppingNick DioOpenClaw/relationship graph','Kind Candor','15-minute meetings','Long-term greedy
Full Transcript
Bro, this is going to be one of the highlights that I know from this meeting, this podcast. I love that I said meeting. This feels more like a business meeting than this is why you guys are so successful. Gary, let me ask you a hard-hitting question. I've known you now for a few years, a while now. Do you own a computer? Uh, you know what's funny? I did not own a computer uh for four or five years. It going into co So, what what year did you buy your first laptop? I went full phone because I didn't work within Excel or any documentation and it was all email, meetings, social.
So, I I think I stopped having a laptop in 15, went to 19 without one, but I've had one since. You know those luxury brands where it's like quiet wealth or whatever where there's no label. We found the podcast version of this, which is that the richest guys who come on the pod, they don't know how to use a computer. They're like assistant sets up a screen, they just show up. We had one guy try to share his screen and he was like, honestly, he's like, honestly, guys, this is this is bad. I don't know what I don't even know what I'm doing.
We go just click in Chrome. He goes, what's Chrome? He didn't even know what Google Chrome was. He goes, I don't think I have one of those. It's ironic. I would actually argue it's so crazy to think of evolution. So, I went through those four years. It was the best like not having a laptop at the airport. Like it was the best and now it's completely the opposite, right? Like my openclaw computer is like the most important thing in my life, right? It's just so fascinating. Wait, what what are you doing with OpenClaw, Gary? I mean, lots of things.
I think with OpenClaw specifically, I'm using it as a capture all for all information. What's been really fascinating even with three admins and chief of staff and all this I'm still like I never got there like some of my friends were their chief of staff is with them in every meeting so there'd be like so much context lost right like in a meeting so much opportunity missed so one of the first things I've done with openclaw is it might even happen here I might literally take a photo of this screen sent to my openclaw on text it's mainly for CRM for me right now relationship prep and then what's so amazing right?
Is once it understands my relationship graph now I'm just building you know logic and agents on top of it to like keep me updated on when things are happening like even sending you guys a email automatically in two years saying congrats on a trillion downloads because it knows I know you knows that was a milestone for you and I do want to you know say what's hey good job you know like like it's just like scaling all my favorite things about humans is definitely step one for me you just said something about relationship And you have this guy Nick Dio.
I think you I don't know if he's still with you, but but this fascinated me. He does these really interesting things. He's like host these dinners almost like on behalf of Gary. Who is this guy? What is he doing? So I'll I'll tell everybody who's listening. This is actually a pretty This will be good. This is going to be good for your crew. Nick Dio is the VP of relationships. He literally goes around the world and in essence, he's been with me for 12 years. Started as an intern, grew up in Vayner Media. I trust him to represent me to some degree because I can't be everywhere.
And about two, three years ago, I realized my favorite thing about business is people. It's probably why I ended up having an agency with 3,000 people when that's not the best business model. It's why I make so much content. I just like the people part. And Nick just became another version of that which is like I can't be everywhere. And who's got a better job than Nick? go around the world and listen carefully if there's something we could do something for someone for karma, right? Like no KBI, no ROI, like like pay attention. And Nick, you know me so well.
You, you know, we have so much to give. Just keep your ear to the ground. You know, figure out who's got the right intent. Figure out who's talking [ __ ] and not talking [ __ ] Like, who's good? Who's good? I'll tell you what it was like from my perspective. I got a DM from you and I don't think I You could have said it and there's a chance I didn't read it uh closely, but it said like, "Hey, I'm going to be in Austin. Do you want to get dinner?" Yes. Yeah. I just said yes. And then I just got sent an invite.
And the invite, like I said, it could have said the details, but I show up and it's like 50 people. It was at a very wealthy person's home, this like Microsoft executive's home. And I'm like, "Hey, where's Gary?" They're like, "Oh, he he's not here, but I'm here. I'm Nick, and I'm hosting it on his behalf." And I met like yours was yours was felt like more of a robo dope. Yeah. No, but I I want to give you credit. I don't think I read it. There's a chance I didn't read it, but I get there.
And I met like I remember that party cuz I was one of the bigger ones. It was never alluded that like I I apologize if we didn't word it well, but I remember the context. Like we weren't trying to trick you to meet the No, I don't think so. And I met like I met this cool dude named Hunter. Do you know Hunter? I think his name's Woodall. He's got one leg and he like won in the Parolympics. He was badass. I met like all these like it was like this athlete, this Microsoft executive, this person, this person.
I met all these cool guys. Um it was awesome. Which is the easiest way by the way to spread good karma and good and like you know add value is just hey let me just connect you with 10 other awesome people versus what can I do for you, right? Is that's the easiest way to do it. Yeah, that is a that was one and it was early in Nick's world where I wanted him to get a broader like understanding of different people that were in the you know what's tough about things for busy people that like you know relationships is you just can't scale you're a human right and so like I end up with like these unlimited business acquaintances that I wish I could take to the next step and Nick helps me scale that a little bit by decoding a little bit because I trust his intuition.
He's been with me a long time. grew up with me and he represents me well and he's smart and and and I trust him. So then when he hits me and says, "Hey, this person really needs a new marketing person." Like this is how when I'm long gone, I think good stories will come out. Like this is a true example. Hey, this kid's got a good DTC brand. It's gone from 0 to 20 million. We're not an investor in the company. I have no vested interest. They just lost their head of marketing. He was like over dinner talking in a group of 12 like he's stressed and worried and then three weeks earlier one of my best people at Boehner came to me you know uh after eight years and said I don't want to do agency anymore and like literally just putting that person in that company and everyone wins and literally I don't have a dollar in the company literally nothing literally no transa and like we do that in a way that I I now do feel three like in the last three years people are starting to understand Gary and Gary B a little more like cuz we're doing it such scale that eventually the truth becomes your actual reputation.
I think to on the surface it's like okay great so this guy host dinners that's cool sounds like he's he's got a mandate to spread good karma and just help people that's cool I I think this is actually unbelievable and I can't believe you don't talk about this more this is like you know when that story came out a few years ago where it said LeBron James spends a million dollars a year on his body and people went nuts and this went everywhere this is like a global thing other athletes turned on to this and I would I was thinking about it the other way I was like first of all obviously this guy's a billion dollar athlete for him to spend a million dollar a year on his body.
That's like a masseuse, a trainer, good a chef, and that's nothing. He should be spending three, four times that if if anything. The second is what a great question everybody should ask themselves who wants to be great is what is your equivalent of spending a million dollars a year on your body? And you know, my executive coach, for example, he spent a million dollars getting coaching himself from the best in different disciplines. He would overpay and say, "How do I get how do I go do an immersion with you? I know you usually do once a week, but I want to do immersion because he's like, I want to be the best coach, so I'm going to go learn all the modalities from the best teachers of those modalities.
And I just think everybody should ask this. And you what you're doing with Nick to me is the equivalent of LeBron James spends a million dollars a year on his body. Gary spends Gary has spent probably at this point 5 million plus 10 million maybe developing relationships with people who he thinks are doing good things in the world. He wants win be win in their sales. I have three full-time employees at Vayner X who host influencers that are emerging to walk through the office and meet brand deal heal teams to maybe get them brand deals on pure karma.
Yeah. See, that's amazing. And I think that that that type of investment it it only comes from first principles. Doing good things for people is literally the highest ROI and lowest risk thing. And most people think it's the highest risk thing because when they're doing something good, they're not doing something good. They're doing something calculated with the expectation or at least minimally the hope that something comes back to them. Well, but on the other side of that, it could be like, well, I need to I'm spending money on these things. I have bills to pay.
That's Sam, to your point, I didn't do this the first 30 years of my career. Like, I got to a place where I could afford investing in that. Yeah. Yeah, but what I was going to ask you is I think that you've always you from from what I could tell you've always defaulted to hiring a lot of people. I think that like um that it seems like that's how you like to operate and also you've defaulted to doing things that don't really make sense on paper, but because you're you appear as though it works out nicely in terms of profit.
How do you like justify doing some of these things that don't make any sense financially knowing that like when Vayner Media was 5 or 10 years old and your margins were a bit tighter and you didn't have enough money to go around to do some of these wacky things and yet it still appears as though you did do them. It's a really good observation. I think the very simplest clean, you know, this is now me respecting the audience because I think you have a sharp one. It's because I think most things that are taught in business school are shortsighted and are tactical versus how humanity actually works and business actually works.
Like if you're and and then I would also say that I am inherently a marathon runner. So I train for marathons in a world where most of my contemporaries on paper are sprinters. Alexis O'Hanian was at one of our events and he checked me in the best way possible. We were talking about how yeah we wanted to get this great group together. There's, you know, we don't charge anything. I pay for this whole event out of pocket. I pay like a quart million dollar a year just to host this event. And it's like, look, I asked nothing in return, which it's all about, you know, just having a really, and everybody's like this.
We're all like a generous crew. And he goes, no, no, no, that's not it. And I was like, oh [ __ ] what is he what is he about to say? And he goes he goes, it's just the difference between short-term greedy and long-term greedy. He goes, you know, I'm he was in the first YC batch and he goes, one of the beautiful things about Silicon Valley is you learn the virtue of long-term long-term greedy people. And he goes, it's not a bad thing. It's everybody obviously wants their interest, but when it's long-term greedy, you're going to play a totally different game than short-term greedy.
That's exactly right. And I would tell you my nuance that I do see in some others, which is why I gravitate towards them, is And then if your law greed is about rainy day human stuff, not money in your bank, it becomes an extreme nuance of that. What's rainy day human stuff? What does that mean? I probably do everything I'm doing not to get into a deal in nine years and put a million and make 40 million more for my daughter has an issue in n in 19 years in her personal life and for some reason Sam's nephew can help her.
I'm good enough to take care of my money part. Sometimes it's hard to run a business that way being nice all the time because you have to make difficult decisions like firing someone if they suck. But you seem like you are a really bad fireer. I literally wrote a book because I was so bad at it. I hid it. But it was called 12 and a half. And in the book, the 13th principle was a half. And it was called Cander. And I spoke about my journey. And I was only ready, Sam, to write about it.
You know, you can only talk about your alcoholism when you're like feeling like you're close to fixing it, right? Like, and and by the way, back to like alcoholism or what I was dealing with, which was you're incredibly wrong, Sam. I wasn't a bad firer. I was an all-time atrocious firer. Right? I And I didn't see it. Right? All of us currently the three of us and we're proud of ourselves in certain areas and know we can do but currently by far the biggest problem the three of us have is something we can't see. I used to think of it as my ultimate strength Sam.
And it had so many beautiful effects. It led to so much good. But it actually ended up leading to the worst of the worst. meaning, you know, I've been really managing people since I was 18 years old, right? But the liquor store for real. Like truly, like this 18-year-old child is the boss, you know, cuz he's the boss's son in this liquor store. And all the way up to where I am now. And so I used to think my greatest strength was eliminating fear. I had superhero syndrome, right? Like I can take care of everything.
I got it. And I had this day in my early 40s, which led me to writing the book, where I realized I thought everybody was rolling with me with lack of fear, but that many in my company were scared because they didn't know where they stood with me cuz I was unable to do cander. And on Friday, I was like, Sammy can have the best weekend, my guy. Like, have like really I think you guys know me. I'm a little golucky that way. I'm like, Sammy, you have the besting weekend this weekend, right? And you're working for me for three years.
Like, all right, Gary. Like, you too. And then like Monday, I'd be like, "Sam, need to talk to you in my office real quick." Hey, so you know, it's going to be your last day. And by the way, I've been sitting on this for a year and a half. Back to your point, Sam. Right. And today's your last Hey. And you're like, "What, bro?" Like I like you've never said any like And then I would blame you. I'd be like, "Sam, you're you're so del like can you?" And then I would talk to Sean be like, "Sean, could you believe Sam?
Like everyone in the company knows Sam sucked for the last 18 months. I was giving him a gift for the last year of charity and he's mad at me." I was coming up with that excuse. So my cander was at a zero. I rebrand. So I have this real watershed moment where a group of former Vayner employees like were in a Facebook group like not talking nicely about me. And these were people I really had a lot of continue ironically like you know it's funny that person also over time realizes what they did. So there was like a lot of them I reconciled with in a great way but it was really hurtful but I knew I had to be accountable.
I'm like, why are these people who are all lovely people who I really went to batboard, did a lot of great things for, who have really nice careers on the equity of their time with me, why are they [ __ ] on me? And it was all and I knew it cuz I just looked at the eight names and I was like, these were all sloppy exits. You know what's funny is uh have you guys heard of uh obviously you have, but Jensen Hung, the Nvidia guy, uh he has this great line where he's like, I'm not going to fire you, I'm going to squeeze you so hard that greatness comes out of you.
And then interestingly, Dave Portoi, the founder of um Bar Stool, he had another point where he goes, "I never fire anyone. I refuse to fire anyone, but we are going to make you great." Like he says something like that and I thought that was so fascinating because that's the exact opposite of what I think. You know, we had Neil Patel on and Neil was like, I only hire people who have been there, done that. I only hire people who have built this thing already that I want built and if they can't do it, then I fire them within a week.
which is probably honestly the more common attribute of like just hiring people who have been there, done that, and then if they suck right away, you know, you hear higher slow, fire fast. I bleed into both those categories, by the way. And then have a third element, which is I'm the cliche girl that wants to date the bad boy cuz I'm going to fix him, right? So, if I didn't have entrepreneurial DNA, I would 100% be a therapist, guidance counselor, or a coach, right? like and so I allowed both in my investing and in my operating too much in my 20s through mid-4s too much of my nonprofit therapy DNA into my dayto-day I've been able to clean it up in the last 5 years and let me say this to anyone who's struggling with being too nice you know or cuz it was never that I was scared to not be liked it was that I thought I could fix it, that I would squeeze it, that I would make it, but through love, not like trashing you, like what, you know, and and so for anyone who's struggling with this, like there's a better way, like, you know, can't let me say it this way.
As long as you're delivering things with cander, all of it becomes dramatically more palpable. I was not. I was holding it all in. That became the vulnerability. And I'm really glad as I've gotten to 50, I'm now in that place where I could be a lot better. And it and it's showed up in the business results. I've been a dramatically better CEO the last three, four years where I've cleaned up my cander. I rebranded it into kind cander. It became the ethos of our company because I think cander a lot of times is used as an excuse to be a dick face and suppress people and so we had to put that word kind in front of it and it's uh it's worked for me and for my leadership and it's been a big step forward in my career.
You give a lot of uh coaching and advice to entrepreneurs around the world. Who do you learn from? So I learned from my mother's by far number one by a country mile because almost the far majority of what I do is predicated on the people and emotional intelligence front more than the information. I learn through social media at scale, right? just like just consuming content at scale from random people that are farming carrots in Idaho to someone going deep cut on what they're doing with claude code to pontificate and it's truly like I am a product of this era like whose video are you are you turning the sound on uh lately you know when you're scroll on Instagram honestly like I you know I'm pissed right now because I want to my favorite thing is to give flowers and the truth is it's so weird Sam like my brother for example would answer this epic.
He's got his ex so dialed in and he would sit here and talk about AI or live shop. Like he would give you like seven names and he'd be like so good and I'm so shitty because the answer is I have seven active businesses that are doing more than eight figures a year in revenue where I am meaning involved. Which ones are those? Tell us about it. What do we got? I'll break them down. Vayner Media, Vayner X, which is 400 million in revenue. I am the day-to-day CEO. And that that owns all the other six.
No, it own it owns none of the other six. Next. Wow. Vayner Sports. What's Vayner Sports doing exactly? Oh, Vayner Sports does sports representation. So, we rep Kirk Cousins, Sauce Gardner, Aiden Hutchinson, Bo Bashette, and and NIL stuff too now or just pros? NIL at scale. We have probably 300 college athletes. Okay. So, that's doing tens of millions. That's doing tens of millions in revenue. I have ECR group which is a restaurant group which is if you remember famously I had that NFT restaurant news alert everyone it's crushing it's called flyfish club uh we also have kons and eto and five restaurants and and I'm actively involved texting with David Rod it's all the time so VCR group tens of millions in revenue as a restaurant group I have V friends is probably the thing I'm most like AJ and David Roditz are 1A in the prior two businesses I am on a in V friends.
V friends is going to do minimally 20 million in revenue this year in licensing and selling comic books and coins and trading cards. I'm building a true brand. Like it that by the way that has a darkhorse chance to be really one of my greatest roses because all the ashes of the NFT era that I'm going to get to the other side and be Marvel and Pokemon is going to with everyone so heavy in 15 years. Wine library. People would be flabbergasted how involved I still am in the wine business. My best friend runs it.
I am definitely 1B to my dad and Brandon's 1A, but I work on it every single day. One that's really under the RA radar, Vayner Watt. I have a very successful TV production company that's kind of brewing right now called Vayner Watt. We have a bunch of shows that have quietly just sold. So you like literally on Hulu and ABC and Netflix, like you're going to see Vayner Watt, Veayner Watt pop up. And then finally, and I'm sure not lost on you guys, the the NIL and brand of Gary Vee. I have a full massive team on it, speaking in books and content and NIL.
Do do you have ads or just or is it monetized via speaking? I did a deal with Stan Sto. I did a deal with Masterclass. I'm starting to let I'm starting to be open to Gary Vee. I don't do like a brand deal. I'll look at seven and eight figure nil deals where it's really integrated. potentially me doing a little consulting as well. But I think you guys are pro I'm writing a new book called the individual empire which talks about the me the Bartletts the Alex Coopers the the the rise of the creator entrepreneur and the entrepreneur creator as the next Fortune 500 companies and my belief with AI blockchain evolving social deeper you know decentralization of Hollywood and and Madison Avenue and Wall Street that the biggest companies in the world are humanbased organizations where the human either has a partner that could operate or they're of me where they can be both.
Hey everyone, really quick. If you're enjoying this episode on CEO stuff, so delegating, having hard conversations with your team, hiring, then I've got something for you. So, the team at HubSpot, they actually went and put together a bunch of best practices that Sean and I use in our own companies, and they put it together in something that's really easy to read and understand. And so, if you want to just save yourself 10 years of headache and heartache, then you should check it out. I wish we had this long time ago. It would have helped me a lot.
But there should be a QR code on your screen that you can scan or a link in the description. So check it out. It's totally free and totally awesome. You just named like six or seven companies that are doing eight figures that you're like, I'm either the 1A or the 1B. And I think that's awesome because I too wish I had 96 hours a day. And so, you know, walk us through what's the what does the day look like? What's the time blocking look like for this, right? Like what's a day in the life of Gary Vee to do all this?
You know, I wake up at 6:00 or 7. There's a workout session every dayish. I'm pretty much an 8 to 8:30 to 8 to 9:00 am start point done between 8 and 10 p.m. depending on the day, but there's not a single break. No lunch, no anything. Every minute's booked. 60% of the meetings are 15 minutes. And again, let's get to the point here, right? Let's get to the point here. This is 30 years of building equity. And my secret weapon was hiring people. And again, you guys, again, this is fun talking to you than let's say a net new podcast where I've interacted a little bit with you guys.
I had this feeling that I was going to be able to have a lot of really good A and B players around me that would stay with me, that could do bigger things, could do things on their own, but that the relationship and that they would believe in me and that they would say, you know, in 15 years, I might actually make more money being Gary's number 13 versus me my own number. I just had this intu and that I could convert D's into B's and C's into B's. I just had this feeling that my superpower was the human relationship side.
And so the reason I can do this, so yes, I work a lot and yes, I'm I'm uncomfortably efficient with my time. And yes, I'm on a boat which has seven holes and I put my finger in the one that needs it most for every parent that knows you're only as happy as your most unhappy child. And so my es and flows of like, oh [ __ ] Vayner Sports needs me, or oh [ __ ] Vayner, like there's all that, but the real reason is because of the 50 people from Ryan Harwood or Kalin or Claude or JT or AJ and Greg Gensky or David Rodelitz and Connor Hland or Andy Kay and John and JT John Troutman and May and Rips on Be Friends or Brandon Warick on Wine Library or Eric Watenberg Veayner Watt on that.
And I've got another one coming that I'll announce next year, standalone business. Uh, and it's somebody who's worked for me for 11 years who's going to be my co-founder. And I had the experience with Resi. You know, like people forget that I'm the co-founder and inventor of Resi, but I had Ben Leventhal be the 1A, I was the 1B, and that was a hefty nine figure exit. And I had Empathy Wines, two former interns of mine who worked for me for 11 years, and we started Empathy Wines, and in 18 months sold it for a almost nine figure hefty eight figure deal to Constellation Brands in 18 months.
Just like, you know, everyone's like Gruins. I'm like, I did that. Not not to 1.2 billion, but it's because when I do things on a net new business, the person is my family member. It's family business. We know everything about each other. It's 7 to 10 years before we decided to do X, Y, and Z. They roll differently than a lot of people trying it with net new people they hire randomly. Well, I was listening to your podcast this morning and someone asked a question that a lot of content creators ask. They said, "Uh, I'm doing live shopping and live streaming, but I don't want to do this all the time, and I'm nervous that this all relies on me, and I want to get other content creators.
You have listed six or seven businesses doing tens of millions in revenue, and it all is started off of you, and I don't know what percent is run or you get customers still for each thing because of you, but a lot of it's based on you and your content. Do you get nervous about that or do you not care? You think, I just love this so much that I ain't going anywhere." Not only is that true, Sam, I think I'm the preview. This is what's going to happen. This is what is happening. Like, if you look at the derivatives of all the people that are like kind of that crew right now, what do you think is happening?
And then of course there's Kylie Jenner and Haley Bieber where they need a business person to also be in round. But then there's also like I mean you guys are like in PO it, you know, everyone has different hopes and dreams and Sam, you've nailed it. Like to me, like I love this [ __ ] bro. You know, people go and buy a home in the Bahamas and that's and play golf and that in Bakers Bay and that's their escapism when they need an escape. When I need a break from Vayner X, which I do a lot cuz client services suck [ __ ] I don't go to Aspen.
I go to two days off sites for V friends cuz it fills my soul and I do the comic stories of my characters, you know? Or I go to a half day at Wine Library and talk to Brandon because he's my best friend since I was 14 and I need it for my soul, but then we also fix the business. What uh what's going on in these 15-minute meetings? Uh cuz I suspect what you're doing in 15 minutes is taking most people an hour. So maybe you have a format. I'm mad at you, bro. You took my [ __ ] I was You asked.
I was about to say the thing that everyone else is spending an hour on. meeting, this podcast. Everyone's gonna I love that I said meeting. This feels more like a business meeting than this is why you guys are so successful. Um, everyone's gonna say yes right now on the treadmill, walking the dog, in their car, on a plane, or however they're consuming this. Everyone's meetings are twice as long as they need to be if they're a winner and they know it. You got slam poetry snaps for me. And I just went there. I knew it subconsciously.
Then it became just, you know, then years went on and it became conscious and then I executed. I have this huge pride of how underrated as a businessman I am because what I just dropped on you guys literally nobody really knows which is wild because I'm Gary Vee and I'm talking to all the time and I think I got there on the the 15-minute meeting and the family business vibes of my partners in crimes and the top and by the way it's not just one person like every company requires three or four family members for it to really work the way it works for me cuz you got to have a backup and a backup and a backup cuz there's so many variables that can go into these things.
So, the 15-minute meeting has been gangster for me, gamechanging for me. I do think I'm getting three days of work in one day. This is all happening at a time where I'm spending more I mean more time with my family than ever. You know, I have teenage kids. I have a wife. It's just like you can be so much more efficient if you have remarkable people around you and you're obsessed with not wasting time to fill the slot. What percentage of those meetings are you making decisions or being informed? I would say 30% I'm being informed, 70% I'm making decisions.
That's insane. That's hard. The context switching the That's challenging. It's funny you said that. I've got a bunch of new film people because all my people look this feels incredible. Go on to these incredible things after they film me for a little while and get all these offers or start doing things. And so I constantly have a D-Rock coming through, you know, every year or two. The number one thing, Sam, every single new admin and every single new person that films me says is they do not understand the switching. I think I clearly DNA I wonder if growing up in retail where you're just switching like everything's just always on.
I don't know. No, I actually think that sometimes when I say contact switching, we had a guy our one of our friends came on the podcast and like as we were doing the sound check, he got a text from his daughter saying she didn't get into the college that she wanted to get into and it screwed him up. like the the rest of the podcast was kind of shaky because he was like, "Oh, I'm so sorry. I can't stop thinking about my daughter just texted me this. I'm so sad for her." I think one, it's it I've come to learn it's unique to do that.
Two, now you're really talking about it. That has definitely been even that has definitely been something um that I got from my mother, which is being able to carry in the moment adversity and negativity and still show up. Like I think a lot about that as a leader. Like I get a lot of bad news every day. One, I'm psycho and I'm in the HR of all my companies and now we have so many goddamn employees. Every day someone's dad is sick. It's just like I want to know if somebody in my company is going through tough stuff.
And then there's just when you're in client services. Um we went 16 months without losing a client at Vayner X. We're ripping hot, right? Uh and then recently in the last 60 days, we've lost two. And and the first one was not surprising. Second one was a little bit. And I was walking right into another thing and I was just like, it's funny you say that. I was like, man, I really got into that because I was pissed and like I wanted to to fix it, but I knew I had to show up for this thing and this thing and this thing.
And then not to mention all the things that happen in my personal life similar to the college thing. There's always something just like being able to like eat [ __ ] and firefight is like a really strong emotional framework that is hard. What about no notification fatigue? I I tease Sean all the time. Sean, what's the joke? What's the stereotype if I want if anyone wants to get a hold of you? Do do you know what that stereotype is about you Sean? Call Ben. I don't know. No, you Sean will not reply. Getting in touch with Sean when you need to.
Sometimes it's a pain in the butt. With me, I tend to reply, but it wears me out. I get so exhausted because I feel like I want to like please these people. Sean's like worst part is I go to him and I say, "Hey, long time no talk." When I think of somebody and I see that actually they have been talking and I haven't and I'm like, "Okay, I shouldn't even send this. Maybe I should just I would say I'm in between you guys. I try to reply a lot. I use flights quite a bit to catch up.
Um and then if they can't get me, they get to the admins. The admins have a good sense of my reality. How do you decide what projects to go into? Because you know, for the six or whatever you said that are working, obviously maybe a couple didn't work and then there's hundreds of opportunities you're saying no to. So what's the bar now? What's the box? How do you think about that? My tummy. Just gut. Yeah. Like I want to do this and I want to do what this person. Say that again, Gary. Say it. Say it cute.
You said tummy. Gut instinct. I got tummy tickles. You know, like it just there's so much serendipity to it. Um I'm very comfortable dying on my sword, which is my intuition. I'm very comfortable. Well, have you guys all ever came close to bankruptcy or or not being able to make payroll? You know, it's funny. uh make payroll. Resi was in trouble. I had to put personal money in that I didn't really have at the time, but nothing I've ever operated as the 1A. You know, I got trained by a Soviet immigrant father who didn't even let raising capital, forget it.
Debt, forget it. Literally didn't have a credit line. And we were in the liquor business where you had to legally pay your bills on 30-day terms or you went on COOD to the whole industry and you couldn't get product. So, I think I got trained. So, well, you know, always have money in the bank for a rainy day and 30-day terms legally bounded by the alcohol laws of America and no credit line that by the time I went to my own journey full-time, it was in my subconscious of like, well, you always have to have money.
The end. You meet a lot of people. Who do you think is doing cool [ __ ] right now? What are, you know, either businesses that are kind of blowing your mind? Maybe something that's taking off faster than you would have expected. Maybe something totally unrelated to what you do, but wow. You know, you get exposed to stuff that the average person doesn't. Where are you seeing a lot of heat right now? Oh, there's so many good areas. I mean, like, you know, I'll answer a question that might bring I'm trying to think about how to bring the most value to the audience.
I'll go to places where people are betting on 5 years from now, not to create an exit 5 months from now. So that takes me to people that are really spending time on advanced AI like really knowing where the stigma is today but won't be in 5 years right like creating a entire agency of virtual people right knowing right now it's a little weird but let's survive 3 to 5 years and we're going to have the CA of virtual people they're all going to be the most famous virtual people and we own it. You're in the IP business, not the representation business.
That I like. I love everything, and this is my wheelhouse, but I love everyone who sells something to the consumer that realizes what live shopping is doing to e-commerce is what e-commerce did to real com like real life. And so what I mean by that is like in 6 to 10 years, you know, I think ecom now is what 25 30% of the market. Like in six to 10 years, live shopping will actually be 10 to 15% of all commerce. And that is scary big. Did you invest in whatnot? I did not. I obviously talk about what not.
All is not an investment. It's possible. You've been talking about live selling for years. Sean, you'll love this. Anytime I've invested in something that I end up having to talk about a lot, I make a lot of content up front that I'm an investor. So the way you know if I'm an investor in something is I'm saying it a lot early on because I never So you know I'm sure everyone thinks I did and by the way it it ran through my table like I don't I wasn't actively investing at the time which is the answer Sean to why I didn't and I know it crossed my desk but I never took like a meaningful meeting with Grant but I'm so happy for him.
He's done a great job. I'm happy for the people that invested. I think Sean didn't they ask you to invest in the seed run and you forgot to reply to the email? No, no, no, no. That was a that was a uh not a finally when I didn't shoot myself in the foot. Somebody else shot me in the foot. I met with Grant. I was like, I love this. My last business got acquired by Twitch. I'm amazing. Have you have I told you how amazing I am. You got to let me invest. The round had like just closed, but a lot of times they'll let you in if they like you.
They'll they'll open it up or they'll they'll they'll squeeze you in. He he was just like, "Let me see what I can do." And I didn't hunt to chase it down like 10 times more and I just let it go. And yeah, that was a that was a big miss. I have a great email in my inbox from Joe at bed airband andre breakfast. Airbnb. Yeah, I'm trying to remember. Was it? Yeah, airband andre.com. That's a good one. Do you have any other ones that you haven't talked about? I know you have Uber, obviously. That's a famous one.
Airbnb, but I never saw the email so it doesn't hurt. Uh Pinterest. I had a guy who was the Cso, the chief strategy officer at Campbell Soup who was like 60 years old said, "Gary, you got to look at this startup from Pennsylvania." That's how he said it. My friend's cousin knows the guy. I'm like, "Okay." That's like I'm Yeah. It's like I got to get That's like getting a script for Hollywood in Chicago, you know? I didn't even like contemplate it. Yeah. So, that was close. And then, but I got in later through Scott Bellski.
What a great investor he is, by the way. He invested in I think Uber and Pinterest in the same couple of weeks. Both at a $3.5 million valuation. Both was like $25,000 checks when he had like 75. He told me he had like he's like I He's like I had 75 grand in personal savings and I put 25 in each of those companies which it's like eight or nine figures. And by the way, he's better than that even like he's got more wins and he's an operator. He's one of the best. Yeah. Yeah, I mean I'm I mean MAD, you know, one of the reasons I'm starting my next thing is a lot of CPG's magic spoon.
A lot of good brands came to Vayner wanting us to be the people, but we didn't take on those kind of clients. Some things I invested in, some I didn't. I want to be better at that. My biggest win that I don't deserve is going to be Liquid Death. Mike worked at Vayner Media the day before he started Liquid Death as a creative and he sent me an email and said, "Hey, I'm leaving. Thank you for your time. I learned a lot here. by the way, I'm doing this thing. Would you like to invest? He was a creative.
I'm a cliche businessman that thinks creatives aren't business people, right? So, I was like, you know, and I didn't know him well enough because we had a big company at that point. Well, he's also saying that he's launching a water company called Liquid Death. Like, that is like a silly thing on paper. You'll appreciate this. The way I think about branding and marketing, it actually fits me more than it doesn't for me, the way I like stuff. So, that wasn't the crazy part. I was kind of agnostic about that part. I thought it could work, but I didn't think it was brilliant.
And I definitely didn't think what a lot of people thought, which is it has no chance. Because on consumer brands, marketing isn't a stunning variable, especially if the product's a commodity, and water is a commodity, right? Like water and plastic versus water and can doesn't really change the variable. In fact, the can is the advantage. So, I understood that part. It was more interesting why I invested. It goes back to this nice guy theme a little bit. I just wanted to invest because I want to support my employees on their own ventures. So, I literally did it for that reason only.
And you know, that's going to be a mine. It was first check in. You're you're significantly larger than both of us, but we sort of run in the same world. And there's a lot of scammers and shady people in this like content and business world. Like I've noticed that as we've gotten bigger, I've tried to be very careful about who I associate with. Yeah. Being a nice guy, do you struggle to like say I don't want to be around this person like they have a background of doing X Y and Z or they don't they don't or they're they're they have political beliefs that I don't buy into and I don't want to be associated political I'll be honest I never talk politics polit political beliefs won't throw me off because I'm very empathetic that people can see the world different I mean hate or like ridiculousness on both the left and extreme leftism and rightism as we know it today sure but like political beliefs no but I don't think they do honor able work.
Sure, I've struggled with that. And you know, also, you know, me being on the speaking circuit for so long, sometimes those, you know, those kind of characters might be at the same place and they want a quick selfie and I don't want to, you know, that's what I'm talking about. Yeah. Yeah. And you know this I I I you know, you're smart and so I know that question is grounded in you know that I've avoided a lot of stuff and association and that's the reason. Yeah, of course. You never I mean there's people the amount of people that will take a cell.
Forget about people we know. There are people that are tier 19 people that are trying to do this. They have like four followers and they sell a $4,000 course and they're criminals, right? They'll take a selfie with me at the airport and then make a post and say that like we had a meeting at the airport to strategize their mastermind. Well, they did when they asked you a question. I guess it's it's really you do have to be conscious of that and you do need to worry about your NIL and your reputation. It is on my mind and now with deep fakes and where this is all going.
I think about that stuff all the time because when I think of the Epstein files cuz I'm like a huge true crime fan and so like seeing the Epstein files like the Jail, you know, you like go through his email. I'm like uh I always want to be so careful about who I'm speaking with. It kind of freaked me out. Man, I will tell you and you guys know this. I make a lot of content about my mom and like it's just I can't help not say it like you just talk and everything that goes to my brain while you were just saying that thing on the Epstein thing cuz I think about that too.
like who's even mailed me through the years and what but the thing I can rely on Sam is I am not cliche human meaning I don't say like things that are not nice like definitely not in writing you know like you know and so like I don't worry about that luckily and it all goes to credit how I was raised like I really believe being the bigger person being a nice person you know what's really interesting actually I want to ask you guys a question this blows me away we are fortunate we've worked hard we had talent we're at where we're at.
And what that allows us is to spend some time in private and public settings with other people that have won. The thing that completely rocked me and when it was happening to me and my contemporaries my era was how many winners and I mean winners they've got the girl they've got crazy money they've got it will actually still spend most of their time [ __ ] on other winners out of envy or I don't even know what and I'm like this energy like I'm like what like I had to say this to a couple buddies not too long ago I'm like you guys are a bunch the 14-year-old [ __ ] I'm like, what are you talking about?
You should be happy for XYZ that they're crushing it. Yeah, he's not the nicest ever, but he's not a piece of [ __ ] And by the way, everything you're [ __ ] on, you guys do the same [ __ ] What is this? Like, you're winning. Like, focus on winning. If you're so actually sad that they won even more than you and you got feelings about it, why don't you take these 3 hours of bitching about this person like Yentas and go build something? Well, Sean, what percentage of incredibly successful people do you know who you think are are good, wonderful people with good attitudes?
Uh, I think they're good, wonderful people with good attitudes, but they're definitely imbalanced in some core way, right? Like there's they're not well-rounded, chill ass, you know, people, right? Like I think the ext you're you're unlikely to be extreme winner without some version of an extreme personality. Sure. And that I think that's fair. Hunter S. Thompson said he said there's there's no reasonable people on the top of Mount Everest. Yeah. Gary, I had a a person kind of point this out to me about about why this happened. So I don't know if you've ever read like the Rene Gerard like mimemetic theory.
It's like Peter Teal is really big on this. So basically the core thing you'll get this as a consumer guy which is that we don't want what we want because we want it. We want it because other people want it for whether it's your luxury bag that you're carrying or I believe in that in fact in fact this is where all my gratitude comes from mother and DNA. I want it for my process not because others want it and it makes me feel simple but it's very clear to me that most are the other way.
Yeah. So, so I think most people have this sort of mimemetic drive, right? And this is why you see trends and fads catch on because I want to go buy Neidos right now because all the other kids are buying Neidos and I want to say this because other people say this. I want to wear Jordans cuz they wear Jordans, right? So, it's so that's like a normal thing. And there's a another term in that philosophy that's called a mimedic rival. And so, I was on a I was on this plane ride and I had this embarrassing moment where I was admitting to somebody.
I was like, you know what? Like I feel stupid even saying this, but god it kind of drove me nuts the way this guy was saying that. I was kind of bitching about somebody which I rarely do but I was doing it and I was like honestly I was like guys I feel stupid saying this but like that [ __ ] bothered me and blah blah blah. And he goes he goes you know what uh he goes that person's your mimemetic rival. What's a mimemetic rival? Basically it's like I don't know if you saw when uh Bezos was launching like his rocket and Elon's launching his rocket and then they had this really passive aggressive thing.
I it's in Elon's biography. It's very funny. It's like congratulations to uh Jeff on the first suborbital launch. And then he's like and then Elon landed it and he's like congratulations on the first successful landing from only a you know two megat ton whatever. It's like they added these little qualifiers. They started blocking each other cuz for each other they're mimemetic rivals, right? And like and it's just a very strange thing. You'd think these are the most secure people on earth but we all have a core part of us that has that. It's have you learned to tame it and live with it?
And it's funny. I literally believe the reverse. I genuinely believe that the far majority of people get to the top from extreme security. Hey, let me ask you one more question and you could and you don't have to answer if you don't want to if it's too private, but with the six or seven businesses that you've named, they're badass. And like I'm looking at the people you hired or I guess they're they are your co-founders. They're freaking awesome. And I was looking at some of their your partners and your other businesses. In order to get these off the ground, do you have to fund them personally or do you get backers for a lot of these things?
Because it sound like I'm reading this deadline article and you have like a list of like five or six people and they're ballers and I'm like those guys aren't cheap and he's Watt Steve Ross the owner of the Dolphins who's in Vayner Media with me as well. He funded that. He wanted to be a part of that. On the rest um I funded. That's awesome. Like I was looking at the I didn't know but that you had a restaurant. Um and I was looking at that and it looked like a membership club and I looked at the interiors and I was like no it was a it was a meaningful buildout.
Um like no it's it's been really cool. Like I um I'm in a really fun part of my career. I'm actually I actually just used this platform this incredible platform. So thank you for having me talking a little bit more because I actually want to start talking a little bit more about me the juggler. to your point earlier, I am proud of what I'm doing and I, you know, no one really knows, which is wild and I'm proud of that too, right? That goes to the humility, but now I'm maybe ready for being like, "Hey guys, by the way, I'm not a motivational speaker." I might actually be a weirdly good operator at scale.
Well, Sean, Google Fly Fish Club Manhattan or just Fly Fish Club and please come when you guys are in New York. You'll be blown away. I live here now, Gary. I live on the upper west side. So, like ASAP, email me after this like ASAP. ASAP. I want you to see it. It's it's a threestory restaurant with a private ori room. Like it's real. But more importantly, cuz you know this, it could also be going out of business tomorrow. Meaning it's a like the business is extremely viable. The in fact, Sam, now that you're here, Upper West Side, if you just go over to GW, which I know is counterintuitive, the restaurant we opened in Bergen County, New Jersey, called Capon's Chop House, we now know we're about to open another one in Westchester, we're about to open 50 of those in high netw worth neighborhoods of the biggest cities in the world.
We got the model. We got it. And and don't forget, this is the brilliance of what I think when when it's all written. The Vayner X marketing machine impacts all these businesses, What's the model? It says that it's a membership. The model is open up the new version of Ruth's Chris and like the best steakhouse that has the most New York City vibes just not in New York City and everyone in bridges and tunnels of the seven most important places on earth that have high net worth individuals are going to sell the [ __ ] out of these places.
It's not a new invented model. It's a member. You have to be a member. Kapons is just Kons is just a Ruth Chris steakhouse 2.0, but we have a very strong what we do to Eugene's credit, to Grutman's credit, to Noah's credit, those places have cool, right? There's that nightife element. We're going 20% less on that and 20% more on food. We think the secret to retention LTB is just execute a food program that is so undeniable and a little bit of that sizzle, but your steak's got to be right. Right. Right. Like our strategy is killer chicken parm.
Like yes, absolutely. That's kind of what people want. You've gotten into this business genius. He decided to start an agency and a uh a restaurant. The two best businesses on earth. Literally. Literally the two worst. And again, this is a great way to end it up, which is like I'm playing for what makes me feel good, not just maximizing the dollars. And then on the other side, I'm going to turn V friends into Pokémon and it's going to be one of the most valuable intellectual properties in the world in 20 years, which in an AI world will have an extraordinary amount of value and will be the best kind of business someone could build.
Well, we appreciate you, man. You're the [ __ ] Thank you, guys. Yeah. Stay well. Wish you well. All right, that's it. That's the pod.
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