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  • - Let me break it down very simple for you:

  • The world plays in the middle and all the action

  • is in the edges.

  • (upbeat music)

  • You've got your perspective.

  • (crowd cheering)

  • I just want to be happy.

  • Don't you want to be happy?

  • Melbourne, what is up.

  • (cheering)

  • What is up?

  • Fuck, I've been flying for two days.

  • (laughing)

  • But I'm here and I'm excited to be here.

  • Thank you for having me.

  • Thanks for the warm welcome.

  • So there's a lot of places I want to go

  • with today's talk.

  • And so, let's just get right into it.

  • I think, for me, what I really want to accomplish

  • in this talk today is set up a framework of strategy

  • of how much abundance and opportunity there is

  • right now and why.

  • And then, number two, really get into the tactics

  • that I think a lot of people here can take

  • and take whatever they're trying to achieve

  • to the next place.

  • I think the thing that,

  • as I was getting ready for this trip

  • and I was really looking at a lot of the things

  • on Facebook, and Instagram, and Twitter

  • and other things of that nature

  • that have become such an important part

  • of the way I think about the world.

  • But, more importantly, before we go into that;

  • what I was doing over the last month

  • as this kind of conference was coming together was I,

  • are you really wearing a Patriots fucking shirt?

  • (crowd laughing)

  • Jesus.

  • Just completely took my energy to a different place.

  • Just wanna punch that dude in the face.

  • (laughing)

  • As I was getting ready for this talk,

  • what I was really looking at were people

  • that were making references to it

  • and then kind of going down the rabbit hole,

  • especially, on the flight our here after I caught up

  • with all my work and still had 20 hours of flying.

  • As people were referencing this conference,

  • I was able to kind of go into their accounts

  • and take a look at what they were doing,

  • how they were doing it.

  • And what's become really remarkably interesting

  • to me over the last half-decade and, especially,

  • over the last couple of years

  • is how many people hear me, understand or consume

  • a lot of the content, but are unable because

  • of patience, I guess, or many other reasons;

  • how many people's actions don't map.

  • I mean, literally, the amount of people

  • that I'll post something about something,

  • they'll jump in and be like, yeah, Gary V., you're right.

  • And then, I click their account and they're

  • literally doing the complete opposite.

  • In that hypocrisy, in that misunderstanding,

  • in the white space, is really the thing

  • that matters to me.

  • I think the first thing that everybody needs

  • to really wrap their head around and understand

  • about this era is how much attention

  • is really being put here and how much,

  • if you're not winning on this devices,

  • how much vulnerability you have.

  • Number two, really understanding that

  • we talk a lot about content but nobody here,

  • including me, with a humongous team,

  • and this is super-important.

  • This is really what I wanted to start this talk with

  • because I think it will help people.

  • Me, with a team of 20, putting out between

  • 80 and 100 pieces of original content a day.

  • I'm grossly underperforming in the amount of content

  • I put out every day.

  • To really set the tone for everybody,

  • the volume, the sheer volume of content needed

  • for every individual or business in this room

  • to be successful in a 2019 environment

  • is staggering, and nobody's really making

  • the financial, or mental, or emotional investment

  • into that level of content.

  • The amount of people that are super-fine

  • with putting one or two pieces,

  • or three pieces a day on one platform

  • are just leaving an enormous amount of opportunity

  • on the table.

  • And so, for me, if there's anything that I can get

  • through today, and there'll be plenty of things

  • I'll try to get through.

  • But the sheer amount of content needed

  • to take full advantage of this land grab is staggering.

  • And so, that comes in a lot of forms.

  • For me, the reason I'm so obsessed with people focusing

  • on video is because the reality is that video

  • creates a scenario that allows you to do images

  • and written words and audio on the back of filming.

  • For me, the reason I do a vlog daily

  • is because we're able to use that as a top of the funnel

  • piece of content and then I'm able to produce a podcast.

  • I'm able to produce the, quote, pictures you see

  • on Instagram, the written articles on my .com

  • and LinkedIn.

  • It is the top of the funnel that creates everything else

  • instead of bottom-up.

  • It's unbelievably important.

  • If you're fortunate enough to be here

  • and you feel okay to be in front of the camera,

  • you need to lean in.

  • You need to absolutely lean in.

  • I think there's a lot of people,

  • and by the way, I'm a big believer that you have

  • to bet on your strengths and be self-aware.

  • I think there's a lot of people here

  • who wish they were something and the reality

  • is forcing that is their vulnerability.

  • If you're not comfortable being in front

  • of the camera for whatever millions of reasons,

  • or whatever insecurity, that's super-fine

  • and you should lean in to audio on your phone or,

  • if you're a great writer.

  • You need to figure out how you communicate.

  • But let there be no confusion here today.

  • If you are not producing content for the internet,

  • you are basically nonexistent in our society.

  • If you have, regardless of how good your B2B business

  • is doing, or how great you're real estate firm is,

  • or financial service.

  • Sears was winning, too, at one point.

  • Regardless of how well you're doing,

  • you are vulnerable right this minute

  • because all of the attention, on a daily basis,

  • continues to funnel here.

  • And whatever excuse you come up with,

  • which is my audience is not on there,

  • or my industry isn't affected;

  • all those things become your great vulnerability.

  • I recently, just a couple of weeks ago,

  • completely changed the strategic and creative foundation

  • of where VaynerMedia, my company, is going.

  • And a lot of people in my inner circle

  • pushed against it because they're like,

  • we're doing well.

  • And I reminded them.

  • I'm like, look, I'm desperate to put us out of business

  • before somebody else does it for us.

  • How many people here are having their best financial year

  • personally or in their business?

  • Raise your hands.

  • Let's clap it up for them.

  • (audience applauding)

  • One more time, raise them high.

  • No reason to be embarrassed about that.

  • Keep them up.

  • To me, the people with their hands up in that scenario

  • are the one that I'm more worried about

  • because, when it's going well,

  • is oftentimes when people become complacent

  • or they don't think the thing matters for them.

  • And so, for me, those are the things

  • that really, really stand out.

  • I think the other thing to really pay attention to

  • is attention itself.

  • For me, attention has been the thing that,

  • bless you, that I've chased my whole career.

  • When I was selling lemonade, I would look at poles...

  • Did you just get naked, bro?

  • Shit's getting crazy here in Melbourne.

  • (laughing)

  • This row's fucked up.

  • The Patriots fan, the naked dude.

  • I hope they paid extra.

  • (laughing)

  • I just looked over.

  • Dude's like fucking naked.

  • (laughing)

  • Attention has been something that I've been chasing

  • my whole career.

  • Selling lemonade against, you know.

  • Really, what's interesting to me,

  • it took me about four or five years ago

  • when I finally realized it.

  • I wasn't setting up the tables or making the lemonade.

  • I was really spending all my time looking

  • at the cars and trying to figure out where

  • to put the posters and the signs to get people's attention.

  • I did that in baseball cards and I did it in wine.

  • And I've done it, pretty much, my entire career.

  • And I think the thing that a lot of people

  • need to focus on is where is the attention?

  • So, for example, 24 months ago,

  • I would not stand up here and push LinkedIn very heavily.

  • You know, the platform was pretty much for anybody

  • that understands LinkedIn and has been around it.

  • It was really something where people put up their resumes.

  • It was something that people really spammed each other on.

  • LinkedIn became a shitty place for all of us

  • because all it was was people emailing in bulk

  • with no context.

  • And then, about three years ago, four years ago,

  • they made it more of a content plane.

  • You started seeing a little bit more.

  • And they had some influence on it.

  • And I was on it and it was fine.

  • But over the last 18 to 24 months,

  • it's been remarkable how much opportunity

  • there is on LinkedIn.

  • And if you're in this audience and you're doing

  • B2B marketing, and you do not have a LinkedIn

  • content strategy, you're making a humongous mistake.

  • Because when you layer on top of it ads that allow

  • you to target the titles of the occupations

  • that you're trying to reach.

  • How many people here are in B2B.

  • Raise your hands.

  • I mean, it's an enormous percentage of this audience

  • and I continue to watch B2B companies

  • not create original content for LinkedIn.

  • And when they do, they're much more in a commercial

  • or sales-oriented way, not in a branding

  • and create content way.

  • I always tell people if you make content

  • on the internet as if you're the TV show,

  • not the commercial in between the TV show,

  • you will get disproportionate return on your investment.

  • The problem is most people are looking

  • for instant gratification and return on their investment.

  • The amount of people here who've run a thousand dollars

  • in ads on something, it didn't work

  • and they deemed it as it doesn't work

  • is staggering to me.

  • I have spent millions of dollars on Facebook,

  • and Twitter, and Instagram, and Google

  • that haven't worked.

  • I've also spent millions of dollar on those platforms

  • that have worked.

  • The execution of the creative is the variable

  • in that environment.

  • Just because you ran $1000 or $10,000 in Facebook ads

  • and it didn't work, it might be the picture or video

  • that you put in front of people sucked

  • and didn't compel them to buy anything.

  • The attentions under-priced.

  • There is no doubt.

  • The attention's massively under-priced.

  • I built my family's wine business

  • on under-priced attention, on email and Google AdWords.

  • Those were the early 2000s.

  • I know what it looks like.

  • It's exactly what's happening right now

  • with Facebook and Instagram and influencers.

  • They're just under-priced.

  • Pre-Rolled podcasts, under-priced.

  • There is no debate that the attention is under-priced.

  • There's a reason that Wish, the shopping app,

  • does 6 billion dollars in revenue on the back

  • of 98% Facebook ads.

  • It's under-priced.

  • But are you capable to create contextual creative

  • at scale, that's the question.

  • Can you produce 97 pieces of content

  • for 97 different demographics and psychographics

  • and then run ads against them to compel them

  • to buy you're things.

  • If I'm selling sneakers, which I do,

  • there's going to be a fundamental difference

  • of the video or picture I'm going to put in front

  • of somebody who's 18, white male, in New York City,

  • versus a 47 year old Latina woman with two kids in Texas.

  • The problem is, when auditing the 30 accounts

  • that I looked at, and the hundreds of thousands

  • I do a year, 99% of people make one to five pieces

  • of content and run their ads and expect something to happen.

  • It is fundamentally not contextual to the audience

  • that they're trying to reach.

  • Very simply put, everybody,

  • everybody's running creative ads, media, marketing right now

  • as if it was 1997 and the only options you had

  • was the newspaper, the billboard, the radio,

  • and the television.

  • Meanwhile, we have Facebook, and Instagram,

  • and influencers that allow us to go way more long-tail.

  • The problem is people haven't put in the time

  • and the effort to create the content that's contextual

  • to the psychographics and demographics.

  • So, and I'm going very fucking nerdy

  • because I'm fucking fired up right now on this.

  • I think that every person in here,

  • regardless of what they're trying to do,

  • whether they're trying to run for mayor,

  • raise money for a charity, or sell their services,

  • needs to have at least 13 to 30 core audiences

  • that they produce content for every time.

  • So, literally, every time you have something new going on,

  • you have to create 30 variations where the copy...

  • I mean, you could target people who are divorced.

  • You can target people who have two kids.

  • You could target fuckers who like the Patriots.

  • (laughing) You could do so much.

  • You can do so much with this medium.

  • Yet, people are mailing it in.

  • Meanwhile, they're also having ludicrous,

  • there are ludicrous conversations going on

  • like people having ego around how well they do organically

  • on these platforms when the ads a massively under-priced.

  • Do you know how many people emailed me

  • crying that Facebook's organic reach declined

  • three years ago as if Facebook screwed them,

  • while Facebook is, literally, free to use?

  • Do you know how many people here are starting

  • to get concerned that they're not getting

  • as many likes and views on their Instagram account

  • because they can feel something's happening?

  • Yet, it's free.

  • I really need to drill this home.

  • People are mad at the algorithm on Instagram.

  • They run ads everywhere else.

  • They buy a booth at a conference.

  • They run print.

  • Direct mail, costs money.

  • You start an Instagram account,

  • if you don't run ads, you can organically build an audience

  • and you post.

  • Now, you're mad that you're not reaching as many people

  • and you've got this big conspiracy anger

  • at the algorithm, yet you haven't paid a fucking dime

  • for the platform.

  • (audience laughs)

  • That guy drank that beer quick.

  • (laughing)

  • It's a very intriguing thing for me

  • that people have emotional opinions about something

  • they haven't paid for.

  • And so, here's the game and it will always be the game.

  • Things come along, they're under-priced.

  • Real estate, stocks, attention.

  • When they're under-priced,

  • you need to strike and squeeze as much as you can

  • out of them.

  • I will come back to Melbourne in six years

  • and spend my entire talk trying to get people

  • to stop running ads on Facebook and Instagram.

  • That will happen.

  • It's always happened to me.

  • It's the same old game.

  • You take advantage when it's under-priced

  • and you squeeze it as long as you can.

  • You ride it all the way through.

  • And, eventually, the long tail catches up

  • and it becomes overpriced because companies come in,

  • and it becomes overpriced because of the bidding,

  • and normal people stop paying attention as much.

  • Everybody here who's been on Facebook

  • for five-plus years pays attention to every piece

  • of content on Facebook a little less than they did

  • five years ago.

  • Or maybe a lot less.

  • That is just the natural cadence of what we do.

  • How many people here had email in the late 90s?

  • Raise your hands, old fuckers.

  • (audience laughs)

  • So all the people that just raised their hands,

  • what they can tell everybody here under 30

  • is what we used to do with email in the 90s,

  • which was we read every single email.

  • Wine Library's email service in 1999

  • was almost 90% open rates.

  • How many people here have done email marketing

  • in their career?

  • Raise your hands.

  • 90% open rates.

  • It's ridiculous.

  • It's like 32% now and I think we feel

  • like we're heroes.

  • So that will happen with these platforms.

  • So, look, before I get into the mindset

  • and the strategy and some of the social things

  • I'm seeing going on, I'll go back into the details.

  • But the details are very simple,

  • and I said it when I was here last year

  • and I'm going to say it again.

  • If you are not a practitioner yet

  • of making content and running ads on Facebook and Instagram,

  • you will massively regret it.

  • And the reason, and you've seen me say it

  • in every video, I am putting it down on film

  • to recall it in a decade.

  • I will never stop saying it.

  • I don't care how much you're tired of hearing it

  • and hoping for something new.

  • I'm not going to make up something

  • that isn't true.

  • They are grossly under-priced.

  • The one little add-on that I've been saying

  • a lot more over the last month or so

  • than in the past is how much content you need to produce.

  • And the reason one of the breakthrough videos I've ever made

  • called, Document, Don't Create, worked is it's hard

  • to create a new video that's creative.

  • That's hard.

  • But if you actually film your day-to-day,

  • your meetings, your mundane,

  • there's absolute action in that.

  • And so, I'd highly recommend really understanding

  • what that means.

  • Let's take a step back and let's talk about

  • something I've been spending a lot of time on,

  • which is, in a world where I'm asking you

  • to create so much content, the fact that so many of you

  • do not create content because you're so bent

  • out of shape by the feedback in the comments section.

  • This has become a remarkable fascination of mine,

  • that people literally aren't living their lives

  • to their happiness or their fullest

  • because SallyPants36 said that you're ugly or fat.

  • (audience laughs)

  • People absolutely crippled by the judgment of others

  • without really understanding what it is.

  • Let me say it here right now so there's no confusion.

  • If a human being takes the time out of their day

  • to consume your piece of content, consume it,

  • and then spend time to leave a negative comment to you

  • after consuming your content,

  • think about how shitty that person's life is.

  • (audience murmurs in agreement)

  • Somebody literally has the time to consume

  • your content and try to drag your down.

  • My friends, misery loves company is one

  • of the most interesting sayings that has been

  • in culture for a long time.

  • It most manifest in a very poor way

  • when I watch parents drag their kids

  • into shit because they're upset.

  • But it's one thing, and I have empathy,

  • a lot of it when it's your mom and dad

  • dragging you through shit, because that's deep.

  • But when an anonymous person with a fucking icon

  • of a rugby player is dragging you through shit,

  • you have to get into a place where that

  • does not bother you.

  • It makes zero sense.

  • I mean, literally, and I get shit on all the time.

  • You get that many comments, you get shit on.

  • When I see it, I don't feel bad for me.

  • I genuinely feel bad for them.

  • I'm fascinated.

  • I've never in my life taken the time

  • to consume somebody's content and then shit on them.

  • It makes absolutely no sense.

  • So, please, if you're one of these individuals,

  • and there are a lot of you in this audience

  • that are no producing content because you're worried

  • about the judgment.

  • You know how many people email me,

  • Gary, but I have to put on makeup.

  • Why?

  • Because your grandma told you when you were seven?

  • But, Gary, the lighting?

  • Why?

  • You don't like the bags under your eyes?

  • Good news.

  • Everybody has bags under their eyes.

  • Like, there is an enormous amount of insecurity

  • in the system that is stopping people

  • from creating the thing that they want

  • and it needs to be talked about in a much bigger way.

  • The judgment of others is a fascinating thing.

  • How many people, by show of hands,

  • work in a job and are desperate for their side hustle

  • to become their career?

  • Just raise your hands.

  • Raise them high.

  • Can you stand up, actually?

  • I need to see this because I've got to get a sense.

  • Stand up if this is your MO.

  • Your side hustle, you're desperate for that

  • to become your career.

  • Good amount.

  • Okay, thank you for doing that.

  • So I'll go into this.

  • So this has become a new thing that I've been spending

  • a ton of time on;

  • something I've realized that really kind of caught me

  • off guard is how many people spend more money

  • on shit than they can afford.

  • And I know that's like a funny thing to say.

  • But it's actually very basic.

  • I'm actually talking about the amount of people

  • that have emailed me in the last six months,

  • because I've been on this rant lately

  • of trying to get people to move back in with their parents

  • at 30 and 40.

  • (audience laughing)

  • Yeah, I'm hot on this.

  • It's because there's this incredible thing.

  • How many people here own their home?

  • Raise your hands.

  • The people that just raised their hands,

  • 90% of people that own their homes

  • don't use more than 50% of their home.

  • They have three extra bedrooms that they don't need.

  • They have a living room, and dining room,

  • and a fucking den, and all sorts of shit.

  • The amount of people who live in homes

  • that they've extended themselves financially to afford

  • that don't even use half of that home is fascinating.

  • The amount of people who are in debt so they can drive

  • a car that has a logo on it that makes them feel better

  • because that's keeping up with the Joneses

  • or other people's judgment is fascinating to me.

  • What I didn't realize was that fact

  • that 35-fucking-percent of this audience wants

  • their side hustle to be their careers,

  • but the reason they can't is because they can't

  • quit their job because they need their job

  • to pay for dumb shit to impress people they fucking hate.

  • (laughing)

  • (audience applauding and cheering)

  • And so, especially, while the economy, globally,

  • is frothy, I am aggressively throwing up

  • for debate for the third of this audience

  • that is trying to get their side hustle to be their job,

  • for them to give a real thought to what it would look like

  • if they were to downsize their home, and their car,

  • and their vacations, and their watch,

  • to put themselves in a position to be happy.

  • I think, over the next decade,

  • as we continue to start really discovering,

  • as a human race, mental health and happiness,

  • that we are on the predawn of people changing

  • what success looks like.

  • When I really look at the world,

  • and I grew up super-humbly.

  • I've spent my 10-years-ago career in the explosion

  • of Silicon Valley.

  • I've really been lucky to see all sorts of different things

  • going on.

  • It is super-cliche but absolutely true

  • that the money/happiness things is just a funny thing.

  • People that don't have it think it does bring happiness.

  • People that have it know it's not true.

  • And when you really look at suicide data

  • and depression data, it's fascinating who struggles

  • with it.

  • I really do believe, as we become dramatically

  • more thoughtful about happiness versus money,

  • that a lot of people are going to really start looking at

  • the things they amass and how much that

  • is a choker to their happiness.

  • And so, what really excites me right now

  • is how frothy the economy is globally.

  • And I know so many of you can take advantage

  • of selling high, positioning yourself to be happy.

  • I think it's a very rogue point of view.

  • It's completely against the propaganda

  • that you see in your Instagram and Facebook feed 24/7;

  • everybody's pushing all sorts of fancy stuff,

  • and fancy trips, and fancy things.

  • I genuinely believe that the majority of people here

  • can dramatically, dramatically put themselves

  • in a happier place if they, honestly,

  • considered downsizing things that they don't use.

  • So just a random thought that I'm super-passionate about.

  • Let me talk to you guys about influencer marketing.

  • For me, I talked earlier about under-priced attention

  • and overpriced attention.

  • The way you get those things is when the market

  • doesn't understand itself.

  • When people don't understand how under-priced Facebook is,

  • they don't put money into it,

  • thus, the prices stay down.

  • The most inefficient and misunderstood marketplace,

  • in my opinion, is influencer marketing.

  • Humans don't know how to price themselves.

  • There are pretty people that have 400,000 followers

  • on Instagram that want $30,000 a post.

  • And they're are other people with 5,000 followers

  • who want $40.

  • They are 400,000-follower people that want $100.

  • They are people with $500 followers that want $5,000.

  • The inefficiency in influencer marketing is staggering.

  • How many people here, by show of hands,

  • and you guys have been pretty bullshit-y with your hands.

  • I don't know what's scaring you.

  • But go high.

  • How many people here sell an actual product, physical?

  • Raise your hands.

  • A lot.

  • Every single person, one more time, hands in the air.

  • All of you, all of you that have your hands in the air

  • should have a significant influencer, thank you,

  • influencer marketing strategy.

  • Literally, DMing people on Instagram and asking them

  • how much they would charge you to take a picture

  • holding your physical product and tagging your page.

  • It is massively inefficient.

  • I love when people, Gary, how do you scale it?

  • By DMing more people, fuck-face.

  • (audience laughs)

  • It just, there's no machine or algorithm.

  • Just get nice and cozy and DM people

  • and ask them one by one if they're willing

  • to do it.

  • I often find that the biggest upsides often

  • is scaling things that are not scalable.

  • Scaling things that are not scalable

  • comes from sheer effort and time.

  • And so, one more time, I just want to get the physical.

  • Selling a product physically.

  • If I was your partner, buddy with the hat,

  • selling physical, I would spend 30% to 50%

  • of my overall marketing budget on influencer marketing.

  • It's so inefficient.

  • And if you're lucky enough that your product you sell

  • directly on your Shopify or Amazon,

  • like, you can see it,

  • you don't even have to guess.

  • You literally, one, either codes,

  • or just isolated time slots for certain influencers

  • and you can see what the return on the investment is.

  • There's been many influencers that we bought

  • that we weren't sure, and then we bought 50 times over

  • because their audience was converting

  • because they had an authentic audience.

  • I couldn't be more passionate about it

  • and it is wildly under-priced in this market down here.

  • It's under-priced everywhere but we've even debated

  • opening a VaynerMedia office in Australia

  • just on the back...

  • (audience applauding)

  • Just on the back of, really, influencer marketing

  • because it's so underserved in the marketplace

  • and I highly recommend you take a deep look at it.

  • Another thing that is unbelievably under-priced

  • in this market and globally is keyword

  • and AdWord Google searches,

  • and then retargeted on YouTube Pre-Roll video.

  • So imagine a scenario where people search on Google

  • for curtains, or a financial advisor.

  • How many people here have done Google advertising

  • in their careers.

  • Raise your hands.

  • Perfect.

  • So a lot of you know it was an incredibly powerful platform

  • because it was intent-based.

  • If they were searching for it,

  • that means they were interested in it

  • and they would convert.

  • And a lot of you did extremely well with it

  • because it converted highly.

  • Much easier to be good at Google at first

  • than Facebook at first.

  • Facebook is branding.

  • Google is selling.

  • Very different game.

  • Selling is a hell of a lot easier in the short term

  • which is why people like it.

  • Branding and marketing takes time,

  • which is why people bail on it.

  • The problem is Nike, and Adidas, and Coca-cola,

  • that's branding.

  • Our bullshit business, this is selling.

  • Do you understand?

  • But there is a combination of selling and branding

  • that is super-powerful and it plays out on Facebook,

  • but it also plays out on YouTube.

  • YouTube, for everybody that doesn't know,

  • is the second-biggest search engine in the world.

  • For people like me that can't read for shit,

  • when you want to go on YouTube and hear it

  • or watch it visually, you understand it,

  • it's incredibly powerful.

  • But besides that, what's unbelievable is there

  • is a way for you to actually target people

  • that search on Google for something...

  • Let's use my old world.

  • They search for Margaret River Cabernet

  • on Google to buy.

  • Three days later, they go on YouTube to watch a video

  • of how to hang a picture on their wall

  • and the Pre-Roll YouTube video goes,

  • hey, are you in the market for Margaret River Cabernet?

  • And then, you're like, holy fuck, they're spying on me.

  • (audience laughs)

  • Because you fuckers forget that you searched for it

  • three days ago on Google.

  • For me, when I thought about this talk

  • and coming here today,

  • I said to myself, look, there's three or four things

  • that are just black and white tactics,

  • that if I get people to actually do,

  • they will feel benefit.

  • It's funny how I think about marketing

  • no different than fitness.

  • People are always, always far more interested

  • in finding some rare fucking fruit deep in the Amazon

  • that they can eat that makes them lose fat

  • than actually fucking working out and eating healthy, dick.

  • (audience murmuring in agreement)

  • Like, you're far more excited to buy some fucking pill

  • that was found in Saturn and brought back

  • than you are to do the very basics.

  • It's super-stunning.

  • Eat healthy and work out every day.

  • It's super-basic but nobody wants to actually

  • put in the work.

  • I've literally spent the last 30 minutes

  • giving you three to four basic things

  • that are real as fuck.

  • 99% of you, even though all of you wrote little notes,

  • are not going to do shit about it.

  • You're going to write it down.

  • You're going to say, yeah, you know what?

  • I've heard him say it a bunch.

  • This is the time.

  • I'm definitely going to go back and do that.

  • And then, next Thursday happens

  • and something good or bad happens in your business

  • and you completely put this talk on the shelf.

  • Let me be very clear with you.

  • In October of 2018, in Australia,

  • if you run Facebook and Instagram ads

  • against 30 to 50 different pictures and videos,

  • against whatever you're trying to accomplish

  • in your business, it will work.

  • Let me make it perfectly clear for you.

  • In October 2018, if you spend five hours a day

  • going to direct messaging influencers that could possibly

  • sell your product and getting a third of them,

  • 8% of them to agree to post a picture holding up

  • your product and tagging your product, it will work.

  • Let me make it perfectly clear for you.

  • In October 2018, if you run Pre-Roll YouTube video

  • against search queries on Google of whatever

  • you're trying to do in this room, it will work.

  • Now, I just need to ask you why you're not doing it.

  • Because if you've come to this conference

  • to see me speak, you've heard

  • this shit 40-fucking-thousand times.

  • (audience laughs)

  • I can't wrap my head around it.

  • I can because I watch it every day.

  • It's human behavior.

  • I see it.

  • But the reason I get passionate to keep doing this

  • is I've learned sometimes it just takes that 19th time

  • and you actually sitting in the audience to do it.

  • Bless you.

  • What really, really shocks me, though,

  • and what really excites me as being in,

  • like, this is my spiel in America,

  • the most advanced, competitive market

  • for all of my concepts.

  • The fact that everything I just told you

  • is disproportionately even more exciting here...

  • The reason we opened up a London for Vayner.

  • The reason we're opening up Singapore next February.

  • The reason I keep going global is it's like going

  • into a fucking time machine.

  • It's working better here.

  • It's cheaper here because the bigger companies here

  • are even slower than the big companies in America.

  • So the big money's not in.

  • You need to take advantage of this.

  • You are going to regret it.

  • You're gonna regret it.

  • And let me tell you this.

  • This is a good segway.

  • An incredible random fucking thing that I can tell you

  • to do is to go volunteer at a retirement home

  • one day this year.

  • A very random thing that can fundamentally change

  • your life business-wise.

  • Let me just not even go human.

  • In your business, is go and volunteer at a retirement home

  • once for five hours.

  • Let me give you the preview for the 99.9% of you

  • that won't do that.

  • You will see human beings with regret in their eye.

  • And I promise you, for whatever scary shit you've seen,

  • abuse, murder, the scariest shit you've ever seen,

  • there's nothing scarier than to stare a human being

  • in the face who understands she or he fucked up

  • and there's no going back.

  • Regret.

  • There's macro- and micro-regret.

  • Macro-regrets of who you married,

  • what you didn't do, dah-dah-dah-dah.

  • And there's micro-regrets.

  • And, in the context of this talk,

  • the micro-regret in a business world is you're sitting

  • on a golden goose.

  • It will take you five to seven hours to Google it

  • to figure out how to run a Facebook ad.

  • And, please, Melbourne, please do me a huge favor.

  • Do not hire your 22 year old niece and think

  • she's going to know how to do it

  • just because she grew up with this shit and you didn't.

  • I love what you, Gary, but you know,

  • I didn't grow up with this shit.

  • Neither did I, dick.

  • (audience laughs)

  • I'm 42.

  • I didn't grow up with this.

  • And let me tell you something else.

  • You didn't grow up driving and you figured that out.

  • This is something you have to learn.

  • You want to have a business?

  • You want your side hustle?

  • I love when people, do people understand how hard

  • it is to live your live for yourself on your terms

  • and make money?

  • Have we had the right conversation yet about this?

  • To live as your own boss and make enough money

  • to have a good life, that's a 1% thing

  • in our society, and everybody has this level of entitlement.

  • And, especially, now.

  • Trust me, I'm feeling it.

  • I'm the beneficiary of it.

  • But now that we've made entrepreneurs cool,

  • the whole thing's totally fucked.

  • Everybody thinks entrepreneurship is so easy.

  • This shit is super-hard.

  • It's super-hard to be good enough to make

  • that kind of money,

  • Because, even though the internet is here

  • and everybody in this room has the chance to do it,

  • the problem is the internet's here and everybody here

  • has a chance to do it,

  • and supply and demand takes over.

  • I love people who are like, Gary, but my content,

  • it's not doing well but it's because people don't get it.

  • I'm too ahead of the curve.

  • No you're not, Ron.

  • You just suck.

  • (audience laughs)

  • You're not ahead of shit.

  • The market is the market, is the market, is the market.

  • You have 39 views on your YouTube,

  • it means you suck.

  • It means it's not interesting.

  • Or, it means that you're early.

  • So many people are like, Gary, I'm lost.

  • You're not lost.

  • You're 27.

  • You've just started.

  • This is a long game and the opportunity is substantial.

  • But there are two very important things.

  • The world, my friends, let me break it down

  • very simply for you.

  • The world plays in the middle and all the action

  • is in the edges.

  • The world plays in the middle.

  • It's what school does to us.

  • It makes you in the middle.

  • All the opportunities in the extreme of micro and a macro.

  • I always talk about macro-slow/micro-fast, right?

  • Micro-speed.

  • I work 17 hours a day.

  • I'm booked every minute.

  • Micro-speed.

  • Yet, I'm in year nine of building VaynerMedia,

  • in the prime of my career, not making that much money,

  • as much as I could, to build a machine

  • for me for the next 30 years in the macro-slow.

  • All of the action is in the edges.

  • Having ridiculous blind confidence,

  • equally having the humility to know that you

  • don't mean shit.

  • Going all in and having the ability to completely pivot

  • if you know it's wrong.

  • There's such a fine line between perseverance and delusion.

  • It's such a fascinating thing for me to watch.

  • And so, my friends, I promise you,

  • there's so much abundance.

  • I hate watching people get upset when other people win

  • without realizing how much abundance is in the system.

  • Nobody on earth's success is coming at your expense.

  • Everybody thinks this is a binary game.

  • It's just not.

  • There's so much abundance.

  • And so, we, in general, in the macro,

  • have to desperately get our mindsets right.

  • We are collectively, stunningly, not patient enough.

  • Everybody wants it tomorrow.

  • We are unbelievably lacking in perspective.

  • The dumb shit that I hear people complaining about every day

  • is stunning.

  • Everybody here needs to start joining more nonprofits

  • and getting in the field.

  • You go join a nonprofit like Charity: water,

  • and you go to Africa, and you watch people walk

  • seven and a half miles every day for fresh water,

  • you start struggling to complain to the barista

  • because he or she put the wrong milk in your fucking coffee.

  • We need perspective, we need passion,

  • we need patience, we need a lot of things,

  • and then, you have to let it play out.

  • Everything I've ever done, two core things

  • have always been the theme.

  • And for anybody who's dreaming or thinking differently,

  • I really need you to hear this.

  • Everything I've ever done professionally,

  • two things have happened.

  • One, it's taken forever to manifest because I was early.

  • Number two, nobody agreed with me and people snickered

  • and made fun of me every time I did them.

  • If you're looking to innovate and do something special,

  • you have to recognize exactly what's going to happen,

  • which is the voices, the voices are going to be the game

  • that you have to play out.

  • The one that's become most fascinating to me

  • over the last year because I get so much interaction on this

  • is the people, and I'm just going to say this.

  • This is completely just random.

  • But I'm hopeful it might help just one person

  • in this audience.

  • If the voice in your own head says to you

  • that you suck, I desperately need you to know

  • that somebody put that voice in your head.

  • If the voice in your head tells you to yourself

  • that you suck, somebody put it in there,

  • and you have to understand that.

  • Usually, your fucked up mom,

  • (audience laughs)

  • but you have to wrap your head around that.

  • Because it's really difficult for me to watch

  • so many people not act based on that own voice.

  • The biggest thing that people aren't acting on

  • is they're not taking risk because they're scared

  • to lose and they're scared to then have people judge them

  • on that loss.

  • It is remarkable to me how easy it is for me

  • to see a true-bred entrepreneur versus one that's not.

  • A true-bred entrepreneur loves to lose.

  • It is scary to me how much I love losing.

  • Publicly.

  • Love my investment.

  • I love talking on passing on Uber twice.

  • Love it.

  • I love when people literally leave comments like,

  • don't listen to this guy.

  • He passed on Uber twice.

  • And then, I look at their account.

  • They have nine followers and they fucking suck shit.

  • (audience laughs)

  • And I'm like, yo, bro, but I didn't pass on Facebook,

  • and Venmo, and Twitter.

  • What are you doing?

  • You're fucking playing Fortnite and jerking off 24/7.

  • (audience laughs)

  • Anyway, I'm obsessed with losing because,

  • something that I really want people to wrap

  • their head around this, when you lose,

  • it's your loss.

  • We have so much judgment out there and we lack context

  • and laugh when people tell people how

  • to raise their children.

  • You're not in that person's home.

  • I laugh when people talk about other people's relationships.

  • You're not behind that closed door.

  • I laugh when people give advice on how to run a business.

  • You're not in it.

  • If you notice, the biggest reason I stay very macro

  • and just give details on what you can do,

  • is there's so much judgment being thrown out there

  • to everybody and nobody knows shit.

  • Everybody's running around with judgment and nobody

  • knows shit about what's actually happening.

  • Judgment is poison, my friends,

  • and this world right now, because of social media,

  • specifically, because you can see all the judgment...

  • I love when people think social media changes us.

  • My friends, social media exposed us.

  • Nobody's changed.

  • You used to be a dick, too.

  • (audience laughs)

  • You just said it to yourself and three other people

  • in your neighborhood.

  • Now, you can say it to everybody publicly online.

  • It's like money and fame.

  • It doesn't change you.

  • It exposes who you actually are.

  • And so, we're living in a very transcendent world.

  • And so, you're either going to look at the negatives

  • or the shortcomings or you're going to look

  • at the positives.

  • For me, I see all positives.

  • I love that we're going through all this shit globally

  • with ourselves because we needed to be exposed

  • of our weaknesses.

  • One step backward, two steps forward.

  • That same machine, do you know how many people say to me,

  • Gary, I don't think Facebook and Instagram,

  • that stuff doesn't work.

  • Yet, in the mouth, during that same dinner,

  • all they talk about it how social media's

  • fucking up the government, or countries,

  • or the world.

  • Literally, you're telling me that Facebook's powerful enough

  • to change the global world and governments,

  • but it's not powerful enough to sell some

  • of your T-shirts, or your landscaping business services?

  • My friends, take it for what it is.

  • We are all obnoxiously fortunate to be living through

  • this era right now.

  • What this era is, just to quantify it,

  • is we are now at the maturity of the internet.

  • The internet now is at scale.

  • We all live there.

  • It is real.

  • It's not what I grew up, which it was coming.

  • It is here.

  • It is at scale.

  • And the reality of the situation is,

  • how many people, one more time, with side hustles?

  • Raise your hands.

  • Stand up again.

  • Side hustle to turn into your business?

  • I need this because this is the point.

  • Side hustle to turn into your business?

  • I just need every single person that's standing

  • to understand one thing:

  • Your grandparents couldn't even dream

  • to turn a side hustle into their business

  • because the internet didn't fucking exist.

  • They just had to eat shit and live their life

  • and put food on the table and a roof over their head,

  • and then fucking die.

  • I'm being serious.

  • We are so outlandishly fortunate to have this era

  • and what everybody's doing is spending all their time

  • deploying cynicism and looking at the things

  • that are negative about it without realizing

  • it is the full empowerment to whatever you want

  • if you're willing to be a practitioner

  • and actually learn this shit and execute it.

  • This era will go away.

  • Many of you follow me, know I'm all focused on voice,

  • and Alexa and all this.

  • It's all going to happen.

  • Shit changes.

  • Whether it's blockchain, or AR, or VR, or voice,

  • this internet era, this golden era,

  • as we stand here today, will go away.

  • And then, for the same reason that I didn't make

  • any fucking videos for five years

  • because I had nothing to say,

  • there won't be a great deal like influencers,

  • and Instagram and Facebook,

  • and you will deploy regret because you've heard me

  • pound it down your throat and you did nothing about it.

  • So, please, Melbourne, do me a fucking favor

  • on my 37-fucking-hour flight to get here.

  • Please make this event, this talk,

  • the time that you actually go home and start

  • fucking executing.

  • Because I'll be very honest with you.

  • I'm fucking tired of the thousand,

  • 1000 emails every week that I get

  • that are the same exact thing,

  • titled, I don't know why it took me four and a half years

  • of listening to the same shit to finally do it,

  • but I'm really glad I did,

  • because in the last seven months,

  • I've made $80,000 and before I used to be $40,000 in debt.

  • Please make tonight the beginning of the next chapter

  • of your life.

  • Because when it goes away, I'm going to get quiet

  • and execute, and you're gonna wish,

  • you're gonna wish you did something about it tonight.

  • Thank you.

  • (audience cheering and applauding)

  • Let's do Q&A.

  • - [Man] We're not done yet.

  • We're not done yet.

  • Did you guys learn something?

  • Very good.

  • Turn to the person next to you and give them

  • a high-five and say, I'm glad he came.

  • (cheering)

  • - Stop giving high-fives and go fucking run some ads.

  • (laughing)

  • Let me tell you something.

  • They didn't learn shit.

  • If they follow me, they know this is not about learning.

  • I pounded this for fucking two years.

  • This is about doing.

  • This is fucking exercise.

  • You know what to do.

  • You still eat cupcakes, fatass.

  • (laughing)

  • - [Man] Got it?

  • - That's what's going on here.

  • Fuck.

  • (laughing)

  • Seriously, though.

  • By the way, just to give you a preview,

  • I'm a nice guy now, or if you think cursing is mean.

  • But I'm a nice guy if you look under it.

  • I'm going to be very mean in four years.

  • When everyone's crying about this,

  • I'm going to be jumping in a be like,

  • you fucking ass, I told you.

  • I'm going to be razzing the fuck out of people.

  • (laughing)

  • Sorry.

  • (laughing)

  • Go ahead.

  • - [Man] Question number one,

  • this came from people that are in the audience here today.

  • So these questions are from you all.

  • First question is from Henry Vela,

  • a question about gratitude.

  • What do you do when someone gives you an opportunity

  • and you know you'll never be able to pay it back?

  • - You know, Henry, you've got to take that

  • as a gift, right?

  • And the reality is you don't know that you'll never

  • be able to give it back.

  • This is what I always talk about,

  • how dangerous envy is and not having context.

  • I always tell people, the amount of people

  • that throw lucky or other things at me,

  • I'm like, look, sure, but what about tomorrow

  • if my daughter gets hit by a bus and dies?

  • Am I then lucky?

  • And I know, I know, but that's how I think?

  • For Henry, you don't think you can give that person

  • anything back today.

  • That's just not how life works.

  • You might be able to.

  • So, A, accept the gift and be grateful.

  • Try to help other people in ways you can.

  • But if you're so fixated on helping the person

  • that put you on, recognize that life ebbs and flows.

  • Who's winning today loses tomorrow and vice versa.

  • It's a fucking marathon and everybody's just judging today

  • without understanding tomorrow.

  • I spend all my time anticipating tomorrow.

  • That's the rant that I just gave for 45 minutes.

  • So that's how I think about it.

  • - [Man] Yeah, very good.

  • Next question: What is you number one tip

  • for growing a wealth and investment advisory firm

  • in the digital age where access to information

  • is so easy?

  • How do you get to be number one?

  • - Number one comes in all shapes and sizes.

  • I mean, to me, it's just a process of aspiring

  • to be great.

  • I think it's about, for me, where the information's free,

  • it becomes, especially, in wealth investment

  • and things of that nature,

  • it becomes a personal brand world.

  • People buy from people.

  • That's just the way it's always been.

  • And so, the more, and by the way.

  • The biggest reason so many people lose in legal

  • or wealth or things of that nature is they front, right?

  • They play a character on social media

  • not who they actually are, right?

  • And so, as you can imagine, in 2008-2009,

  • I missed out on 90% of my speaking engagements

  • because I cursed.

  • It was less acceptable than it is today.

  • I still do but I didn't know how not to be me

  • and that was just the way it was going to be.

  • I think a lot of people try to be the person

  • in their LinkedIn profile even though they hate

  • wearing a fucking tie.

  • And I think the more you can be yourself

  • and just talk about the things you're actually into;

  • there's more people that would get business in this country

  • talking about footie than talking about the actual skillset

  • they have in managing someone's money.

  • It's a personal game.

  • - [Man] Inside of there, if I can just ask you a question.

  • You said something.

  • You said the process of aspiring to be great.

  • But I think that's so powerful.

  • Where does that come from for you,

  • the process of aspiring to be great?

  • - I just love my game.

  • I love my game.

  • I don't want to win because I want to keep playing.

  • I never want it to end, right?

  • Once you find what you love to do, you've won.

  • And so, for me, I'm trying to get better at it

  • all the time but I'm not fixated on being number one,

  • or having the most money or revenue.

  • I'm just in my own little insular circle

  • just enjoying it and trying to get better at it

  • and letting the chips fall.

  • I mean, it's incredible how little I know about

  • anybody else that does anything that I do.

  • I've never watched anybody give a talk in my life.

  • I've never read a business book in my life.

  • I've never listened to a complete podcast

  • of anybody's podcast.

  • I'm sure they're great.

  • I'm sure you enjoy it.

  • I love that.

  • I watch sports.

  • I'm not saying that you shouldn't.

  • It's just not my process because it doesn't matter.

  • The only thing I care about is the audience.

  • The only thing I care about is the audience.

  • And so, that's why I read all my comments.

  • That's why I have insights on this,

  • why I got into places like empathy or judgment.

  • Once you understand that somebody knows everything

  • that they should be doing,

  • you have to ask why they're not doing it.

  • You start getting into mommy and daddy issues.

  • You start getting into insecurities.

  • You start getting into a lot of people here

  • not building personal brands because they have skeletons

  • in their closet and, once they get public,

  • they don't want to deal with the ramifications.

  • There's real shit out here.

  • (audience laughs)

  • I always enjoy the skeletons in the closet.

  • People get really weirded the fuck out.

  • People's faces get funny.

  • (laughing)

  • - [Man] Next question comes from Veronica.

  • How do you get in with the right people?

  • For example, if you want to get in with the people

  • who choose the light bulbs

  • for the next multi-billion dollar hotels.

  • - Yep, Veronica, you have to reverse-engineer people.

  • It's really easy.

  • You know who the decision-makers are by title.

  • Follow them on LinkedIn, Facebook, Instagram, Twitter

  • and see what they care about and if they're into things

  • that I've talked about already.

  • Footie, or Margaret River Cabernet.

  • That is your gateway.

  • There's a reason people play golf or have steak dinners.

  • They get to know people.

  • They get to know their spouses.

  • They get to know things that make them tick.

  • And then they exploit them,

  • if you want to go cynical with it,

  • or they just use them to do business.

  • But Sarah who makes that decision is the person

  • that you need to reverse-engineer.

  • And so, one of my favorite things about social media today

  • in a B2B environment is following the people

  • that you want to do business with and figuring out

  • what they love.

  • And then, if, to me, I think manipulation's scary.

  • So, for me, I'll never, when I know something

  • about somebody, make pretend I like it too.

  • I'll look for the things that I have a common interest in

  • and I'll lean in there, or I'll have a teammate

  • that has a common interest,

  • or I'll just reference that interest,

  • just showing respect that I understand what's going on.

  • I think too many people fake.

  • People try to do that to me all the time.

  • They're like, Gary V, yo, the Jets, right.

  • I'm a big Jets fan.

  • I'm like, name the offensive line.

  • They're like, oh, fuck.

  • I'm like, fuck you.

  • (laughing)

  • So I think you have to be careful to fake it

  • for the sake of business which is why I always

  • bet on authenticity.

  • And so, but you can reverse-engineer that person.

  • - [Man] Yeah, very good.

  • Next question comes from Shermaine.

  • What's the best way to support teenage kids

  • who have an entrepreneurial mind and limited assets?

  • - Well, limited assets is the best fucking thing

  • for any entrepreneur.

  • I mean, I don't know how people haven't realized it.

  • Here's the secret: Adversity is the foundation of success.

  • This would scare me a lot more if they had

  • an entrepreneurial mind and had tons of assets.

  • Entitlement and too much abundance

  • creates zoo animals.

  • And so, to me, take more away from them.

  • (laughing)

  • I mean it.

  • And definitely don't dwell on things.

  • To me, I think the thing that my mom did really well

  • was she saw that I was entrepreneurial

  • and she doubled-down on it.

  • And she punished me for bad grades but she didn't make me

  • feel like that was the most important things in the world.

  • And so, I think finding a balance of raising

  • a child with entrepreneurial aspirations,

  • finding a cadence between them respecting things,

  • but also leaning in on their strengths.

  • But it's interesting that the person

  • put limited means.

  • It means that they're feeling some insecurity

  • that they can't give their kid a $10,000 boost.

  • That's the best thing that happens.

  • Put a kid out there that has to learn how

  • to eat for themselves.

  • The best thing that ever happened to me

  • was when I rolled up on my mom in fifth grade

  • and I was like, mom, everyone's getting Nintendo.

  • I was Nintendo.

  • She looked me dead in the face and, with her Russian accent,

  • she said go buy it.

  • So then, I fucking shoveled snow and fucking raked leaves

  • and washed cars and sold lemonade.

  • And from a very young age, I learned how to make money

  • for myself.

  • I genuinely think entitlement is poison.

  • Abundance is poison for entrepreneurs.

  • I genuinely think restrictions, limits,

  • and lack of resources are the foundations

  • of the best entrepreneurs.

  • - [Man] Yeah, very good.

  • Next question comes from Chris.

  • He says how can I take my indie comic book

  • from being a small-scale project into a large brand

  • that more readers will care about and enjoy

  • just as much as I enjoy creating it.

  • - Chris, I think there's a couple of things.

  • One, first of all, you have to understand,

  • the market is the market.

  • And so, for me, two things that I would do.

  • One, if it's good, I'm blown away by how many people

  • get mad at doing free work.

  • All these creators get mad at free.

  • It's so laughable.

  • I always do shit for free and will continue

  • to do things for free because it creates leverage

  • and context.

  • So what I would do, Chris, if you can afford it,

  • and if you couldn't afford it, have a side hustle

  • that lets you afford giving away 3,000, a thousand,

  • 2,000 of the comics.

  • Go to a Comic-Con.

  • Use online hashtags of people that are interested.

  • Just give it away.

  • The attention's worth more than anything else.

  • And I always say, watch what I do,

  • not what I say.

  • There's a reason I don't sell products.

  • There's a reason I don't have masterminds,

  • or e-books, or things of that nature.

  • I give away all my content for free

  • because your attention's more valuable

  • than extracting money from you.

  • So I would give away the comic book at scale.

  • - [Man] Very good.

  • Next question, the last question,

  • number six comes from Pam.

  • She says what's the number one piece of crap thinking

  • or behavior that gets up your nose?

  • She wants to know what this room needs

  • to hear to start doing better in business and life.

  • - Man, I like you, Pam.

  • (laughing)

  • Pam, there's a lot, I mean, look,

  • there's so much...

  • I mean, look, the thing that really drives me crazy,

  • and I just spoke to it, is entitlement.

  • Anybody here that thinks anybody owes them anything

  • is already in deep shit.

  • Entitlement's stunning.

  • Number two, the thing, lack of patience.

  • It's why I push it so hard.

  • You want to make a million dollars a year

  • and you think that's supposed to happen in the first

  • two three, four, five, seven years of you doing something.

  • It's laughable.

  • People have gotten so crazy about the one

  • or two things like Uber and Instagram

  • without realizing that it's, you're more likely

  • to win the lotto than start a company that looks like that.

  • You're more likely to get struck by lightening

  • seven times than starting anything that looks like Uber

  • or Instagram.

  • So just people's perspective is completely fucked.

  • I don't understand what people are doing out here.

  • I don't know what it is in Australia, look this up.

  • The median income levels compared to what people

  • are aspiring to.

  • I America, if you make $440,000 a year,

  • you're in the 1% earners in one of the richest countries

  • in the world.

  • If you make $440,000 a year in America,

  • you're in the 1%.

  • That's the bottom of the 1%,

  • but you're in the 1%.

  • Yet, everybody's walking around like,

  • if they don't make a million bucks,

  • they haven't even started doing anything.

  • And so, perspective, entitlement,

  • complete lack of patience.

  • This stuff is hard and takes a lot of work.

  • Clearly, what gets in my nose,

  • which I like the way you put it,

  • is when we transition to this Q&A,

  • that I had a rant for two more minutes.

  • I can't wrap my head around how many people

  • have consumed the same shit from me 67 times,

  • in written form, in audio form, in video form,

  • and in 88-page deck form, in LinkedIn form.

  • I spend millions of dollars saying the same fucking shit

  • in 400,000 ways, hoping today's going to be the fucking day.

  • That fucking pisses me off, Pam.

  • (laughing)

  • (audience applauding)

  • - [Man] That was the last question.

  • So any last words?

  • You flew 36 hours.

  • You're here.

  • Any last words you want to give?

  • - That's a big sign.

  • Can I ask a question?

  • Yes, that's just, I have to reward that ridiculous sign.

  • Go ahead.

  • (laughing)

  • I'll repeat it.

  • (speaking faintly off mic)

  • I'm here.

  • Come up here.

  • Let clap it up for Amir.

  • Yo, Amir's buddy, hold up the sign that you guys made.

  • Stand up and hold it up.

  • It's such a piece of shit,

  • (audience laughs)

  • but it worked.

  • Come up here, Amir.

  • Bring your fucking sign.

  • This is perfect.

  • This is attention arbitrage.

  • I mean, how much did this piece of shit cost?

  • Like, a dollar?

  • Look at this.

  • But it worked.

  • Good job.

  • What's your question?

  • (cheering)

  • Do you have a mic for him?

  • Or you can speak into my mic.

  • - [Man] Here, I'll give him mine.

  • - There we go.

  • - I'm currently 15 years old.

  • - 15?

  • - Yeah.

  • (cheering)

  • I skipped a day of school for this.

  • - That's a great decision.

  • - Yeah.

  • - Talk into this so they can hear you.

  • - My question is is there any chance

  • you can be my mentor?

  • - So, Jesus.

  • (audience laughs)

  • Definitely not.

  • Mainly on the back of I don't even know how people,

  • I don't even talk to DRock.

  • I barely talk to my mom and my brother.

  • I don't want to stand up here in front of,

  • I don't care how much they aww and hum.

  • I've no interest in bullshitting you.

  • I think mentorship is an interesting thing.

  • Here's what I would say for you.

  • One, especially, with me, nobody is spending more time

  • and energy and resources trying to show people

  • what to do.

  • It's literally like I'm putting it out every day.

  • So mentorship, super-easy.

  • Number two, what I will do is I'm more than happy

  • to give you a summer internship on my team.

  • (audience cheering)

  • So if you can figure out how to get to America,

  • I'm sure you will.

  • You made a fucking sign.

  • And so--

  • - [Man] Wouldn't use that as a boat.

  • - You can just get on that.

  • Happy to do that for you.

  • - Thanks.

  • - You're welcome, buddy.

  • Just send me an email.

  • It's gary@vaynermedia.com.

  • Good job.

  • Take care.

  • Come on.

  • DRock needs still shots these days.

  • I can sign it.

  • Hold this up.

  • DRock's been fucking bugging me.

  • (audience laughs)

  • Awesome, you got a pen?

  • - [Man] Here you go.

  • - Markers, nice.

  • Now, here's the most important part of this.

  • You have to sell this on eBay.

  • (laughing)

  • Melbourne, I love you.

  • - [Man] Give him a hand.

  • (audience cheering and applauding)

  • Gary V!

  • - Do something!

  • So something, please!

  • Thank you.

  • Thank you for coming.

  • Thank you.

  • Even you.

  • Thank you.

- Let me break it down very simple for you:

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A2 初級 美國腔

品質與數量。在2019年創建一個內容戰略|澳洲墨爾本,2018年主題演講 (Quality vs. Quantity: Creating a Content Strategy in 2019 | Melbourne Australia, 2018 Keynote)

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    YU Xiang 發佈於 2021 年 01 月 14 日
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