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  • - [Gary] Hey, man. How are you?

  • - Good, how you doin'? - [Gary] Good.

  • Wow, if Neilann's you're spirit animal--

  • - [Jacob] You like that? She's a beast though.

  • - She's a beast. She is a beast.

  • How you doin'? - Good.

  • - [Gary] How's work? - Great.

  • - [Gary] Good. Tell me.

  • - People I'm working with are the best.

  • Very, very happy with who I ended up with.

  • - [Gary] Yeah, you ended up with an A team.

  • - Yeah. - [Gary] That's the truth.

  • - Everyone I work with is unbelievable.

  • - [Gary] Yeah.

  • - And first job out of college is sweet.

  • - [Gary] Yeah.

  • - I feel like I got lucky. - [Gary] It worked out.

  • - Yeah.

  • - [Gary] And so, what are you working on right now?

  • - We just finished up some always on content.

  • - [Gary] Yep.

  • - But we're transitioning so we're now doing more campaign

  • work so I'm doing less--

  • - [Gary] On what brands? - On (censored).

  • I'm also on (censored). - [Gary] Yep.

  • - Those I just do community management.

  • - [Gary] Yep.

  • - But I'm, that's the best about them is since they're so solid

  • they let me do other things. - [Gary] Yep.

  • - Across the board, all of them, they're outperforming higher so

  • they let the person under them--

  • - [Gary] 100%.

  • - That's the best part about it and that's why I think it's good

  • for me 'cause I'm working on a ton of shit.

  • - [Gary] It's like how we know.

  • It's a sports analogy.

  • You get drafted by a great team,--

  • - [Jacob] Yeah, it's a fit. - and, yeah, it's a fit.

  • - [Jacob] I got lucky. - It's good.

  • It's good to get lucky sometimes.

  • What about and what about the macro culture of the company?

  • Outside of your day-to-day?

  • - That's what I mean.

  • I don't really have to compare to--

  • - [Gary] Yeah. - because my first job.

  • - [Gary] That's a good point.

  • - Talking to other people,-- - [Gary] Yeah.

  • - just humans, I've met, I've talked to humans before and

  • I have a good experience with humans.

  • - [Gary] No, (laughs) yeah.

  • - I mean, yeah, it's great.

  • And I would say coming into this it has exceeded my expectations.

  • But again, I have little to compare to.

  • - [Gary] Yeah. - But I mean, yeah.

  • I would hang out with most of these people outside the office.

  • - [Gary] Yeah, and the basketball stuff has been great.

  • - It's huge. - [Gary] Yeah.

  • - It's been great. It's great.

  • Even outside of work, just to run.

  • - [Gary] Yeah. - It's awesome.

  • I think the fact that it's at six in the morning--

  • - [Gary] Eliminates, yeah. - Yeah. It really does though.

  • - [Gary] People that want to be there.

  • - Yeah. - [Gary] For sure.

  • What can I answer for you?

  • - [Jacob] Question, building communities.

  • Advice between...

  • - [Gary] What is that, DRock?

  • - [DRock] I have no idea.

  • - [Gary] Go ahead, I'm listening.

  • - [Jacob] Content, outside of blogs,

  • SEO versus just social.

  • - For the purpose of?

  • - [Jacob] A start up that is just trying to gain a following.

  • - Cool.

  • So is this like for your side hustle?

  • Your friends or your guys'? - [Jacob] Yeah.

  • - You can be specific with me.

  • - [Jacob] Yeah.

  • I'm working with guys like Brandon,

  • guy you know as John Henry. - Yep. What is it?

  • - [Jacob] His personal brand.

  • - Who's? Brandon's? - [Jacob] Yeah.

  • - The kid we played with today?

  • - [Jacob] Yeah, yeah, yeah. - What's he do?

  • - [Jacob] He does menswear. (inaudible)

  • - [Gary] That's awesome.

  • - [Jacob] Yeah, he's good.

  • - You're gonna get more bang for your buck,

  • I mean, there's so much,

  • so what's good about search and

  • blogs is there's

  • far more guaranteed singles and doubles.

  • What's great about social is there's so many more potential

  • for home runs and grand slams and so it just depends on how

  • you want to play it.

  • It comes down to economics, a lot of times.

  • - [Jacob] Right. I think that's a good thing.

  • - And menswear is all going to over-index visually so that's

  • where Facebook and Instagram

  • and things of that nature are gonna--

  • - [Jacob] For sure. - Go ahead.

  • - [Jacob] If you want to build a deeper community,

  • wouldn't you agree that you'd have to give real content?

  • So, is that why SEO and Google

  • people are searching for their problems.

  • - [Gary] Yeah, I mean look. Look, search is real.

  • - You think you're getting real to who you want to talk to.

  • - [Gary] Real people meaning?

  • - The specific people that have, are searching for their problem

  • and provide their solution.

  • - [Gary] Yeah, I mean, search is the great intent marketing

  • vehicle of our time.

  • I have a weird rash. - [Jacob] Right.

  • - How to solve this bike problem.

  • - [Jacob] Right.

  • - So what search is incredible for is I have a specific thing

  • I want to scratch right now.

  • And I'm going to go to this site,

  • Google, and I'm going to find something.

  • What's great about social is you're interested in basketball

  • and it comes to you. - [Jacob] Okay.

  • - It's passive versus going on the offense.

  • What's great about social is it's got built-in word of mouth.

  • So you are an individual trying to solve your fashion problem in

  • a menswear thing, you're never gonna tell anyone about

  • what you're doing.

  • There's no inherent word of mouth brand building.

  • Whereas in social if you

  • discover that I'm interested in that, I see it,

  • the amplification percentages are very high.

  • Even built-in.

  • Instagram, you double tap something your friends look at

  • what your liking. - [Jacob] Right.

  • - It's just just a very, very, very,

  • very different insular versus outward thing.

  • For me that's why social has been so big for small brands.

  • They don't have anything yet.

  • And so they rely so much on word of mouth.

  • - [Jacob] What about getting a community?

  • For example, your community is strong.

  • Down to comment.

  • Down to do whatever. - Yes.

  • - [Jacob] Essentially anything you say.

  • - Yes.

  • - [Jacob] But I think that's because you give deeper content.

  • - Yeah, I think the variable of the subject matter,

  • what the person is bringing to the table.

  • If this is a menswear product that has 89% of its overall

  • macro energy, in Brandon's heart and brain--

  • - [Jacob] Right.

  • - is to sell this product, if that's 89%,

  • he's gonna have an 11% community.

  • The reason I have such a big community is I'm the reverse.

  • That's what people don't understand.

  • It's playing a marathon versus a sprint.

  • When you don't have the luxury like Brandon probably doesn't of

  • waiting two years to monetize,--

  • - [Jacob] Right.

  • - whatever he's doing, you go in for the sale and what happens

  • when you go in for the sale is

  • the people on the other side of it feel it.

  • It's a value exchange game.

  • - [Jacob] Long-term, short-term. - That's exactly right.

  • And I sit here on a pedestal because I've been able to put in

  • the work for 20 years and I have the leverage now to do that.

  • - [Jacob] Right.

  • - But day one it is hard.

  • Day one 22-year-old Gary trying to sell wine,

  • I don't know if I would've

  • had a 97% percent you, 3% me strategy.

  • As a matter fact, I know I didn't.

  • It was more 50-50 but

  • I even then knew wasn't 98, 2 and that's what most people do.

  • Why are you producing content?

  • 'Cause you really want to sell your shit.

  • If you want to sell your shit in the short term,

  • your content and your energy to ploys that behavior.

  • If you think about I'm going to try to stay alive for two years

  • and the content I'm going to put out is just going to build

  • relationship and then I'll be able to monetize that some way

  • in two years, your content looks very different.

  • All of a sudden you're in

  • there answering people's fashion questions.

  • You're just thinking about it differently.

  • See where I'm going? - [Jacob] Yeah, definitely.

  • My big question,

  • 22-year-old advice

  • New York indie digital game,

  • what about that?

  • - It comes down to your ambition.

  • I think the answer is far more like

  • what you want to happen in life?

  • And then how you want to get there?

  • So you know, the serendipity of being that this,

  • if you're in digital games, you stepped into shit because you

  • stepped into the best place at a time when a lot of people didn't

  • realize that that was the case.

  • Which means you have just disproportionate value.

  • You know, everybody's gonna want to work you now.

  • - [Jacob] Right.

  • - But they're gonna come in at a different company.

  • You have a lot of value and you came in as employee number

  • five-who knows what number you came in, right?

  • Well, guess what? People that came in number 30

  • and 40 have even more value, right?

  • So I think it comes down to do you want to have your own

  • agency, do you want to have, it's amazing.

  • And I'll give you a really good piece of advice.

  • It's been interesting to watch 22-year-olds that have asked me

  • that question who tell me want to have their own shop and

  • I would say I'll help you.

  • You'll learn so much here.

  • I'll be an external mentor.

  • We'll get to know each other.

  • You work here for 5 to 7 years and give me a lot of blood and

  • sweat and tears I'll even help you even more.

  • Financially, relationships.

  • It's been interesting to see how many of those 22-year-olds are

  • now 26, and now say to me, "I don't want my own shop.

  • "I fell in love.

  • "I like my work-life balance here.

  • "I believe in you.

  • "I like the idea of making

  • "$200,000 a year and having that life."

  • Other people went the other way.

  • "Like I don't know, I want to work at Vayner my whole life and

  • "make $100,000," and now they're like,

  • "Wait a minute, maybe I can have my own."

  • So I think the one thing to understand is 22-year-old Jacob

  • and 27-year-old Jacob and

  • 33-year-old Jacob are very different dudes.

  • I wouldn't cripple yourself with,

  • don't let your ambition create and whatever ambition,

  • whether the most extreme.

  • I want to buy the Jets or whatever it may be,

  • don't let it be in permanent marker.

  • - [Jacob] That's pretty good advice.

  • - And I think the other thing is relationships matter.

  • - [Jacob] Yeah. - That's life.

  • And so the thing we started this meeting with,

  • I would highly recommend spending 30 minutes in the

  • cafeteria every day and working and saying hello.

  • - [Jacob] Sure.

  • - It's just insane that Chris, right there,

  • is the guy that might create an opportunity for you and how many

  • people will not even say hello. - [Jacob] Yeah.

  • - So I'd be so more social professional.

  • - [Jacob] That makes sense. - Yeah.

  • There's so much value here.

  • The greatest thing I've created here is that it's easy to say

  • hello to somebody here. - [Jacob] For sure.

  • - That's what your friends are telling you.

  • That they work in a place where

  • you can't fucking say hello to anybody.

  • - [Jacob] Yes. - That's not allowed.

  • That's the horse shit out there. - [Jacob] Yes.

  • - That's the best thing here.

  • So then do it. - [Jacob] I like that.

  • - It's really, real. - [Jacob] Yeah.

  • - And it creates different opportunities.

  • Even if you life goal was to work here for 37 years,

  • even internally it'll create opportunities.

  • - [Jacob] Sure.

  • Yeah.

  • - Go ahead. - [Jacob] Yeah.

  • He got a new job but he's looking for other stuff.

  • Digital sports, whatever,

  • any advice for the direction he should go?

  • - Again, whether it's 22-year-old (censored) it comes

  • down to does he want to work for 13 more years,

  • eight, three.

  • Where is he financially?

  • It's so hard, that's why you have to know those things

  • but I would give...

  • Listen, I've come to really like you if you (censored) come and

  • jame for me for 15 minutes, 20 minutes,

  • I'd be willing to do that.

  • I have a lot of relationships. You know?

  • I'd be more happy to help him

  • but I need to know what the fuck he cares about.

  • - [Jacob] For sure, for sure.

  • - If he's like dude, I just want to go three more and I'm gone.

  • - [Jacob] No, no, no, he's interested.

  • - Cool. - [Jacob] He's working for--

  • - Good, if he's in the game, then I think it comes down to a

  • financial thing of what can he afford.

  • Does he want to be executive, so kid we're recruiting right now,

  • his dad took a huge pay cuts as an operations SVP to be the first

  • SVP operations at...

  • He was right.

  • He left half his salary on the table 'cause he could afford to.

  • And that stock turned into the greatest nest egg of all time.

  • Became rich!

  • Let alone successful.

  • So I think (censored) can go through that too.

  • Out of (censored) he's needs to decide if he's gonna go for

  • eight to 15 more, can he afford to make $80,000 at Bleacher

  • Report versus 235 at NBC Sports. - [Jacob] Right.

  • - Got it? - [Jacob] Yes.

  • - That's how has to think about it.

  • That's a black-and-white decision.

  • And then if you can afford it, then I would push him very

  • heavily to more fun, more autonomy,

  • more upside, better energy-- - [Jacob] For sure.

  • - and if he can't, then you got a look at the alternative and

  • try to find the best version

  • of that in that corporate environment.

  • - [Jacob] That's awesome.

  • - Yep. Cool.

  • - [Jacob] 'Preciate it.

  • - Good seeing you, man. Talk to you soon.

  • - [Jacob] Yeah. Have a good one. - You too.

- [Gary] Hey, man. How are you?

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