“Crushing It!” is written by Gary (Vee) Vaynerchuk, CEO of VaynerMedia, serial content producer & aspiring owner of the New York Jets.
Gary was born in 1975 & rose to stardom following the expansion of his family’s wine business through social media & production of online content. He can be found under the handle @garyvee on Instagram, Twitter & YouTube & anywhere Podcasts can be found under The #AskGaryVee Show.
Once breaking through the self described, “Alpha,” facade, (at first listen some of Gary’s content can be a bit in your face) I have always found Gary’s content to be genuine & real and this book was the inspiration behind my fledgling YouTube channel & the personal brand I am building. For the sake of brevity, my summary excludes the many examples within the book from readers of “Crushing It.” While the principles stand on their own, I highly recommend reading the book for additional context & inspiration. With that said I hope you enjoy this summary:
You can buy the book here (I receive a small commission!). But first check your libarary.
Introduction
- In our modern society it has become the norm for people to work for multiple companies & even have multiple careers throughout their lives. It is therefore more important than ever to build a personal brand that transcends your current employment or occupation.
- Online platforms and social media allow direct one on one engagement as well as the ability to reach a large audience & are perfect for building a personal brand.
- Facebook, Twitter & YouTube are the future of all business.
- Youtube has become the new Hollywood for aspiring children. This and other social media platforms allow for the building of businesses in ways never before possible — Most parents do not understand this path and label it, “not a real job.” However there are countless examples of people who have made a prosperous career on YouTube. Let children gravitate with what they love. Slime making is 6 figure monthly business via YouTube. E-gaming can make 7 figures.
- A personal brand can highlight your business OR be your business. You can get paid to do what you would have done anyway.
- The secret to success is no longer where you come from or who you know. It’s understanding these online platforms & having a willingness to use them to their full potential.
- To be successful: Be true to yourself at all times. Then go all in.
- Not a single person is creating or putting out too much content.
- The secret to becoming rich is to be being ridiculously good at what you do & work harder than anyone else.
- We owe it to ourselves and our children to be fulfilled and thrilled everyday.
- Finding money vs passion does not need to be a dichotomy. Our options are more open than ever.
Part 1 — Get Pumped
Chapter 1: The Path is all Yours
- The goal of first edition of Cush It was to show how to build a brand identity such that traffic is driven to your business + website & brands become willing to pay for your expertise and viewpoint.
- A 7 figure income is possible via Instagram or YouTube. 1000 followers can earn $5000/year with two posts per week. 10,000 followers can generate $20,000/year.
- We often think of influencers as being the individuals big brands are willing to pay for endorsements. But it is now open to a far larger audience.
- The internet is the entrepreneurs oyster. You can get much bigger than you think. You can get paid simply to be you. This is a true influencer. You can be tomorrow’s newest star.
- What is cool changes each generation. To be a lawyer or doctor was cool in the 80’s. In the 90’s gamerss were nerds. Now they are hero’s because of the prevalence of e-sports. Being an “entrepreneur,” is cool now but won’t be forever. Instead of chasing what others deem to be cool double down on what you love.
- Don’t be beholden to one platform or your current success. Instead create a personal brand that is so strong it transcends platforms topics etc.
- Snapchat, Instagram, & YouTube are the NBC & ABC of today. The internet has become “mainstream,” not just a step in the ladder. It is a place where you control the full narrative.
- You no longer need to work behind someone else or for larger platform before going off on your own. You can do this, and many still do but it’s not a requirement.
- If you’re not crushing it, it’s not because you are too old or too poor or have too many other responsibilities. It’s because you haven’t fully committed to making the leap yet.
- The principals shared in the book are universal. However the path is yours. It is not a step by step process.
- When you are getting started you will need to “show, not tell” to win new clients, customers, etc.
- First provide content for free. Then ask what you are worth.
- It will be hard everyday. Make sure to take time to recognize what you are doing well. Daily. Weekly. Monthly. Annually.
Chapter 2: What Still Matters (The 7 Essentials)
- Building a successful personal brand starts with choosing the correct pillar.
- To make this decision focus on a small list of items. What really matters:
- Intent
- In business the why matters as much if not more than the how. Why do you want to be entrepreneur. Is it to build a community? To teach others?
- There is a scary number of people that start companies to “change the world,” but are exposed by one or two direct questions about their model.
- Those at the pinnacle of success & influence share 3 characteristics:
- Commitment to service.
- Desire to provide value.
- Love of teaching.
- Authenticity
- Authenticity will be informed by your intent. If you are authentic it will be a welcome relief to consumers.
- Don’t fake it. The more authentic you are, the more willing your audience will be to forgive your mistakes.
- Humans are inherently self-centered. If you can be just 51% altruistic you can stand out (most people are 70-90% self centered).
- There is a scary number of cynical people that don’t believe someone can do things for a greater good.
- Be OK acknowledging what you don’t know. If you don’t have the skills yet, be caring, enthusiastic, energetic. People are drawn to these characteristics.
- It’s not how much you know, it’s how much you care.
- Passion
- Heaps of people have jobs that make tons of money but do not make them happy. If you do what you love you will be happy regardless of income.
- There will be a long period (not a week, not a month, not a year) where you don’t make money. If you don’t love what you do it will be hard to stick with it.
- Passion is a back up energy source that can kick in when others fail.
- Go deep not wide. 1000 views & 100 comments is better than 10,000 views & 10 comments.
- Don’t care what any one person thinks — But do care about about your entire audience. Speak to your haters.
- Patience
- Pursuing passion, brand & long term wealth requires patience.
- Break the money first cycle. Show up with value first. Then find a way to earn money later. If you believe in your business put your income back into the business.
- Don’t sacrifice legacy for short term gain. Every action cannot be predicated on what you will get out of it.
- Eat shit for as long as you have to & go above and beyond for your customers.
- Speed
- Patience is for the long term. Speed is for the short term.
- Don’t be afraid to make mistakes. Learn from them. Make decisions quickly.
- Doing 10 things & getting 3 right is better than doing three things & getting them all right.
- Work Ethic
- When you are getting started there is no time for leisure (if you have massive ambition).
- Family & sleep matter but everything else likely needs to be left behind if you want to create massive success (ambition needs to be matched by work ethic).
- If you have a full time job & family, your side hustle working hours are from the time you put your kids to bed until 2am & on the weekends. Make them part of your work/adventure if possible.
- Start by blocking out your time. Anytime not spent on your obligations should be used for creating content, distributing content, engaging with your community & engaging in business development.
- This should take up 12-15 hours per day or if you are working another job will need to be crammed into 3-5 hours. Fully use the 16-17 hours you are awake.
- Crushing it is about living on your own terms, equally satisfied with your income and life. There is no mold. If your ambition is not obnoxiously large that is OK.
- Attention
- You can’t do it all. You will need to make choices. Not everyone should build a business as large as possible.
- Whatever effort & energy you put in, is the energy that will come out. Make sure to focus your energy so it does not dissipate.
- Follow the eye balls:
- What are you customers paying attention to?
- What is the new thing — What is controversial?
- Your competitors will look backwards giving you an advantage. Don’t become too comfortable on one platform at the expense of learning about others.
- Always keep learning. Don’t stay on a stinking ship.
- Intent
Chapter 3: The 8th Essential
- Content & product are two things you need to build personal brand.
- Content should be strategically delivered to all platforms. Must be optimized, native, micro content NOT the same post or video copied. Each platform captures people in a different mindset/ seeking different types of content:
- Twitter: News & current events.
- Facebook: Friends.
- Youtube: Long form content & stories.
- To be efficient, create pillar content that can be splintered micro content for other platforms.
- You don’t need to wait until you are an expert or have a perfect website to launch your brand. Quite the opposite. Document don’t create. Show your learning process to your audience.
- Every story has been told over the course of history BUT not by you. Speak your truth. Let people watch who you are & what you will become.
- There is no avoiding the fact that success is predicated on quality content. You can’t put out bad videos & expect results. However, just because you suck now doesn’t mean you will always suck. Strive methodically to get better.
- No one needs to “fake it until they make it,” anymore. This strategy was necessary to convince those managing the gates to give a chance. The internet has changed & democratized the gatekeeper process.
- The customers & viewers gained using this approach are not the ones you want long term for your brand. Who will trust you if you’ve shown a willingness to trick & hoodwink people. It’s OK to be a novice. Admitting you are still learning gives others more reason to check in on your progress.
- Perfection doesn’t exist. It is subjective. Just get started and document your journey.
- The number of followers you gain is secondary to the quality of these followers.
Chapter 4: What’s Stopping You?
Line up all 8 essentials & you have closest thing to a formula for Crushing It:
- Intent
- Authenticity
- Passion
- Patience
- Speed
- Work ethic
- Tracking customers attention
- Master social platforms + content
Most common reasons people give for why they are not Crushing It:
- I have a full time job
- I have kids
- I have no money
- I don’t have time
- There are too many strict rules in my industry
- Are afraid their friends will get ahead if they leave the defined path
- Don’t know which idea to pursue
- Don’t have right equipment
- I am not into anything monetizable
- Afraid of hate comments
- I’m too old
- These are all bullshit & the book provides counter-examples to all of these issues.
- Social media doesn’t change people, it exposes people. You will get hate, especially if you are succeeding. Embrace it.
- Fear of failure is really the fear of judgement from those we care about.
- The only person you can’t ignore is your spouse.
- No one who has played it safe ever made it big. It is hard to fail to the degree that you can’t bounce back.
- In our modern age with as many possibilities available as there are there is no reason you should be doing something you hate.
- Fear of wasting time (if under 35 this doesn’t apply) — You can always go back to school or your 9-5 job.
- Every platform is worth some investment. You won’t know until you spend time there.
- Giving up empty leisure hours to do something you love & to crush it, is not wasting time unless you are 100% happy with your life.
- Fear of seeming vain — Let this go. Embrace it. You will prove the market wrong. Everyone is an ass until they are a pioneer.
- The pool is crowded. But there is still room. Get started now.
- There are people in this world that want to see and help others succeed.
- Fear of failure is really the fear of judgement from those we care about.
Chapter 5: The Only Thing You Need to Give Yourself to Crush It.
- Permission.
- If you want to sell worms. Own it. Be that person.
- If you are studying for a test or certificate document your studies —If this garners attention create an e-book
- Don’t hide mistakes.
- Reciprocity is an innate human characteristic. Set your platforms accordingly. Give tremendous value and others will give value back.
Part 2 — Create Your Pillar
Chapter 6: First, Do This
- Create a Facebook page. This will reach the young crowd. Don’t bet against Zuckerberg or FB.
Chapter 7: Get Discovered
- The most power discovery tools are Hashtags & Direct Messaging
- Collaboration is the best tried & true method to grow a brand. Expect it to take years.
- Do it right. Offer knowledge and skill. Don’t ask for something without giving something first. Provide an upside to respond.
Chapter 8: Music.ly (now TikTok)
- The majority of entrepreneurs ignore apps that are popular with only younger crowds. This is a mistake as the audience can grow or pivot quickly.
- At least monitor apps that fall in this category.
- Be the large fish in a small pool. Creatively Adapt platforms to your need. A young crowd eventually grows up and becomes entrepreneurs/customers.
- If you are seeking an audience go where they are. It doesn’t matter how long the platform lasts.
- The only thing you -risk trying a new platform is time.
- Creative people can be creative anywhere. Especially where others have not gone yet.
- Social media is a long game. It is about building a brand & connecting with your audience not just selling a product.
- Music.ly (TikTok) 101:
- Utilize hashtags & study trending tags.
- Learn the hashtag culture.
- Collaborate. Become part of the platforms community.
Chapter 9: Snapchat
- Snapchat is the anti-Facebook. It is for imperfect photos and real moments.
- A devoted, “sticky,” fan base will be willing to be patient while you experiment.
- Don’t overthink. The platform is for raw, unfiltered, mundane behavior. It is for “throwaway,” content.
- In downturns, a glimpse of normal life is well received.
- Allows for differentiated content as the platform stands completely on its own (vs an instagram story which needs to support the instagram pillar content).
- Be a marketing & branding person NOT a conversion based digital sales person. Long term > short term.
- Every piece of content should give your audience something.
- Can’t be famous on only Snapchat because it is temporary. Needs to be supported by other platforms.
- Don’t be vulnerable to one platform regardless.
- Try becoming the expert on a new platform to gain an audience. Write blog posts about the new platform so news media will come to you for quotes. Or post a list of top people on the platform that will naturally drive users to you as well.
- Be cognizant that work can steal your passion. To prevent this you can work in something that is closely but not exactly aligned with your passion.
- Treat your platform & content like a business.
- Create real relationships and provide value. Give give give.
Chapter 10: Twitter
- Twitter hasn’t changed in 9 years — It is still the water cooler of society. The place people go for news.
- It is built to be a conversation platform. It is a great place to listen, react & hijack threads.
- Can be difficult to stand out amongst the volume of content as the barrier to create is very low.
- Still a good place for business development. Generally there is less competition for the attention of influencers as on other platforms (due to less followers).
- You are always one comment away from getting noticed. Can create with way more volume than other platforms.
- Best place to amplify your brand.
- Great place to connect with those you want to work with. Who has a better chance of winning an internship:
- 1/4000 applicants to submit a resume and hope the hiring director sees their portfolio.
- Someone who frequently engages with the individuals they would be working for at internship.
- Use trending topics & respond with your thoughts.
- Don’t give up too early. Persistence is key. It will take far longer than you think.
Chapter 11: YouTube
- YouTube is the most important platform for a personal brand. It now has more young eyes than network TV.
- Give it a try. Even if you don’t think you are video worthy.
- You don’t need to be accomplished to start creating. Instead document your journey.
- Let the market decide if your video ideas are good. People like strange & mundane things.
- Be yourself. Show your passion. Let yourself be you.
- Some people are successful idiots because people like watching them be idiots. Don’t doubt yourself. Don’t be a dreamer who puts up 10 episodes and gets bullied. Keep going.
- YouTube will be television. Television will be youtube. YouTube owns video.
- To build audience attend video conferences such as vidicon and try to collaborate with channels of a similar size
- YouTube 101:
- If you want to increase viewership focus on the following items:
- Video optimization.
- Titles
- Does the title accurately describe the content
- Is it short and concise/ fully viewable on mobile
- Is it emotionally driven & keyword optimized
- Descriptions
- Are the top two lines keyword optimized
- Do you link to other similar videos in your description
- Do you include a subscribe link & links to your other social media accounts
- Are the links clickable and trackable
- Tags
- Include at least 10 tags including single word tags and phrases.
- Are tags valuable — i.e. high search, low volume. Use, AdWords, Keyword Planner or Vidiq to check.
- Thumbnail
- Is the thumbnail accurate to the video
- Is the text readable
- YouTube cards
- Do you use them to drive your audience to your other videos
- Channel Optimization
- Does your banner reflect your brand and genre
- Is your about section and channel description keyword optimized with an upload schedule included
- Do you have clickable social media links available on your channel page
- Do you have a channel trailer trailer that tells the best story possible int he shortest amount of time
- Playlists
- Do you have playlists with keyword optimization on your main page
- If you want to increase viewership focus on the following items:
Chapter 12: Facebook
- Facebook is on par with YouTube for brand recognition.
- If you want to maximize your personal brand you need Facebook, period.
- Facebook is very flexible platform. Written posts work in long form or short form. Video works at 32 seconds or 32 minutes. It is a great landing page for all content to come together and live for eternity.
- Is a good distribution channel as others can share your content.
- Incredibly detailed targeting capabilities. Can pay to “boost posts,” to select audiences.
- Still one of the cheapest CPMs (cost per thousand impressions).
- Can do marketing, sales & branding in one place.
- Have FB live as well for spontaneity vs posterity.
- Collaborate through FB. If you have video that gets attention, reach out to all related brands & ask if you can put together video for them.
- Do searches on FB for terms related to your genre.
- Join as many related Facebook groups as possible. Get involved in light hearted ways. Try to collaborate with others when possible.
- Going for the indirect sale is harder than posting a photo with an open house sign but it is a hell of a lot more effective too.
- Know your audience. If you are doing something in a new way, be OK with criticism (this shows your are succeeding in doing it a new way).
Chapter 13: Instagram
- Second only to YouTube in creating stars — On the platform you can be a content producer or a content curator.
- More brands are spending on blog advertising & collaboration. Takes at least a year of consistency before money is made.
- Good for bite size content, not long form content.
- Tagging system is very good as are the native ads.
- Instagram Stories allows for ephemeral content to balance the highly curated feed. Can link to other sites.
- Very good for business development:
- Dm those who you admire or are doing well in your industry. Include why you are reaching out & what value you can add to them. Can target using tags or geography.
Chapter 14: Podcasts
- Podcasts are god send for 2 reasons:
- Many people are uncomfortable on camera & worry about too many things before getting started (lighting, appearance, etc.).
- Podcasts sell time (that means even those who are great at video should do it).
- In our hyper speed world, multi-tasking is everything.
- Easier to check email & pay bills while listening to podcast than watching a video
- 139 million US commuters spend 29.6 billion hours commuting annually. Many are in cars & can listen to audio but not watch video (yet).
- Podcasts 101:
- At this time all hosting platforms are very similar. There is no good way to creatively grow your podcast brand other than produce good content & use your other social channels to advertise.
- Use pillar content to create micro content. If your podcast is your pillar content post quotes & excerpts to Facebook, Instagram etc.
- Consistent content & lots of free value will help build your audience. Asking the audience what they want helps build community.
Chapter 15: Voice First
- Google Home, Amazon Alexa, Siri etc. allow voice to be harnessed. This can be in the form of an interactive skill or flash briefing.
- This enables our addiction for speed & convenience. It keeps our hands free & allows less checking of notifications. Because of this & because it is so new there is a huge land grab opportunity if you can deliver something fresh & new.
- This platform will allow you to connect with users the first 15 min in the morning or the last 15 min before bed via a device on the bedside table or bathroom counter.
- Voice First 101:
- Make native content, “Hey Alexa users”.
- Make something new & fresh. Do not recycle old content.
- Too new for best practices. Just create & iterate.
Conclusion:
- Social media = Business
- We should care about everything but not care at all what others think.
- Talent has little value without patience & hard work.
- Someone will constantly be trying to tear you down. Don’t let this stop you.
- It pays to be brave. Be brave & dive in.
- Quit being a student of entrepreneurship and DO entrepreneurial things.
- Everyone recognizes a sales person. No matter how slick. Those that actually care about the customer will be received differently.
- Advertising should be used to accelerate the stories people are telling about you. If stories aren’t yet being told, advertising just accelerates your death.
- Social media gives huge advantages but you can’t automate everything. Face to face interaction & empathy is important too.
- When your audience is small do everything you can to engage with those taking an interest in you.
- The platforms mentioned above are only getting started. There is so much game left to be played.
- If you are only investing in the one or two platforms currently giving you the best ROI you are being foolish long term.
- Twitter, YouTube & Instagram have become mainstream, but what is next. Don’t wait to be told — Seek it out (AR, VR, AI)
- Constantly experiment & explore new platforms. There is always a next new thing. Don’t use past boats missed as an excuse to miss future boats.
- Humans will always embrace whatever new technologies allow for speed & convenience. Don’t resist change, embrace it.
I hope you found this summary of “Crushing It,” helpful. If there are other books you think I should read and summarize, let me know! For additional insights check out: