Guardian column: Gary Vaynerchuk
My Guardian column this week about wine wizard Gary Vaynerchuk:
Before you read this, do me a favour and go to WineLibraryTV.com Be prepared for a jet engine in your face. That blast of personality is Gary Vaynerchuk, a 32-year-old merchant who has made more than 450 daily wine-tasting shows online - just him, his glass and a spit bucket.
The show, with its audience of 80,000 a day, has transformed Vaynerchuk into a cultural phenomenon. He has appeared on two of the biggest TV talk shows in the US and in the Wall Street Journal and Time. His book, Gary Vaynerchuk’s 101 Wines, comes out next week and the day he announced this on his internet show, his fans immediately pushed it to No 36 on Amazon’s bestseller list. He has a Hollywood agent. He makes motivational speeches. And he has only just begun. Gary Vaynerchuk is on his way to becoming the online Oprah.
This isn’t as simple as using online video to sell wine, though the family store is now a $60m-a-year enterprise. Vaynerchuk is also transforming retail and making it social. He has realised that a store should be a community and so he uses every tool available online - a social wine rating site called Corkd.com, his videos, his appearances on other popular online shows such as Diggnation, his ubiquitous presence on Facebook, and answering countless emails every day - to make and connect with as many fans as possible.
One day, a few weeks ago, Vaynerchuk announced on his online show that he’d throw an event for his video friends at his store in New Jersey. More than 300 people showed up. He calls himself “the social media sommelier”. “Social business,” he says, “is the future of our society.”
Vaynerchuk is on a mission. “I want to change the way that people think about wine and change the way that people do business … This is how I will be remembered.” His secret is generosity and passion. Now that may sound like a line. But I’ve witnessed Vaynerchuk in action. I’ve bought my wine at his store for a few years and watched his sales people eager to help customers find a better, cheaper bottle. I watched him at the South by Southwest conference, where he gathered instant parties via Twitter, having strangers - now friends - sample from the seven cases of wine he had shipped down. I do think this guy’s for real. Authenticity, Vaynerchuk argues, is a necessity in the transparent, social, web 2.0 world. “You’re not going to be able to have multiple personalities,” he says. “Your personal brand is now completely exposed to the world, 24/7. Everyone is media now.” This leads him to a grand conclusion: “So now good is going to win.”
See, he does sound like Oprah. And he acts like her as he constructs his empire. He says he is building - as he calls it - “brand Gary Vaynerchuk”. Online, he issues opinions, not only about wine but about life, like this: “I’d rather have a million friends right now than a million dollars. Your social equity is far greater than your financial equity.”
He even has an inspiring personal story: he came to the US from Russia at age three, a young entrepreneur who made a $1,000 a week selling baseball cards at the mall. When he had to work in the family store as a kid, cleaning shelves, he hated it until he realised that wine was as collectable as baseball cards. And now he has used his expertise, passion and personality - and the power that online gives anyone to speak to the world and make friends anywhere - to turn himself into a star.
As I left the office where he tapes his show, he handed me a copy of his book. Then he went to a “meet and greet” with a fan who just wanted to be near force Vaynerchuk. All this is possible with just a dream and a webcam.
May 5th, 2008 at 4:34 am
Hi Jeff - As you say, the only way to get Gary is to see him in action. Check out this 2 minute video I posted last month about “Good People Day” - this is not a wine rant but a Goodtrain Manifesto - watch, applaud, and get on at http://eatmedia.blogspot.com/2008/04/good-guys-unite.html
May 5th, 2008 at 10:21 am
[...] Jarvis in his BuzzMachine post today discusses his Guardian article about Gary Vaynerchuk. I had the pleasure of seeing Gary at a [...]
May 5th, 2008 at 3:48 pm
This post helps me wrap my mind around the Vaynerchuk phenomenon. I have been simply wondering, who IS this guy, and why do I hear about him all over? I confess I haven’t visited his site, or watched his videos. Guess that’s the iconoclast in me. Anyway, I’ll officially put it on my list of things I should do.
What I’m really interested in commenting on is your final argument: “All this is possible with just a dream and a webcam.” I have to disagree. I can tell from your description of the young Vaynerchuk that you need something else, too. A laser-like focus, a habit of being extroverted, access to a product or service that others want, an understanding (conscious or unconscious) of how to inspire action, etc.
I’m just sayin’. There are more factors at play here than the two tools you mention.
May 5th, 2008 at 6:20 pm
I’m not surprised Gary left an impression on you, Jeff. He did his thing down at the Future of Web Apps conference in Miami, and a lot of the things he said really clicked for me as well.
News organizations tend to bring that impersonal, official feel of the newspaper. TV stations bring that very slick, polished anchor’s face. However, the web is inherently a social place, and we all need to dive right in and really get to know the people who use our site. I think if we can do for news what Gary is doing for wine, we’re going to be in a much better place.
May 5th, 2008 at 11:13 pm
[...] this piece about Gary Vaynerchuk. Fascinating guy. A total energy bunny and a very rich man thanks to blogs and [...]
May 6th, 2008 at 4:36 am
[...] Guardian column: Gary Vaynerchuk Excellent column from Jeff about Gary Vaynerchuk, who’s now getting 80,000 viewers a day on his wine programme online. (tags: jeffjarvis socialmedia wine television) [...]
May 7th, 2008 at 8:05 am
[...] Buzz Machine - his Guardian column from last week. All about an interesting wine guy’s brand and what this means in the world of social media: “Your personal brand is now completely exposed to the world, 24/7. Everyone is media now.†[...]
May 22nd, 2008 at 8:19 am
[...] Videos, Web at 11:19 pm by Andrew McMillen I was linked to WinelibraryTV through Jeff Jarvis’ blog. He wrote a short article on The Guardian’s site describing the site and its owner, Gary [...]
June 3rd, 2008 at 8:35 pm
[...] Jeff Jarvis at BuzzMachine: Guardian column: Gary Vaynerchuk [...]