Crush It! by Gary Vaynerchuk, a review

by Miriam Salpeter on October 12, 2009 · 5 comments

book-header-transI’ve heard a lot about Gary Vaynerchuk. He is well known and widely lauded for his approach to personal branding for business owners. He “leveraged social media tools such as Twitter and Facebook to promote Wine Library TV,” a video blog about wine. He’s hob nobbed with Meredith and Ann on the Today Show, shared wine with Ellen and Conan and been featured on Nightline, among other appearances.

So, when I was invited to participate in launching his book, I was happy to join in. (I love reading advance copies to share with my readers!)

Gary’s book is a high-energy guide for business owners and would-be business owners to harnessing the power of social media to fuel not only your bottom line, but also your personal brand. (And, if you don’t think you need a personal brand because you are happy with your day job, Gary’s response, “What you think you’re invincible?” He notes, “Developing your personal brand is the same thing as living and breathing your resume every second that you’re working” (p. 38).

He reminds readers how important it is to create bonds with other professionals in your field and to share your ideas and expertise on the social networks. (I LOVE when other writers second what I tell my readers!)

Gary thinks traditional resumes are going to be irrelevant. This is a common belief among the social media elite. I agree that your reputation (aka, personal brand) will be key, but having a great traditional resume is still important for most people! The good thing? Pursuing a new media strategy to support your professional reputation does not prevent you from having a terrific, traditional resume. The best approach? A multi-tiered plan that has potential to appeal to everyone in your target audience.

Other terrific points relevant for job seekers from the book? Wait for it…this is key:

If you are authentic, you will sometimes lose people along the way!

Gary knows this – he admits that his loud, in your face, brash style does not appeal to all wine lovers. He says, “I lose about 12 percent of my viewers right off the bat because I yell and scream like a maniac” (page 85). You can’t be everything to all people, whether you are a job seeker or an entrepreneur. And, you really shouldn’t try. When you differentiate, you will lose some people, but those probably are not “your people.” On the other hand, by strongly focusing on what you have to offer – your best and authentic you – you have a better chance to connect and appeal to a community of “good matches.”

Crush It! is a terrific guide for anyone (entrepreneur or job seeker) who needs a nudge and a guide to begin to shift his or her mindset to move forward with today’s tools. Stay tuned for more thoughts from his book tomorrow, the official launch date!

If you need help using social networking tools for your business or job search and just need a helping hand, contact me to learn how I can help!

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{ 4 comments… read them below or add one }

Gary Alan Miller October 12, 2009 at 11:23 AM

Thanks for the review. I’m looking forward to giving this book a read. I’ve seen him speak before, and I can definitely see why not all wine lovers would be a good fit for his style. But, I also see value in a lot of what he’s saying (although, like you, I don’t think resumes are going anywhere). I do think there’s truth in not being “all things to all people,” and it’s okay if some are “lost” along the path of differentiation.

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Miriam Salpeter October 12, 2009 at 12:57 PM

Gary – Thanks for your reply! I like the way you put that – “the path of differentiation.” Nice! Look forward to being in touch.

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Todd Schnick October 12, 2009 at 5:05 PM

Thanks for sharing your thoughts. I am very much looking forward to this read.
Todd Schnick´s last blog ..Making Customers Stab Things Is Bad For Your Marketing My ComLuv Profile

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Miriam Salpeter October 12, 2009 at 6:18 PM

Todd – Thanks for stopping by. I’ll be interested to know what you think of the book!

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