Business Tips: Venture Capital & Angel Investing Gary Vaynerchuk Q&A | Columbia Business School 2016

Business Tips: Venture Capital & Angel Investing Gary Vaynerchuk Q&A | Columbia Business School 2016

Awesome Tip: Venture Capital & Angel Investing Gary Vaynerchuk Q&A | Columbia Business School 2016



Q&A I had on November 1st, 2016, with the Venture Capital & Angel Investing course at Columbia’s MBA program.

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Gary Vaynerchuk builds businesses. Fresh out of college he took his family wine business and grew it from a $3M to a $60M business in just five years. Now he runs VaynerMedia, one of the world’s hottest digital agencies. Along the way he became a prolific angel investor and venture capitalist, investing in companies like Facebook, Twitter, Tumblr, Uber, and Birchbox before eventually co-founding VaynerRSE, a $25M angel fund.

The #AskGaryVee Show is Gary’s way of providing as much value as possible by taking your questions about social media, entrepreneurship, startups, and family businesses and giving you his answers based on a lifetime of building successful, multi-million dollar companies.

Gary is also a prolific public speaker, delivering keynotes at events like Le Web, and SXSW, which you can watch right here on this channel.

Find Gary here:

Website:
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39 Replies to “Business Tips: Venture Capital & Angel Investing Gary Vaynerchuk Q&A | Columbia Business School 2016”

  1. this is a reminder that gary is intelligent and deeply thoughtful, but his videos mainly focuses on valuable content for encouraging the people who are at their lowest points in life to thrive.

  2. That is what I want to become a venture capitalist/angel investor. GaryVee has an advantage – he is practitioner and see the deals that many others do not take the time to observe

  3. So what you're saying is the right man in the wrong place makes all the difference in the world? 😉
    But half life aside in interesting speech, nice to know what the experience is thinking, i'm no entrepreneur but I see a lot of that natural talent you spoke of going to waste in the areas I reside, but good to hear someone down to earth talking about this.

  4. Gary, please, FOR THE LOVE OF GOD, get educated on the talent argument. Stop with this shit man. PLEASE listen to the book The Talent Code on Audible (cause I know you won't read).

    We are hard wired to be able to learn anything. Those are the FACTS. Please stop telling young, impressionable kids that they just aren't born with the "talent" to be an entrepreneur. It can ABSOLUTELY be learned. The real issue you have is that they are not being taught the right way (which I agree with). But PLEASE, PLEASE stop spewing this hard-wired, natural-born talent bullshit. There isn't an entrepreneur gene. Evolution would be completely inefficient if that were the case.

    Please bro, PLEASE listen to that book on audio.

  5. i don't think any big investor would invest in artist … i can flip $1k to $100k in 1 year off my art alone. imagine what i could do with 10K ! but for now, just got 2 small investors hustling my ass off .

  6. thank you for posting this video Gary, I am currently preparing for our first investment round for a reality show we are distributing to netflix. thank you for providing so much value to your subscribers 🙂

  7. You know what's the coolest thing in the world? That me, a 26 yr old, once failed but still aspiring entrepreneur from the buttfuck south of AFRICA, can watch these heavyweights nonchalantly talk about startups & investing. I love the internet and appreciate Gary massively for uploading this stuff. Much love from South Africa.

  8. Gary, if you're seeing $4M caps or priced rounds on idea stage deals, you're not getting good terms. Nothing should be pre-product at that number. Well… maybe bio-tech and nuclear fission.

  9. Haha you made me remember of the time me and my friend from junior high Dan, we used to get permission slips from our parents to walk to the gas station about 500m from our school to go get 12 packs of coke to sell to classmates for a buck. We even developed some competition from a kid who's father worked for FritoLays and was able to bring in Pepsi products. I almost thought I wasn't an entrepreneur and almost forgot my childhood. Thanks for reminding me Gary

  10. I'm 17 and have a clothing line. Creating the product, design and knowing how to market the brand isn't necessarily the difficult part however acquiring capital from investors is the real challenge.

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