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American businessman (born 1975) From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Gary Vaynerchuk (born Gennady Alexandrovich Vaynerchuk,[lower-alpha 1][2] November 14, 1975; commonly known by his alias Gary Vee) is an American businessman, author, speaker, and internet personality.[3][4][5] He is a co-founder of the restaurant reservation software company Resy and Empathy Wines.[6][1][7] First known as a wine critic who expanded his family's wine business,[8][9] Vaynerchuk is now more known for his work in digital marketing and social media as the chairman of New York–based communications company VaynerX,[10] and as CEO of VaynerX subsidiary VaynerMedia.[11][12]
Gary Vaynerchuk | |
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Born | Gennady Alexandrovich Vaynerchuk November 14, 1975 Babruysk, Byelorussian SSR, USSR (present-day Belarus) |
Other names | Gary Vee |
Citizenship | United States |
Known for | Entrepreneurship, social media, angel investing, enology |
Notable work | VaynerX, Wine Library TV, Resy, Empathy Wines[1] |
Website | garyvaynerchuk |
Signature | |
Vaynerchuk was born in Babruysk in the Soviet Union (today part of Belarus),[9] and arrived via the U.S. Refugee Resettlement to New York City in the United States in 1978 at the age of three.[5] He is of Ashkenazi Jewish descent.[13] Growing up, Vaynerchuk lived in New York City's Queens borough and later moved to Edison, New Jersey.[14][15] At age 14, he joined his family's retail-wine business. After his family moved, he graduated from North Hunterdon High School.[16] In 1998, Vaynerchuk graduated with a bachelor's degree in management science from Mount Ida College in Newton, Massachusetts.[17]
Vaynerchuk co-founded restaurant reservation app Resy, which was acquired by American Express in 2019.[7] He is also a co-founder of winery Empathy Wines, which was acquired by Constellation Brands in 2020.[18][19] Vaynerchuk is the creator and founder behind the VeeFriends1 and VeeFriends2 non-fungible token series.[20][21]
After graduating from college in 1998, Vaynerchuk took charge of his father's liquor store, Shopper's Discount Liquors. He renamed the store Wine Library, launched sales online, and in 2006 started Wine Library TV, a daily webcast on YouTube covering wine.[22] He grew the business from $3 million a year to $60 million a year.[23] In August 2011, Vaynerchuk stepped away from the wine business to build VaynerMedia, a digital ad agency.[22][24]
Vaynerchuk is the chairman of VaynerX, a communications company that holds media properties and technology companies.[25][26][27]
In 2009, Vaynerchuk and his brother AJ Vaynerchuk founded VaynerMedia, a social media-focused digital agency.[28] The company provides social media and strategy services to Fortune 500 companies.[28][29] In 2015, VaynerMedia was named one of Ad Age's A-List agencies.[29] With 600 employees in 2016, VaynerMedia grossed $100 million in revenue.[30] The company also partnered with Vimeo to connect brands and filmmakers for digital content.[31]
In 2017, Vaynerchuk formed The Gallery, later renamed Gallery Media Group, a VaynerX subsidiary company that houses PureWow, male-oriented news outlet ONE37pm.com, and other media properties.[32][3][33]
Vaynerchuck founded a hospitality company called VCR Group with David Rodolitz, Josh Capon, and Conor Hanlon.[34] VCR group has started many restaurants in Las Vegas and New York including: Ito, FlyFish Club, Capons and Bar Ito.[35] They opened a restaurant called Little Maven in NYC in the fall of 2023. [36]
In February 2017, Vaynerchuk was a participant of Planet of the Apps, a reality television series, with will.i.am, Jessica Alba and Gwyneth Paltrow.[37] In the show, Vaynerchuk and the team evaluated pitches from app developers vying for investment.[38][39]
Vaynerchuk hosted a video blog on YouTube called Wine Library TV (WLTV or The Thunder Show) from 2006 to 2011, featuring wine reviews, tastings, and wine advice. The show debuted in February 2006.[40] At 1,000 episodes in 2011, Vaynerchuk retired the show and replaced it with a video podcast called The Daily Grape.[41]
In 2010, Vaynerchuk launched Wine & Web on Sirius XM satellite radio. The show's programming paired new wine tastings in a "Wine of the Week" segment with coverage of gadgets, trends and startups in its "Web of the Week" segment.[42]
In 2014, Vaynerchuk launched The #AskGaryVee Show on YouTube in which he responds to questions from Twitter and Instagram.[43] The questions are mostly on entrepreneurship, family and business topics. The show inspired Vaynerchuk's fourth book, AskGaryVee: One Entrepreneur's Take on Leadership, Social Media, and Self-Awareness[44] which reached The New York Times Best Seller list.[45]
DailyVee is a daily, video-documentary series on YouTube hosted by Vaynerchuk. Started in 2015, he records interviews with other businessmen and broadcasts investor meetings and strategy sessions at VaynerMedia.[10][46]
Vaynerchuk has earned a social-media following around mentorship.[47] However, critics have called him a snake oil salesman.[5]
In 2015, Vaynerchuk was named to Crain's New York Business 40 Under 40.[48] In 2017, Vaynerchuk was listed as one of Forbes' Top Social Influencers.[49]
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