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Gary Vaynerchuk on why working incredibly fast matters

Moving at a cracking pace in business should be valued above anything else, says Gary Vaynerchuk. But theย serial entrepreneur says many company founders fail to understand how essential their every single minute is in their longer term quest to scale their startup. Instead, in Vaynerchuk’s words, “in the day-to-day they’re slow, and in the macro, […]
Martin Kovacs
Martin Kovacs
Gary Vaynerchuk

Moving at a cracking pace in business should be valued above anything else, says Gary Vaynerchuk.

But theย serial entrepreneur says many company founders fail to understand how essential their every single minute is in their longer term quest to scale their startup. Instead, in Vaynerchuk’s words, “in the day-to-day they’re slow, and in the macro, they want their business to be huge tomorrow”.

In a recent blog blog, Vaynerchuk described how “unbelievably fast” he works, praisingย the benefits of ‘micro-speed’ and ‘macro-patience’.

“On a daily basis, I am scrutinising my 12- to 15-hour days, down to the second and trying to fill in as much stuff with the smartest stuff into that bucket,” he says.

โ€œTo me, itโ€™s all about speed. I actually donโ€™t care about anything else. Speed, both in people skills and hard work, will trump anything.โ€

Attention to detail counts

Vaynerchuk says organising your time efficiently demands attention to detail, right down to the smallest details.

For instance, how long does it take you to travel to work, and is there a faster way? How much time do you spend browsing social media? How long is your lunch break?

Focusing on the smaller things will in turn help build the larger vision.

โ€œIt matters,โ€ Vaynerchuk writes.

โ€œAnd believe me, Iโ€™m taking meetings and making decisions that are going to disproportionately affect the success of my business and long-term career, every-single-day.

โ€œIโ€™m deciding what Iโ€™m going to eat for lunch or how Iโ€™m going to respond to that email. I just move fast.โ€

Thinking short or long term?

It may well be that you’re happy to focus on the present, however, does this conflict with your greater long-term plans?

Hard work now can lead to proportionately greater rewards later, so how prepared are you to make short-term sacrifices?

Vaynerchuk believes such short-term thinking โ€œdramatically changes your behaviourโ€.

โ€œSo, most people are working eight hours and trying to make money on every single hour and Iโ€™m here working 16 hours and trying to make money on four of those hours,โ€ he writes.

Micro-speed, macro-patience

Micro-speed and macro-patience are dual attributes that will work together to help realise your long-term goals, says Vaynerchuk.

It is matter of keeping goals in perspective and recognising that every little thing counts.

Cutting corners may lead to short-term gratification, but where will this leave you in the long term? Are your short-term goals at odds with your long-term planning?

Having got a handle on speed, Vaynerchuk observes that you also โ€œneed to have patienceโ€.

โ€œYou need to understand that no matter how fast you work, it doesnโ€™t happen overnight,โ€ he writes.

โ€œIt may happen in seven years (which is incredibly fast by most peopleโ€™s standards), but itโ€™s not going to happen overnight.โ€

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