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The GaryVee Audio Experience
The GaryVee Audio Experience•December 16, 2025

Great Marketing Won’t Save a Bad Product (Business & Marketing Chat)

An engaging fireside chat about marketing, branding, and the critical importance of having a great product, featuring insights from Gary Vee and Poppi founder Allison Ellsworth on how to build a brand that resonates with consumers.
Creator Economy
Startup Founders
Ecommerce & Dropshipping
Branding
Gary Vaynerchuk
Allison Ellsworth
Kim Kardashian
TikTok

Summary Sections

  • Podcast Summary
  • Speakers
  • Key Takeaways
  • Statistics & Facts
  • Compelling StoriesPremium
  • Thought-Provoking QuotesPremium
  • Strategies & FrameworksPremium
  • Similar StrategiesPlus
  • Additional ContextPremium
  • Key Takeaways TablePlus
  • Critical AnalysisPlus
  • Books & Articles MentionedPlus
  • Products, Tools & Software MentionedPlus
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Timestamps are as accurate as they can be but may be slightly off. We encourage you to listen to the full context.

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Podcast Summary

This podcast features a fireside chat between Gary Vaynerchuk and Allison Ellsworth (founder of Poppi soda) at a Fiserv event in Las Vegas. The conversation explores the fundamental differences between branding and sales, with Gary emphasizing that marketing is harder because it's art and requires trust, while branding builds long-term value compared to direct sales. (02:44) Allison shares her journey from starting Poppi in her kitchen to building a billion-dollar brand and eventual acquisition by Pepsi, highlighting the importance of taking nine months to develop their brand identity after Shark Tank. The discussion covers the rise of what Gary calls the "interest media era" - where content algorithms show us what we're interested in rather than who we follow - and critiques how big brands still operate on outdated 1991 marketing principles.

  • Main themes: The podcast focuses on authentic brand building, the shift from social media to interest media, the importance of product-brand alignment, and why scrappy entrepreneurial marketing beats corporate approaches

Speakers

Gary Vaynerchuk

Gary is an entrepreneur and CEO of VaynerMedia, a marketing and branding agency. He built his family's liquor store from $3.8 million to $60 million in revenue without raising capital or even having a credit line, pioneering early digital marketing through wine videos and Google AdWords. He's also the author of "Day Trading Attention" and a prominent voice in social media marketing and entrepreneurship.

Allison Ellsworth

Allison is the founder of Poppi, a prebiotic soda brand that she started in her kitchen and built into a billion-dollar company before selling to PepsiCo. She appeared on Shark Tank, later returned as a guest shark, and has accumulated over 3 billion views on TikTok. Under her leadership, Poppi became known for its vibrant branding and cultural relevance, particularly among young women.

Key Takeaways

Great Marketing Can't Save a Bad Product

Gary emphasizes that one of the biggest mistakes small businesses make is having excellent marketing skills but a poor product. (07:13) He explains that good marketing against a bad product only speeds up everyone discovering that your product is subpar. Allison reinforces this by noting that while Poppi had great branding, it started with having a genuinely good product first. The lesson is clear: invest in product quality before scaling marketing efforts, as no amount of creative campaigns can compensate for fundamental product issues.

Reply to Every Single Comment and DM

Gary reveals his secret weapon from 2007-2011: he personally replied to every single person who tweeted at him for four years straight. (39:59) He's shocked by how many business owners post content, receive seven comments, and reply to none of them. Community building isn't theoretical - it's like working out. You either do it or you don't. Building 20,000 truly engaged customers can create a massive business, as evidenced by Coca-Cola having to change back their formula due to heavy users' complaints.

Use the 80/20 Budget Rule for Cultural Moments

Allison explains Poppi's strategic approach: 80% of their budget goes to planned, structured campaigns tied to retail moments, while 20% remains flexible for cultural opportunities. (13:53) Examples include creating an "Amaya Papaya" flavor when Love Island went viral or partnering with the Lakers despite not being able to sell there. This approach allowed them to take calculated risks and stay culturally relevant, even when VCs and investors felt uncomfortable with the uncertain ROI.

We're in the Interest Media Era, Not Social Media Era

Gary argues we've moved beyond social media into what he calls "interest media" - where algorithms show us content based on our interests rather than who we follow. (25:23) This shift means content creators and brands have more control over reaching specific audiences organically. The implication is that quality, interest-driven content can find its audience regardless of follower count, making it possible for anyone to break through with the right approach.

Don't Let Ego Block Your Growth

Allison's final advice centers on humility as a secret weapon. (41:19) She emphasizes not letting ego prevent you from accepting help, hiring better people, or stepping back from roles you're not best suited for. Gary echoes this by noting that humility balances perfectly with confidence. The most successful entrepreneurs know their superpowers and build teams around their weaknesses rather than trying to do everything themselves.

Statistics & Facts

  1. Gary built his father's liquor store from $3.8 million to $60 million in revenue without raising any capital or having a credit line, operating on just 10% gross profit margins. (09:05) This demonstrates the power of bootstrapped growth through innovative marketing.
  2. 95% of marketing campaigns are expensive failures, according to Gary's experience in Madison Avenue. (03:17) He notes he's being "kind" with this statistic, suggesting the actual failure rate may be even higher.
  3. Allison's viral TikTok video has garnered 250 million views, with her face appearing in 3 billion total views across the platform. (13:24) This massive organic reach played a crucial role in building Poppi's brand awareness and community.

Compelling Stories

Available with a Premium subscription

Thought-Provoking Quotes

Available with a Premium subscription

Strategies & Frameworks

Available with a Premium subscription

Similar Strategies

Available with a Plus subscription

Additional Context

Available with a Premium subscription

Key Takeaways Table

Available with a Plus subscription

Critical Analysis

Available with a Plus subscription

Books & Articles Mentioned

Available with a Plus subscription

Products, Tools & Software Mentioned

Available with a Plus subscription

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