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99U | Mark Ecko: Embrace the Mess @99u | Uploaded September 2015 | Updated October 2024, 17 hours ago.
About this presentation

Whether it’s due to exclusive communities in your industry or a slavish devotion to page views, tweets, and awards, it’s easy to get caught up in pleasing others. Entrepreneur, media mogul, and designer Marc Eckō tell us that, if we’re not careful, we can let others label us and define our career, robbing us of our natural potential. The solution? Stand up for yourself. What the gatekeepers may cite as a reason for your exclusion may very well lead to your success.

“Wealth that matters cannot be counted,” says Eckō. In this presentation, Eckō shares three strategies for taking control of your creative career, one gatekeeper at a time.

Watch more videos here: 99u.com/videos

About Marc Ecko

Once a graffiti artist with no connections or fashion pedigree, Marc Eckō left the safety net of pharmacy school to start his own company. Armed only with hustle, sweat equity, and creativity, he flipped a $5,000 bag of cash into a global corporation now worth hundreds of millions of dollars. Eckō is an American fashion designer, entrepreneur, investor and artist. He is the founder of Marc Eckō Enterprises, a global fashion and lifestyle company. He is also the founder and chairman of Complex Media, the world’s leading provider of fashion, entertainment, lifestyle, and product trends to young male tastemakers. Complex Media Network includes 110+ websites that generate more than 700 million page views and 70 million unique visitors per month. Eckō serves as an emeritus board member to the Council of Fashion Designers of America, Big Picture Learning, Tikva Children’s Home & Everloop. Marc lives in NJ with his wife and three kids.


About 99U

The 99U delivers the action-oriented education that you didn't get in school, highlighting real-world best practices for making ideas happen.
Mark Ecko: Embrace the MessJonathan Perelman: Content Is King, But Distribution Is QueenSteve Selzer: Designing for FrictionIan Spalter: Why Designers Should Work Like ComediansKelly McGonigal: How to Turn Stress Into an AdvantageJeff Sheng: Dont Ask, Dont Tell & Creativitys Role in Driving Social ChangeClive Wilkinson: The Theater of WorkSusan Gregg Koger: Being a Rookie Is an AssetNishat Akhtar: Look Around YouKelly Sue DeConnick: How To Make People Uncomfortable (And Still Make a Living)Starlee Kine: Fear, Heartbreak, and Making It Happen Against All OddsCasey Gerald: Purpose Is the New Bottom Line

Mark Ecko: Embrace the Mess @99u

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