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The Learning Leader Show With Ryan Hawk

586: Erika Ayers Badan (Former Barstool Sports CEO) - Deserving Great Mentors, Learning From Failure, Building Your Career, Earning Your Dream Job, & Other Hard Truths About Life As A CEO

The Learning Leader Show With Ryan Hawk

Ryan Hawk

Careers, Management, Business

4.81.3K Ratings

🗓️ 9 June 2024

⏱️ 59 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

Read our book, The Score That Matters https://amzn.to/3VrogOC

Full show notes at www.LearningLeader.com

This episode is supported by Insight Global. Insight Global is a staffing company dedicated to empowering people. Please CLICK HERE for premier staffing and talent.

Notes:

  • What Erika learned from her dad: “He loved his work and was so full from it. Three weeks before he died he was doing Zoom calls with students from the ER even though it was beyond unnecessary and impractical to do so. If you love what you do it can add so much dimension to your life and the lives of others. He liked people and to learn from them. There’s something to learn from everybody. And the best control was no control - let things happen and learn from them & adapt.
  • Career advice: Know what your company is paying you to do. And the better you make your boss look, the better it will be for you. Find problems and clear the path for your boss. Make their life easier. Make them look good. That’s the role when you have a boss.
  • Must-Haves When she’s making a hiring decision:
    • Be able to share stories of how you’ve gone for something that failed, and learned
    • Be curious, ask thoughtful questions
    • Do research on the company. CARE.
    • Test the product. Be able to demonstrate that you know what it does.
    • Bring a point of view. Articulate what you could bring to the role and how you could make the company better.
  • JoanneI wanted to be you until I realized I couldn’t, so I decided to be me. I studied you for twelve years. You are the architect of all my work dreams, and you are the scaffolding I built myself on. You put force into my nature, and for that I am so grateful.
  • Getting the Barstool CEO role: She earned the job over 74 male candidates. “I wanted this job because they were considered too rogue, too untouchable, too badly behaved, too unproven. Dave Portnoy (the founder) was powerful, seemingly unmanageable, and volatile.”
  • In 2012, when Chernin bought a majority stake in Barstool, the company was worth $12 million. You sold it to Penn Entertainment seven years later for $550 million.
  • Make Your Own Luck – When Erika was nearly graduating college, she applied for an internship at Converse no less than 45 times. She never got an interview. Why? “I didn’t do anything unique enough, passionate enough, or memorable enough to deserve a chance at the job.”
  • “It was a heart attack every day for nine years,” Erika said of being Barstool’s CEO.
  • As the first-ever CEO of media magnate Barstool Sports, Ayers Badan led the company through explosive growth (+5000% in revenue and significantly more in audience), expanding the company from a regional blog to a national powerhouse brand and media company. During her 9 years steering the company, Barstool became a top ten podcasting publisher in the US, with the world's #1 sports, hockey, golf, and music podcasts, and a top 6 brand globally on TikTok.

Transcript

Click on a timestamp to play from that location

0:00.0

I really believe in failure. People who do not fail a lot are either without a pulse or they are

0:08.3

refusing to leave a very safe comfort zone.

0:12.3

Multipime CEO, senior leader at multiple companies,

0:15.0

earning the CEO job at Barstool.

0:18.0

I knew just by taking the job that it would be polarizing.

0:23.0

I'm against the world type of person,

0:25.0

so I'm very motivated by being slighted or being dismissed.

0:30.0

What were some of those early ideas that you brought to the table that that helped the company grow from 12 million bucks to 550 million?

0:40.4

It was following the talent who were following audience.

0:44.0

What would you say was the best and worst parts about working with Dave?

0:49.0

Dave knows what he doesn't know and is not afraid to say I don't know you don't find a lot of work ethic like Dave Portoine.

0:57.0

One of the things that I think is very underrated in work is caring, but actually caring goes so far.

1:05.0

We're living in an era of information overload.

1:10.0

We have more knowledge than ever before, but what do we do with it all?

1:15.0

If you're in Notion, you put that knowledge to work.

1:19.0

Notion is a place where any team can write, plan, organize, and rediscover the joy of play.

1:27.0

It's a workspace designed not just for making progress, but getting inspired. Try Notion for free when you go to

1:36.3

Notion.com slash learning leader. That's all lowercase letters notion

1:42.1

com slash learning leader and start turning ideas

1:46.6

into action and when you use our link you are supporting our show notion

1:52.3

dot com slash learning leader.

1:57.6

Welcome to the Learning Leader show

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