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SMAC Entertainment CEO Constance Schwartz-Morini says: If you aren’t invited to the table, create your own.

October 11, 2023
SMAC Entertainment CEO Constance Schwartz-Morini says: If you aren’t invited to the table, create your own.

Constance Schwartz-Morini

SMAC Entertainment CEO says: If you aren’t invited to the table, create your own.

Don Yaeger’s Corporate Competitor Podcast Episode 158

Constance Schwartz-Morini is not the person to turn your back on. Just ask the original D-O-double-G himself, Snoop Dogg.

Early in Constance’s career, she was part of a marketing team that was meeting its client, the famous rapper and youth football coach, only to find themselves staring at the back of his head as, resplendent in a long purple fur coat, The D-O-double-G stared out the window, much to the puzzlement of his “team.”

Although by no means the senior member of this team, Constance had enough of Snoop’s behavior. She looked at him and said, “Hey, we’re all here for you. And if you don’t want to hear what we have to say, we can leave and go back to our office and work with people who do want to hear us. We’re cool.”

Two days later, Snoop called her and asked her to be his talent manager, and she’s been managing him ever since. Snoop signed on with her at The Firm, where she elevated his prominence as a multi-platinum selling creative, and then again after she co-founded her own company, SMAC Entertainment, a talent management firm, business incubator, and Emmy-nominated production company she co-founded with Michael Strahan in 2011.

Today at SMAC Entertainment, Constance and her team continue to manage Snoop as well as Wiz Khalifa, Erin Andrews, and four Pro Football Hall of Famers: Strahan, Tony Gonzalez, and one of the biggest names in college football today, Deion Sanders.

Listeners to the podcast learn how, and when, to avoid going with the flow and avoiding “group think,” as well as using complex and even ambiguous situations as opportunities to grow. Lessons include:

  • Why fixating on job titles is an inaccurate way to predict quality and skill.
  • Choosing mentors who have done something very close to what you want to do.
  • Developing enough confidence to be able to ask, “Am I missing something here?”

Constance shared that several important early lessons in leadership were learned through her own sporting experiences. A 95-pound softball player in high school who didn’t see a lot of at bats, Constance says she was proud to be a backup and “bench cheerleader.” She and Strahan still are and want their team to be as well. “It doesn’t matter how great I play my position if the team loses,” Constance said. “And that’s what Michael and I instill in our team.”

This leader isn’t afraid to be a backup. Just don’t turn your back on her.

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