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The following article came from RAW Magazine,
December 1999.
Special thanks to ShaneMcMahon21@aol.com
for typing this up!
All In The Family
What grew out of the boxing world in 1921 has evolved into a phenomenal entertainment marketing enterprise- World Wrestling Federation Entertainment, Inc. Shane and Stephanie McMahon, son and daughter of Vince and Linda McMahon, are in line to inherit the family-owned operation. What is the secret of their success? Education, a lot of hard work and most important, passion.
In this RAW exclusive
interview, both Stephanie and Shane speak about their initiations
into the business, their commitments to family and their visions for the
future of World Wrestling Federation Entertainment, Inc.
It would be easy to assume
that Shane and Stephanie would be next in line to inherit their family's legacy
based on birth right alone. However, nothing could
be further from the truth.
"We owned Cape Cod
Coliseum, a small arena that hosted semi-pro hockey and
rock concerts- the Grateful Dead, Van Halen, Ozzy," Shane explains. "That's
where Titan Sports, Inc- now World Wrestling Federation, Inc- was born.
I was 11 years old. I started on the clean-up crew after rock concerts. They
would line up 30 of us with buckets and we'd start combing the parking lots.
We'd go down one side and it was like a big sweep, just done with people. [We'd]
fill up all the buckets and dump all that stuff every 30 yards or so. I learned
the value of a dollar that way- what it really takes to do hard work."
At the age of 12, Shane
graduated to the inside crew and a year later, after both the company and the
family relocated to Connecticut, Shane began working in the warehouse in
Stamford. He packed orders, filled programs with live event inserts, stacked
boxes and stocked the warehouse.
"I did that for two
years," Shane recalls. "Then, I went out and I wanted to start saving
for a car. I was 14, almost 15, and I wanted to get a raise- but my dad
said no. And I was just like, OK. So, I went out and I got another job as
a laborer for a brick mason and I did that for a few
summers. I learned a trade that I could always fall back on if I ever needed it.
I actually helped build my parents' house, so I have a lot of pride in it- when
I lived there and every time I go back. I helped do all the brick and stone
work."
Combined with his labor job,
Shane interned at the Federation's headquarters in the marketing department,
focusing on licensing. He also had the opportunity to go out on the road.
"In '89 I started in the
ring crew, traveling around the country, setting up the rings,"
Shane continues, "where all the guys would get on the plane to fly to the
next town- if it was more than three hours, we'd drive the four or five hours.
First to get there, last to leave. Once the ring was set up I'd either ring
announce or referee or whatever else needed to be done and pack up that night
and drive to the next town. I've been to every state in this country, except for
Oregon and Alaska. I've set up rings in almost, I'd say, 70 percent of the
country."
Stephanie's induction into the
business was a little different from her brother's. She was not allowed to go on
the ring crew because it was deemed not an appropriate environment for a little
girl.
"I wanted the opportunity
to go, but I learned different aspects of the company that Shane didn't
necessarily learn," says Stephanie. "And I think that,
collaboratively, what we have learned will really complement each other.
Now,
I love the experience of being on the road because I am able to do it, even
though I didn't set up the rings and take them down- a fundamental part of our
business that I do wish I had been able to experience. But I'm very happy that I
got to contribute in other ways. I started
off as a receptionist. At that time reception handled all fan calls, as
well all company calls; there was no fan services department. I opened all
the fan mail as well as controlled the stamps and
everything else internal. Everything went through the receptionist. I was a
receptionist for about two years."
Stephanie then went on to
intern in various departments- Human Resources, Marketing and Pay-Per-View,
Media Relations, the television studio as a production assistant, New Media, and
this year with the president and CEO- her
mother, Linda McMahon.
"That's when I became full-time,"
Stephanie continues. "I spent three months in my mother's office and it was
the most incredible three months. It's a tremendous opportunity to be able to
sit in every meeting and every phone call that the CEO has, for three months.
Then I spent six months with my father, who is the chairman. I miss [working
with] him very, very much."
Today, Stephanie is an account executive in the
New York sales office and still learning the business. Shane heads up the
Federation's Internet division, continues as an on-air talent and contributes
creative content for story lines, as well as taking part in the overall direction
of the company. Both siblings graduated from Boston University- Stephanie with a
degree in Communications and Shane with a B.S. in Mass Communications and Public Relations. The question is: Was it assumed by their parents
that Shane and Stephanie would carry on the family business- or did they
have a choice?
"My parents never pressured either Shane or
me into working for the company," says Stephanie. "My parents were
very supportive in everything that we wanted to do. Like I said, when I was
younger, I was a little bit of a ham and I used to dance. I took ballet, jazz,
tap, point- everything. That was extra-curricular, as well as playing sports in
school. And my parents always supported me- you know, if I wanted to become a
dancer, if I wanted to be a choreographer, if I wanted to be anything. I always
did have this love to perform. But my first love first and foremost has always
been the World Wrestling Federation."
The backbone of the World Wrestling Federation's
continued success and evolution is definitely family solidarity. I was impressed
with the passionate conviction both Stephanie and Shane expressed with regard to
the McMahon clan.
"Definitely, family is the most important
thing to me," Stephanie discloses. "That's one of the reasons why I
love this company so much, and one of the reasons I work so hard for this
company is because it is an extension of my family. You know, the World
Wrestling Federation has been in my family for four generations and, hopefully,
my children will want to be a part of that as well. But I certainly will not
pressure them just as we were not pressured. But family is most definitely the
number one priority to me."
Family is also on Shane's mind. He and his wife,
Marissa- who happens to be the manager of National Public Relations for the
World Wrestling Federation- plan to have children some day.
"I want to create a legacy for them...
again, if they want it," Shane reveals. "That's up to them. They'll
have every
opportunity to have the same education. What's really cool for them- and I look
forward to the day- is that we'll be so diverse by then, whatever their
specifics are, they will have opportunity. Marissa is an extremely dynamic woman with many
talents, one of them being creativity. She has a very creative mind. Among other
things, Marissa is an unbelievable chef, artist and business
woman; she's really amazing. So, if any of our daughters or sons have that
inclination toward her creativity and her drive, we have the whole Creative
Services division. Or we might become our own advertising agency... that's wide
open for them. Or if they want to be an actor, then that's open for them because
we have the movie industry. Or if they want to be a producer of a film, they can
go to film school and plug right in.
Then, there's Stephanie and her family... if her
children, along with her husband, want that, then it will be open for them, too.
As we continue to grow and diversify, hopefully, we can multiply fast enough!"
Shane suggests.
Already a diverse entertainment enterprise, Shane
and Stephanie have distinct visions of where they plan to take the company. The
future of World Wrestling Federation is certainly is strong, capable hands.
"This company is growing so enormously and
so fast... looking into things, such as a record company- we're already in the
record business, but really, really focusing on that. So, whatever that
company's called... if it's RAW records- you know, the television show-
the Internet division [for we] might also do a movie- a movie production
company- not just Federation shows, but other television shows," Shane
explains. "Also, we have the World Wrestling Federation Hotel and Casino
project... you know, the Entertainment Complex. It's getting so big and so
diverse that we just want to make every single entity healthy and that's going
to take a lot, a lot of planning to build the right team. So, there's plenty of
the pie to go around for everybody. That's my vision to continue... whatever
product we create, to take that formula of what we do today- and applying that
same formula to any product we want to create. And we know how to do it and how
to be successful doing it."
There is no doubt that Shane and Stephanie have
inherited the entrepreneurial spirit and savvy business sense of their parents,
Vince and Linda McMahon. So, what does the future hold for Shane and Stephanie,
as well as the World Wrestling Federation? While nothing is written in stone, it
is certain that the world is Shane and Stephanie's oyster- and one that is most
definitely cultivating a pearl.
"I see Shane and I being an unstoppable
team," explains Stephanie. "And I think that our style will really complement each
other's and make this company even more successful than it is. I don't
think that there is any limit to what the World Wrestling Federation can become or
already is. We are truly an entertainment marketing enterprise. And the World
Wrestling Federation will be a brand that will be associated with music,
movies, television- any kind of entertainment. The World Wrestling Federation is
a unique brand and with the creative focus that we have on story line and
production value, the high quality of product that we put our heart and soul
and everything into. Every-thing that has that World Wrestling Federation logo,
in a sense, has the McMahon name on it. And Shane and I are just going to work
our hardest to ensure that it is the best possible product it can be."