BigDeal - #69 How To Get Paid More: The Problem Size Framework
Episode Date: May 26, 2025Codie discusses the importance of identifying and solving big problems in business to drive significant profits, emphasizing the ability to prioritize problems effectively leading to greater financial... success. To get help scaling your business to the next level, you can reach out to my team right here: https://contrarianthinking.typeform.com/boardroom-mc Want help scaling your business to $1M in monthly revenue? Click here to connect with my consulting team. Chapters 00:00 Identifying Big Problems for Big Profits 07:04 The Problem Prioritization Matrix 11:47 Using the Rice Score for Decision Making MORE FROM BIGDEAL: 🎥 YouTube 📸 Instagram 📽️ TikTok MORE FROM CODIE SANCHEZ: 🎥 YouTube 📸 Instagram 📽️ TikTok OTHER THINGS WE DO: 🫂 Our community 📰 Free newsletter 🏦 Biz buying course 🏠 Resibrands 💰 CT Capital 🏙️ Main St Hold Co Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Transcript
Discussion (0)
This episode is super, super important. How to Pick Big Problems. You aren't solving big problems. You won't make big money. When you find a problem, that's where the money is. That's not a mindset, by the way. It's a skill set. Big Harry solvable. This is where most scaling problems and opportunities live. This is the exact moment where most people run and thus you get to lean in. This is a big deal podcast and I'm Cody Sanchez. Welcome back. Today we're talking to you builders about how to make more money. The truth that we have today,
is if you aren't solving big problems, you won't make big money. And I wish I had heard this
sooner, that if you want to make more, the easiest way is to find the hardest game and to play it.
You know, the truth of the matter is in business, you're always going to have problems. If your
business doesn't have problems, it's probably dead. So I want to teach you a framework I use that
helps me find the right problems that will make you lots of money. And this is why what I'm
talking to you about is so critical today. If your business picks the wrong problems to focus
on. You will lose all your money and not make any more of it. If your team picks the wrong problems,
you're dead. And if you as an employee pick the wrong problems, you'll never make more money.
So this episode is super, super important. How to pick big problems. Oftentimes we run away from
big problems, right? We want to beat our head against the wall when you come up to them.
But I think this story started to reframe it totally for me. So a few months ago, Mark Andresen
was asked why Elon Musk is able to build rockets, electric cards, brain chips.
tunnels so effectively. And whether you like his politics or not, the answer was so good. Mark said
simply, what Elon does is he shows up every week at each one of his companies. He identifies the biggest
problem that the company's having that week. He fixes it. Then he finds a new problem,
and he does that every week for 52 weeks in a row. It's a relentless problem loop. Simple in theory
and brutal in practice. It requires proximity, so a willingness to actually live inside or
right next to friction. And most people don't operate that way. Most companies definitely don't.
Problems are treated like biohazards. Stay away. Okay, so rule number one, we are going to reframe.
I no longer want to hear you say in your business problems. Instead, we're going to say there's a
growth opportunity. Here's the truth of the matter. When you find a problem, that's where the money is.
The second you find a problem, you should be like, oh, wait a second. This was a bottleneck in the way
of the flow of money funneling to me. It sounds woo-woo, except it's real. We're going to process them,
redirect them, and then we're going to actually welcome them. This is different than what the rest
of corporate America does, because we've become professionals at problem avoidance. But at SpaceX,
they do the opposite. They send a 400 square foot skyscraper into the sky, knowing full well
it will probably explode spectacularly, publicly. But they want to know exactly what breaks,
when, and why, because every failure will help incapacitate dozens of future problems.
So Andresen describes Musk's idea, something like this. Like incredible devotion from a leader,
to fully, deeply understand what the company does
and being the lead problem solver in the organization.
And that last part really matters, the lead problem solver,
because it isn't really glamorous.
I mean, if you understand this, you know the uncomfortable truths,
is that as a founder, you're going to do the thing
that no one else wants to touch.
That's it.
But that's where all the leverage is.
What you earn usually reflects what you solve.
And that's why prioritization,
what sounds kind of fluffy, is actually super, super important.
If you let low-level problems become,
what you do, you get low-level pay. You have to be able to outsource the low-level problems,
otherwise you'll never be able to build rockets. Now, you don't need to like Elon to understand this,
I don't think. You don't need to agree with him. You don't need to launch rockets either.
In a $3 million HVAC business or a 20-year-old manufacturing brand, one constraint, one fixable pricing
model, one key hire, one broken ops process can change the trajectory of the entire company.
What you probably do need to do is move toward the problem that's going to move the needle.
I want you to think about it like this. On the left-hand side of the graph, up and down, you have your earnings size, how much money you can make. On the right-hand side of the graph, you have the problem size. I want you to realize that they're directly correlated. The bigger the earnings potential, the bigger the problem. The bigger the problem. The problem. The problem. The problem. The problem. The problem is what I use. So we are going to actually figure out how to prioritize problems using what I call the problem prioritization matrix. It's a mouthful, but this is what I use.
So Brad Jacobs has built multiple billion-dollar companies in logistics and just about everywhere.
He wrote a book called How to Make a Few Billion Dollars, which I thought was cute.
But what I love is he talks about this in a very specific Brad-only way.
So Brad says essentially, think of M&A, so mergers and acquisitions, something we talk a lot about,
is having four quadrants.
This is the same for any business and any problem.
They're defined by size and risk.
So first, you can see on the graph if you go to YouTube,
you have big, low-risk deals are the ones everybody wants, right?
You can make a lot of money, but not a lot of risk.
But they don't actually exist.
The second is small low-risk deals.
They exist, but you can't make much money from them because of their size.
Then you have small, hairy deals.
That's the worst quadrant.
That's like they're not going to make you much money, and they have a ton of problems.
The reward is super limited.
The odds are stacked against you, so why bother?
The bingo.
What you are looking for in your business is the big hairy deal. If you can find a big hairy deal
with solvable problems, that's where the real money is. And Jacobs didn't win by being perfect.
He won by getting really good at solving the right problems. So he's like, I'm not surprised
when things don't go perfectly. That's kind of the nature of this thing we're doing. That's not a
mindset, by the way, it's a skill set. Big, hairy solvable. This is where most scaling problems and
opportunities live. Now, you don't want it to be fatal, not unsolvable. We're not looking for
like cancer solving. But you're not, you're not, you're not.
You hit Roth and suddenly your cash conversion cycle turns sour.
Your ops leader is underwater.
Your CRM looks like it was built by a bunch of rabid raccoons.
You've got customer demand, but no clean way to deliver.
Revenue's up.
Morales down.
Your system scream at you every time you find five new clients.
You guys...
Okay.
When I sell my business, I want the best tax and investment advice.
I want to help my kids, and I want to give back to the community.
Ooh.
Then it's the vacation of a lifetime.
I wonder if my out of office has a forever setter.
An IG Private Wealth Advisor creates the clarity you need with plans that harmonize your business,
your family, and your dreams.
Get financial advice that puts you at the center.
Find your advisor at IG Private Wealth.com.
Let's talk groceries, specifically your groceries.
With Instacart, you want your groceries just the way you like them, right?
Well, the Instacart app lets you do just that.
They have a new preference pick.
that lets you pick how ripe or unripe you want your bananas.
Shoppers can see your preferences up front, helping guide their choices.
Instacart, get groceries just how you like.
Those aren't problems.
That's not failure.
That's actually your growth unlock.
Every time you find one of those, you should be silently thinking yourself.
Because Jacobs would argue, and so would I, that this is the exact moment where most people
run, and thus you get to lean in.
So if you want to win, you have to rearrange your brain to lean into those big, hairy problems.
figure out how to cut off the hair and de-risk, he would say. That's the job, not avoiding the hard
problems, but identifying them and selecting the right ones to solve. By the way, if you're building a
business right now and you're stuck or you want to break out to the next level, maybe you're not
where you want to be today. Believe me, I've been there many, many times. I want you to know,
I got you. We help thousands of business owners a year figure out how to scale to the next level.
One of my favorite mentor said, every level you have, there's just a higher level and a higher
devil. And so if you've been in business for a while and you're doing six, seven or eight figures,
there's probably one thing standing in the way of your next level. That's why we host growth and
scale workshops four times a year throughout the year in Austin, in Miami, in San Diego, and you may be a
fit to come to one of them. If it sounds interesting to you to get help on how to scale your business
to the next level, you can reach out to my team at the link in the show notes. We believe in you
builders, but we also believe that it's a lonely road and you can't do it by yourself.
So I like to take every single problem that I have and put it in that quadrant.
I need to hire a new administrative assistant to answer email.
Well, it's kind of like a small problem with a small reward.
Okay, that's fine.
I could spend a small amount of time on it.
I need to find an entire new exec team because my exact team isn't functioning right now.
Well, that's actually a big, hairy problem.
But if I figure it out, holy crap.
I spent six months looking for the president of this company, Contrarian Thinking.
I spent $80,000 on the search just for the recruiter to find him.
And the reason I was willing to spend all that time and all that money is because I knew
when I found him, even if I paid a lot to find him.
And then I had to pay him a lot, that one person would lock my entire business.
So I like to do this to myself.
I'm like, every time I get a problem, I'm like, self, remember, it's funny, like how people
get upset about finding problems in their business.
That's what business is.
It's constantly finding and solving problems and learning to enjoy the problem.
If the issue is real, but solvable, keep going.
I think most business owners waste years trying to avoid these moments and the best ones move towards them.
I have our teams use this matrix all the time. Print this out, put it up on the wall,
have then categorized their own problems and only solve the big ones.
I constantly am asking my team, why are you in here? Steve Jobs was actually really famous for this.
He was famous for a whole intermediate, a bunch of people would be in there,
and then he would look at somebody and if they weren't adding value and it didn't see,
seem like they were relevant to the meeting, he would say, what are you doing in this meeting?
Seems kind of rude. But actually, what was he doing? He was freeing them up to leave if it wasn't
relevant to them. He was saying, this isn't your problem set. So, for instance, you know,
here's how I did it this week. I literally this week was working on some funnels that we have for
one of our businesses. So most businesses have some sort of funnel that leads to a product. You get
your original lead and you move it through the process until they finally, until they finally buy.
Well, a lot of times if you're talking to executives, they name all these different reasons why stuff is going on.
But I start with this multi-step process. First, name your potential problems. Okay, so we listed out every single problem that marketing had.
Then, we picked the biggest one to solve. How? We wrote down how much money we could drive from each one, and we wrote down how much cost we could have from each one, and we wrote down all the potential solutions.
this is called the rice formula. So this model helps organizations make better data-driven decisions
by scoring based on four key factors. Reach, impact, confidence, and effort. But I change mine to
revenue. How much money will this problem that I solve make me? Impact, how much cost impact will we
have for doing this? Like, how much will it cost me? Confidence. How much confidence do we have or you have
in your estimates, like percentage or decimal reflecting certainty? So like if you're 80,
confident, that's 0.8. And then effort, how much total work personal months, weeks, or hours
will this initiative require? So let's use an example. So a rice score. Let's say here that you have
a revenue opportunity of a million dollars. You put a million dollars up front minus the cost,
$500,000. You put that all in parentheses times 0.8. I am 80% confident in both of these numbers,
the revenue I can drive plus the cost. Then I divide all.
of that by four, because I think it'll take me four weeks to do. That gives me a score. Now,
every single thing that I'm going to do, I score this way. Why? Because your ability to choose
the right problems will make you more money. Now, some companies lay this out with reach as opposed
to revenue, but I really care about cash flow, as you guys know. Here's the truth. If you don't
know what to do next, it helps to have a buddy to figure out what to do next. And oftentimes,
I think that buddy can be an equation. You can have a process and process limits anxiety.
follow the process and you know that you're going to hit this right step at some point if you don't get up.
In business, one of the loneliest things you can be, I think, is an owner of a business.
A lot of people think that it's hard to be an employee, having been both.
I would say an employee is a lot easier.
When a country's productivity cycle is broken, people feel it in their paychecks, their communities, their futures.
What does this mean for individuals, communities, and businesses across the country?
Join business leaders, policymakers, and influencers.
G's national series on the Canadian Standard of Living,
productivity and innovation.
Learn what's driving Canada's productivity decline
and discover actionable solutions to reverse it.
Visit BetMGM Casino and check out the newest exclusive.
The Price is Right Fortune Pick.
BetMDM and Game Sense remind you to play responsibly, 19 plus to wager.
Ontario only.
Please play responsibly.
If you have questions or concerns about your gambling or someone close to you,
please contact Connects Ontario at 1-866.
531, 2,600 to speak to an advisor, free of charge.
BetMGM operates pursuant to an operating agreement with Eye Gaming, Ontario.
And sometimes you make more money because you're not spending in order to eventually one day
have the potential ability to make money.
We know that it's hard to be an owner, but it gets a lot less hard if you have a process
and you have a principled way to do just about everything you do.
That's why I use the rice score.
If I go, okay, Cody, when a problem comes into my head,
I'm not stressed about it because I know a problem is hiding opportunity. I almost visually think about a
problem like a curtain where if I understand the problem, I pull back the curtain and behind that
curtain is money. Now I just need to figure out how much money is hiding behind the curtain. So I use
the rice score so that I can make that curtain transparent. I'm like, all right, there's this amount
of revenue that cost, here's my certainty, my fix. I think we should go after this problem.
This will also really help you if you have other team members or employees on your team. Why?
everybody wants a to-do list like this. They want 452 things that they can do to check things off
their list to feel good. But what they actually need to do is solve one problem. And if you get that
one thing out of your way, you probably have a different business in front of you entirely.
All right, let me know if you liked this episode this week, you guys. And if you're struggling
with your one thing in business, we are here to help you. This is my entire life mission.
And it's that you never stand alone in your business. And you get to follow proven data and
systems in order for you to grow. So if you want to talk to our team about coming to one of
our scaling and growth workshops. If you want to talk about different resources and communities we
have for builders, then you can hit the link in the description. We are here to help you as owner
nation. All right, see you next week. Hey, I have something special for you for being such a loyal listener
because you're here with me all the time. I get asked by a bunch of you, how do I tell if I should
buy a business or not? Should you buy a business or not? What price should you buy a business at?
How do you structure your deal? I got you, fam. So I'm going to gift you our deal calculator.
time I look at a deal. I grab the numbers, plug it in here, and see how much money I could make or
lose if I did a good or bad deal. So this is my gift to you. And if you're serious about buying a
business, we want to help you. You can talk to my team about if you're a fit for our business
buying community or curriculum. No matter what, here's your free gift. And if you need a hand
to hold, I got you too. Hey, crew, this is so cool. The podcast is growing like crazy. And it's
only actually because of one thing, you. I don't know if you know this, but the only way the big
deal pod grows is when you share it with somebody else. We don't do it.
ads. We don't do pay for play. We don't go on other people's podcasts and talk about it.
So if you think there was something helpful here, if we made you money, we made you think about
your business or life differently, the most beautiful thing you can do for me is share it.
And the most beautiful thing you can do for someone that you care about is to share it with
them, help them grow alongside you. So please share the pod. That's how we grow. And also tag me
on anything you share. I love resharing other builders across Instagram, Twitter, and all other
platforms. Thank you from the bottom of my heart. You're super important to me.
Thank you.
