The Game with Alex Hormozi - 5 Businesses. 5 Fixes. One Playbook | Ep 894
Episode Date: August 15, 2025In this Q&A episode, Alex (@AlexHormozi) takes real-time questions from entrepreneurs and diagnoses what’s holding their businesses back. From underpriced offers to broken sales processes, he de...livers unfiltered, tactical advice for scaling. You’ll hear how he helps founders identify the single constraint that’s stopping them, how to fix it fast, and why focusing on fewer things usually leads to bigger wins.Welcome to The Game w/Alex Hormozi, hosted by entrepreneur, founder, investor, author, public speaker, and content creator Alex Hormozi. On this podcast you’ll hear how to get more customers, make more profit per customer, how to keep them longer, and the many failures and lessons Alex has learned and will learn on his path from $100M to $1B in net worth.Wanna scale your business? Click here.Follow Alex Hormozi’s Socials:LinkedIn | Instagram | Facebook | YouTube | Twitter | AcquisitionMentioned in this episode:Get access to the free $100M Scaling Roadmap at www.acquisition.com/roadmap
Transcript
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Like as a physical product, e-commerce owner, like your core most important skill is the brand.
Like you can't outsource that.
It's the most important thing.
Like so you need to learn the skill of branding, which is fundamentally making associations
with things that people in your audience find positive.
How's this morning?
Good?
Super tactical?
Yes.
Okay, good.
I always want to make sure we do that.
You might be wondering why we kind of organize things this way.
Well, first off, it was because we've just iterated it a bunch of times and it worked out.
But basically, we wanted to make sure one key thing happens, which is that you allocate resources
towards the thing that gives you the highest return.
And so fundamentally, the difference between entrepreneurs who move faster versus the ones
who move slower is that they actually physically move faster or slower, that they choose
the right things to do.
And more importantly, the things not to do.
Because we have such limited resources and the smaller your business is, the fewer resources
you have.
And so you might see Elon and say, hey, how can Elon have $9 billion companies or whatever it
now. Well, he has like 100 children, so who knows, right? The guy does a lot. But to the same
degree, you might only have the resources to do like half of one thing. And we get in trouble
when we try and do too much because you just can't do that many things well. And what Elon's kind
of superpower is, is more so than anything, obviously he's a great strategy, he's great a promotion,
but he's so good at attracting the top talent because people want to work for, you know,
one of the smartest human beings ever from a purely technical perspective. And so, like,
that is how he gets his operating leverage. That being said, this is what I wouldn't want to have
happen, which is that you go home and then you say, okay, I'm going to start at the top
this list and start working my way down because it means that you didn't hear anything from this
entire two days. I'd rather you open up a new page and then have the three things that you think
will drive the absolute highest return possible and then forget everything else. And if it really
up to me, I'd rather you pick one of those three things and then cross out the other two. And so a really
wonderful figy process that I try and exercise a lot because where the role that I have sits within
most businesses is that I will get brought in to look at everything and then think, okay,
what's our goal? Let's say that we want to triple the business or we believe that we have a triple
in us this year. We say, okay, what are the fewest amount of things that would have to happen in order
for us to do that? There's, of course, a lot of things that could happen. Because as long as
you're not supply constrained, then it's like, well, we could increase our sales conversions.
We could increase our traffic. We could have another acquisition channel. We could add more,
you know, whatever's, right, in order to increase throughput. But at the end of the day,
if there's a way that we can more efficiently do that, meaning if there's just one thing that
we could do, like if we only did that and that got us our triple, then why are we talking about
everything else? Like, why are we talking about it? Why wouldn't we just allocate all of our resources
to making sure that one thing actually happened? And I think that is fundamentally why we've been
able to move disproportionately quickly with the businesses that we have. And so with that being said,
I've had the distinct pleasure of entering a handful of business-related questions. And so what I found
interesting is that the places where business owners get stuck is typically not tactical. Sometimes
it's tactical, but it's typically strategic, meaning that they get stuck in a decision. And what's really
harrowing about that is that decisions can take as long or as little time as you take to make them,
which means that some people stay stuck for years and never get past them. And so a lot of times,
it's like you grow, of course there's a constraint, but usually there's a decision behind that
constraint that's actually the thing that's blocking you. And so usually it's when you have to choose
between two terrible decisions and they both suck. One just sucks now, the other sucks later.
And so the first one that I see is avatar selection, meaning I have, you know, three different
avatars that I sell to. I'm doing three million dollars a year. And I really do prefer this avatar,
but the other two together are 50% of my business. If I stop selling to them, I will go out of business.
right that's a that's a bad thing but if i don't stop selling to them i will want to kill my business
also not a good thing right and so what do you do right so these are kind of the rock and hard
play scenarios the next is data this is the only one that is not necessarily rock and heart
place but it is worth mentioning because it's happened so many times i get a lot of math questions
which is like hey i've got these two product lines i'm not sure which one to go all in on and those
are questions that get getting answered with math but then i say hey so what's lTV on this and what's
turn on this and what you turn on that. And then the person might say, I don't know. Well, it's like,
well, if that's the one thing that's holding the business back, then you should stop what you're doing
and only find out the answer to that question. And sometimes it takes a month. Sometimes it takes two
months. Okay, fine. But distracting yourself with kind of the urgent but not important things that
come out throughout the day still puts your long term goals on hold. The next is focus,
which is typically I have two businesses, which one, you know, and they're both great and I can't
stop one of them because I would make less money if I had one business instead of two tomorrow.
But I guarantee you that you'll make less money in five years because you have two businesses
instead of one. The next one is over expansion. So I have one location that's working well.
And so then I opened up my second location. My first location dropped a little bit. My second
location didn't go as high as my first one. And so now I have twice the liability and about
the same amount of profit. And I have twice the work and life sucks. And so I think the answer is I
should open a third location. Right. Rock and Hard Place. What do I do? Do I shut down my new
location or like how do I fix this right and typically you have this much profit and so the answer is
something really hard which is either you have to cut down one location go back re-fortify the base or you have
to give up almost all of your profit to bring someone in on a shot that they're going to be able to help
you out who's good enough and because fundamentally like no business ever over expands you just under
talent it's a great way of thinking about it because you can't do anything about overexpension you can do
something about undertalanting the next one is compensation so this goes in both directions
hey, I've got an HVAC business and, you know, the phone's ringing off the hook, but I can't take
the business anymore. I can't find any dudes to do HVAC stuff, technicians. And then I say, cool,
well, how much are you running good margins? And they're like, yeah. I'm like, okay, well,
what do you pay your guys? X. Okay, well, why don't you pay your guys more than X? I don't know.
It's like, well, you have the cash flow, it's the constraint. What are we talking about?
Right. So it could be a competition on the low side or it could be the other side, which is
I had a physical therapist came the other day. Everything was good. Like marketing, sales, everything was
working. She was at full capacity, but she was not profitable. And I was like, okay, well, how is this
happening? And she said, well, 50% of revenue I give to my therapist. And I was like, well, does that,
do they like rent shares from you kind of thing? Kind of like to the salon model. She said, no,
I do everything. I run all the marketing. I close the deals. I'm the one who fills the toilet
paper up up. They use my materials and they just show up for work and just have all these full
calendars. And I said, it must be nice. And so rock and hard place. She can either lower her
compensation and then potentially lose her team or not do that and never make money. What do you do?
Right. The next one is underpriced. I would guess right now half of you at least are underpriced.
And I think that's just because of psychology. Typically like as soon as people start saying no,
you back off on pricing. That's usually very far from where the ideal sweet spot on pricing is.
And so a lot of entrepreneurs will stop and it's like, okay, you know, two out of three people,
you know, one out of three people is saying no, I don't, I don't want to hear any more no.
But usually if you have two out of three people who are saying yes, you probably have a two and a half X in price sitting there to get to where you should be.
And at that point, you'd have maybe half the delivery with two and a half times the revenue, you'd make a hell of a lot more profit.
And so super common.
And then the last one is what I call just a single product business.
And there's nothing wrong with this per se.
It's only an issue when you're not profitable as a result.
So I had an example where I had a guy who taught people to speak English in Latin America and he sold digital products from a YouTube.
YouTube channel that had like three million subs. And he was selling like seven to eight hundred people a
month on these like 20 to call it a thousand dollar products. And the issue was, or what I asked
him to do was I was like, what if we called those people and made them another offer? He said there's
no way, no one over spend more than a thousand dollars on language stuff. And what was really great
for me in this exact moment is that there was a guy right next to us who was from Latin America,
who didn't have English as his first language. And he looked at him. He was like, I mean, would you have
paid $5,000 to learn English.
And the guys just looked at him like very soberly and was like, I would have given everything
I had.
And I was like, I'm fucking right.
And of course, he didn't listen.
So it doesn't matter.
He has a social media agency now.
So you can't make good decisions for people.
So that being, he thought it would be less competitive.
So anyways, these are kind of the seven growth sins.
As you go through, I'll try and do one of these because I'll point because usually
they fall into these buckets.
With that being said, let's let's A some Q's.
Yes, sir?
Hi, yeah.
My name is Dylan.
I do power washing, solar panel cleaning, window cleaning.
Wait, power washing.
Solar panel cleaning.
Solo panel cleaning.
Solar panel cleaning.
Okay, God, I was like, where are you selling solar and you're doing?
I was like, hold on.
Yeah, window cleaning.
And we do like $500,000 in revenue.
Amazing.
I want to be at a million.
Supreme, right?
Yeah, Supreme Power Wash.
And what I think is stopping me is strategies to attract or reach out to business.
to business reoccurring clients.
And if I should just focus on doing that primarily.
Okay.
So right now you're residential?
Yeah.
Door knocking, yeah.
So what are margins now?
Profit.
Oh, yeah, we're making $500,000 a year.
Profit.
Yeah.
So what's revenue?
Topline.
Sales.
The dollars you collect?
$500,000.
What do you take home?
Oh, $250,000.
Okay, so half.
Yeah.
Okay.
So, and that's all residential?
right now? Yeah, there's a little bit of like some like apartment complexes or. Okay, so what stops you from
doing more of that? People just call us on the phone by my by luck and we get, you know. So it's referrals is the
primary way of growing the business right now. Okay, so you don't have an acquisition channel. And so the thought
process that you have is I'm going to start an acquisition channel and go after commercial cleaning rather
than residential. What's an acquisition channel, yeah? So how, the way you get customers. Right now my phone rings and I'm getting
referrals from existing customers who are calling me up and saying, hey, can you clean my stuff?
You say yes. But it's very much dependent on that phone ringing, right? Okay. So then you're thinking,
or you're telling me that what you want to do next is build out a way of getting customers
in the door and you want to target commercial. Yeah, because we have like this one client that just
came upon us and I noticed like it's a lot more money and it's a lot more stable. Yeah,
because it's reoccurring on a monthly basis. Yeah. So.
So basically, hopefully I've seen this before, right?
You've got OB, and then I'll just put affiliates from over here.
So you've got four ways that you can get clients right now besides referrals,
which is what you're currently doing.
So do you have experience with any of these things, running ads, posting organic content,
cold outreach, or do you have like people who already have a lot of these types of customers already?
I have like a third party help with the ads.
How much do you spend a month on the ads?
2000. Okay. Do you know if you get anything from it? Yeah. I would say like we get more like off like
door knocking and referrals. Okay. So you door knock? Okay. So you're resumed a month here. You're doing
door knocking. So how many, how many deals a month are you doing off door knocking? Like 20.
Okay. 20 here. What's the average deal size? Like 350 to 1,800. Okay. So I'll just call 500. Okay.
So you got 10,000 a month there, that's not right?
Okay, the rest is the phone rings, or what other percentage is this?
Like the...
Does more come from the door knocking or this?
Probably door knocking.
Probably.
Yes, door knocking.
Okay, so you say like half comes from this compared to door knocking?
Okay.
What stops you from spending like five times more money here?
The fear of not getting my money is back on the third party doing its job right.
I think the first, like you need to get this in place.
You need the data, meaning you need attribution tracking, which if somebody else is
helping you run this, they should do it. If they don't, then you probably find someone who does know
how to give attribution for the ads that you're doing. I wouldn't say, hey, let's go after a new
avatar and build a whole new way of getting customers when you currently have two that are working,
or one that's working, one that we're not sure it's working. But if you're spending $2,000,
you're getting more than one deal a week from ads, well, then it's probably working because
you're spending $500 a week. If the average deal is $500 and you're getting more than that, then you're
probably doing okay. And so you might actually be sitting right now in something that's getting
five to one or 10 to one, but you're only spending $2,000 a month. And so it's like if we can just
bump that to 10, then that would be big. Now, you don't have to jump there immediately, like go from
two to four, two to six, whatever you feel comfortable with. But step one is get the attribution in place.
Step two, then increase it, provide the attribution, meaning that we can track what we spend versus what
we make is good, then spend as much as you can there. Once you've tapped that, you'll have a little
bit more cash flow. And at that point, we can make the decision of, okay, do we want to open up another
paid ads channel, do we want to spend up more door-to-door guys? Local is the only exception I have
for being willing to have more than one acquisition channel. I'm not against it as hardcore as I am
for other businesses. Because if you're in, you know, bumfuck Kentucky, like there's only 50,000
people. Like, you've got to reach them as many ways as you can. But right now, attribution,
spend more if you can as long as the attribution's good. I don't think you should change the
business model. I think you should just do more of what's already working. And you just don't know
if what you're doing is working, but I can tell you got 50% margins. It's not bad. Yes, sir.
Cool.
Thank you, Alex.
Yeah, you bet.
Congrats on the business.
Hello, my name's Jessica.
I have a subscription-based...
Boat rental.
Yes.
Yeah, but membership.
Yes, yes, I do.
Currently doing $2 million top line.
I'd like to pass the $10 million mark.
What's stopping me is a decision.
I came here to this workshop because I've been doing this 13 years.
I've put in my 10,000 hours.
not making enough money.
So I came to learn how to scale.
I have two options in front of me in the next six months,
one to purchase an existing club that would more than double.
And another to start a third.
I have five locations.
This would make 10.
And you're doing like two-ish with $500,000 in profit, right?
Yes, $600.
I mean.
Hey, every dollar counts.
I'm with you.
Okay.
Yes.
And in a session that I had this morning or this afternoon in asking questions about how to scale,
Ed told me, I should not scale, I should sell.
Hmm.
So.
Isn't because you don't like it?
Yeah, that's what he said.
What?
I'm just reading here.
Yeah.
He said, do you love boats?
And I said, no.
Well, before we break your life, just a couple frames, because I didn't say this earlier,
but I'll say this now.
I'm really not talking to anyone per se.
I'm talking through them to everybody else because believe it or not, the problems that you have
the same problem that like five other people here have or 10 other people here have. So just want to
set that up front. I'll just share something that might be just maybe a different frame on this,
which like if you read the story of the three stone cutters, so a guy walks up, sees a stone cutter
and he says, hey, how's your day going? The guy's like, it's terrible. It's back breaking work. It sucks.
And he's like, okay, wow, I got it. And he goes to the second stone cutter. And the guy says,
well, you know, pays the bills, you know, keeps the family fed, you know, that's fine. And then he goes to the third
stone cutter and he says, you know, how's your day going? He says, oh, it's amazing. I'm building a
cathedral that, you know, is going to last for generations for my kids, right? And so the same work,
just different perspectives on the work itself. And so the perspective that I'll share is just that
having now owned a lot of different businesses, almost all businesses are the same as if you chunk up
high enough. Because if you get two or three levels up, you're going to have a director of sales,
director of marketing, you're going to have director of IT, you're going to have personnel issues. You're
going to have HR, you're going to have legal. And it's going to suck every other day. You know what I mean?
And so it's kind of like, you know, I've had 10 executive assistants and I currently have none.
And the common thread between all of me and them is them, obviously. And so I say this because like,
if we're trying to hope for the business to be the thing that brings you joy, I would just really
strongly push against that. And I'd rather you just see the business through a different perspective,
which is like this is an opportunity they get to learn some skills. Like a good friend of mine,
He was in the fitness industry and then started a cookie company, which makes it seems completely
antithetical, right? He's like, I'm creating demand and supply. But what was interesting about it is
that I asked him, was like, are you passionate about cookies? And he was like, no, not at all. And I was like,
why are you doing this? And he's like, well, I think there's a good gap in the market. This is before
crumble. So he had the right idea. Like, he thought that gourmet cookies were going to be a thing.
He ended up having a bad partnership, whatever. But the point is, is that he was right about
his idea. He did 100 different recipes to figure out the one chocolate chip cookie that was amazing.
And he did and did really well. But the thing is that he wasn't, he wasn't in love with cookies. He was in
love with being excellent. And I think that that's at least how I try to see business. It's like,
how can I let this business be an expression of the values that I have rather than this business
has to fill a hole in my heart. So back to you. Okay. So do we exit this thing? Do we get another
location? Because I'll bet if you just didn't hate the people you work with, you'd probably be okay
with it. With getting another location? Oh, no, just in general. Like, I mean, because right now you have this
this desire, because you have what, $2 million in debt, right? Yes. Yeah. So you have $2 million in debt.
you're doing 600, not $500,000 in profit noted.
And so basically after taxes, it's going to take you like six years, seven years to pay the whole thing off, assuming you don't spend any money, which would suck, right?
That would blow.
Okay.
So I can feel that that is crushing weight.
So either you want to scale past it so these debt payments aren't killing you because it's eating probably the majority of your cash flow or selling it and kind of either starting over or, you know, doing something else, et cetera, right?
That's right.
Okay.
Do you have an offer on the business?
No.
I wasn't even looking to sell.
until an hour ago.
It was like solid.
So you have 25% margins, so it's not bad.
I don't know less than that because you're a little higher than $2 million in revenue, right?
$2.7 is that where it is?
$2 million.
It's $2 million.
Okay.
So it's $2 million top line, $600,000, excuse me, $600,000 bottom line.
So, I mean, you're running 30% margins.
The only issue is you made a bad decision like four years ago, or however many years ago you took the debt out.
Yes, because it's pretty capital intensive to have 50 boats.
Yeah.
So how's cash flow for the business?
Good.
I mean, COVID was great.
We sold.
like crazy and fortunately put a lot away so I don't have a cash constraint that's great so okay
outside of like let's sell this thing you still want to grow it right I want to grow business this
just happens to be the vehicle I don't think this is a bad business I mean a boat membership
fundamentally you have very high margins on each incremental membership correct yes so you're kind of
at this point where like you've covered all your cost and so each additional membership makes you a lot
more money right disproportionately drops the bottom line is my point okay
So what stops you from selling 10 times the memberships?
That was the question that I tried to answer coming here and going through the framework.
And when we were going through the circles yesterday, I came down to, I think it's my offer.
Okay. And is this a franchise or is this yours that you just start on your own?
That's the other part of the equation is that it's a licensing model.
And I think the conversation in the room today was, is it really mine if I'm under a licensing structure?
Yeah.
I mean, you can sell the business.
You have an existing agreement, but what do you give away top line?
Nothing.
Oh, okay.
What do you license?
Marks in the system.
It's a reservation.
Do you pay a flat fee?
So technically my members do because we're licensed and not a franchise I can't pay directly,
so the members do.
Okay.
What percent do they give away?
It's $500 a month membership.
$30 a month goes to corporate.
Okay, so whatever that is, 6%.
Okay.
I mean, that's fine.
Okay, so I mean, I wouldn't say it's strangling you.
Okay, so it's 20% of your margin functional.
So do you currently do ads? Do you do outbound? Do you organic? You're doing affiliates? What are you doing to grow?
We spend about 6,000 a month in paid ads. We do a lot organic.
Which row is on this? Good, bad.
Well, according to the marketing agency that I use, they're very, very great.
According to they're like, it's acceptable. Yes, yes. You just spend all your money here.
I only spend $11 per lead, and that's a fabulous number in the industry, evidently.
Well, what percentage are you closing of leads?
The industry standard is 6% when I was doing it myself.
I'm going to pause here.
Just for everybody.
Zero fucks about industry standard.
Okay.
And I'll tell you why.
Average American, overweight, in debt, divorce seven times over.
Why would I care about the average interest person?
They all suck.
They don't make money.
Fuck them.
So anyway, sorry.
Go back to you.
We're at 4% lead to close.
Okay, 4% of late.
So 25 times lead costs.
So at 2, whatever, 266 is cost of acquisition right now, not including sales commissions.
Membership is $500 a month?
It's a $5,000.
initiation fee and then $500 a month, we sell five-year contracts.
I love this.
Why are we getting out of this business?
Call it $300, $400 with commissions, whatever, to get the sale, to get a $5,000 up front and then $500 a month.
Yeah, that sounds chill.
So that's why I was thinking I do more of it.
Yeah, do more sounds great.
I love this for us.
I love this for us.
I love this.
Yeah.
Okay.
So why don't we spend more on ads?
Sounds like I should.
I feel like that's not a terrible idea.
The thing is, is you have a business where this happens a ton, by the way.
Like you get, and this is actually really interesting because that's, in my opinion,
it's purely psychology, but you have a certain amount of cost that you have that's fixed
cost in the business.
And then you spend enough marketing to get above the fixed cost and then make some profit.
And then you like exhale.
You're like, oh, thank God I'm not losing money.
But it's like you're willing to work so hard to make everyone else money.
Your landlord, the licensor, the employees, like, you're paying all their mortgages.
but then like you're just forgetting to like pay you.
And so it's like let's go ham on that side.
Like when it gets easy is when you go hard.
So I'm, so you do this.
What else do you do?
You said you're good at organic stuff?
Yeah, we are.
And a third of our new members come from our existing referrals or existing members.
Okay, cool.
Do you have a really structured referral system or just people talk to people?
Yes and yes.
Okay.
Yes.
We have a, because we have a whole bunch of badass stuff for referral stuff.
but that's one thing that can probably get juiced beyond the scope of right now.
But that's a big one.
And then add stuff.
Honestly, if we could just take a look at it,
it's like we could probably figure this out in five seconds of what needs to do.
The thing is, is what's your close rate on people who come in?
So 4% lead to close.
And then we say 33%.
Okay.
You're fine.
Yeah.
Like your stuff's not fucked up.
We just need to get the referral system in place.
We need to spend more on ads.
We can make sure attributions right.
If we needed a tweak, like if you were like I'm closing 10%,
then it's either a sales motion issue or it's an offer issue.
Now, if the lead costs are too high, but you said they weren't, if the league costs were too high, I would look at offer as well, but that might not be the issue right now.
And so I think probably more and better creative that we do on the outside.
And I'm sure, are you doing Google AdWords?
Is that your primary?
Yeah.
More and better creative, probably better targeting in terms of what keywords review bidding on.
And there's probably a handful of like really easy CRO stuff.
So conversion or optimization that we can do on the actual funnel itself.
Like, you just don't know a lot.
Like there's so many little things there that you can just like immediately increase how much the business is.
making from each lead. And that'll probably just give you a little bit more exhale, like,
in order to spend more. Because I think that's what we have to do. Thank you. Real quick,
guys, I have a special, special gift for you for being loyal listeners of the podcast. Layla and I
spent probably an entire quarter putting together our scaling roadmap. It's breaking scaling
into 10 stages and across all eight functions of the business. So you've got marketing, you've got
sales you've got product you get customer success you've got IT you've got recruiting
HR you've got finance and we show the problems that emerge at every level of scale
and how to graduate to the next level it's all free and you can get it personalized to you
so it's about 30-ish pages for each of the stages once you enter the questions it will tell you
exactly where you're at and what you need to do to grow it's about 14 hours of stuff but it's
narrowed down so that you only have to watch the part that's relevant to you which will
probably be about 90 minutes and so if that's at all interesting you can go to acquisition
com forward slash roadmap r oadd map road map road map hi alex first school we'll see you you've only
found you three months ago and life changing oh thanks no thank you really all you and and when you
you said one time it's like entertainment if it's just oh that was cool or like it changes behavior
is changed behavior oh cool so thank you for that and and it's only to people in my life that
have done that for me so thank you for that so my name is angela buy a book at the next launch
No, no, thank you. No, I really mean it. I really do. You and Michael Singer. So my name is Angela. I own a cybersecurity consulting. We focus in cybersecurity compliance for middle market and enterprise customers. I've been in this industry for a long time.
Don't you want a boat membership business?
I love what I love our industry because it's always like changing and technical and all of that. Okay. So IT compliance,
Mid-market.
Cyber security, mid-market, and climbing to enterprise, more and more enterprise customers.
I did revenue of almost $5 million in 2023, root force, and then it's dropped.
So I'm like at 3.6 right now.
My net margin was 35%.
Now I'm at like 18%.
So it's shrinking.
And what I've accumulated over this year was, you know, obviously ignorance and a lot of things that I wasn't even thinking.
But people dead.
So now all that margin is going to the people.
side, right? But also my sales, right, have dropped and my leads because I've been focusing now
on the things I never did because I was just, you know, Hunter. And now I'm focusing on learning how to
become a real CEO and learning how to do people things well and all of that. Okay. So I'm solving right now
for some things. I didn't realize my concern was even recruiting. I found a recruiter by the grace of
God that's amazing. And he's helping me solve these problems. And then the next thing I was
solving for right now is the practice leader, which is like a technical person too that's good with
clients and watches all the people that we work with and works with them. What's holding you back?
So that I'm working on. Okay. I think I'm cracking the note with that. Okay. I think I may have
found somebody, but we'll find out in a week or so. So, but in the meantime, sales has been my thing. And then
I would say my industry has evolved. And COVID definitely was a game changer where cost per
events have increased tremendously.
Your conference stuff,
you got to play to speak
right now, which wasn't the case before.
And, you know, I had family changes
and... Yeah. Do you go to conferences to get
customers? I used to. Okay. And I'm not doing
that anymore. Very little.
Because of the cost and, you know, the
time. Are you coming back with us?
I don't know. Okay. No worries. We have a whole conference
playbook that is murders. So for just selling
at conferences. I need that. I need a lot. I need all the help
I can get them. No worries. No, it's fine. I just figured I'd ask
but I'm learning tremendously from you.
So thank you so much.
I'm listening very intently to everything you say.
So, you know, LinkedIn, it's obviously my market.
I want to pause.
So can you handle more customers?
Yes or no.
You can handle more customers.
So your demand constraint.
Yes.
Right now.
And it's like change over time.
Okay, great.
So right now you can handle more customers.
You've got this other person.
I can handle more customers.
Yeah.
Okay.
So demand constraint is where we're at right now.
Yes.
So you used to do conferences.
They got too expensive, which means the sales motion,
didn't work as well as I used to do little not a lot okay maybe we should organic friends networking
so so that's how basically you just did all outbound as your primary way that's what you did okay got
it so and no one else did the outbound just you just me okay so now I have a marketing person that's like
keep the lights on marketing person I would say what is that guy but anyways he's not that good and we're doing
some content and we're you know like that it's like keep the lights on marketing it's like either
you're getting us business or you're not. I've used agencies before. It was awful too.
Well, if you don't know how to margar, you're not good no matter what you spent money on.
I know. But no, I, listen, the thing I'm thinking here is,
do you want your advice. Okay. Of course. Yes, you figure it out. Thank you, Alex. Thank you.
So outbound is what you're good at. You can either go one-on-one the way you were or you can go hunt
where in there's fish in a barrel. What's the average customer worth to you?
75, 80,000? Yeah. I think, like, no, per per cent. Yeah, no, her. Yeah.
heard. Yeah, heard. You were the prototypical conference playbook. Go to conferences, run the sales motion through the conference, collect as many leads as humanly possible, and then basically have an offer that structured there so that you have urgency for people to sign up. Like, that is the way to do it. And LinkedIn? Hmm? LinkedIn? I would say LinkedIn is kind of what I would say is my like for you because of how your type of business works in terms of the sales motion overall. You, what will happen is it'll look like this. So you'll, so it's like you'll fish with a net. This is me.
fishing with a net on a boat membership right okay so we're fishing here and this is events right
and then what happens it's kind of like a telephone pole you'll start you know you'll close close close
and then you'll have fewer fewer leads and what you'll do is in the meantime you're outbound to go up
during that time period until you lean into the event and then you'll have the next event and so it's
kind of this criss-cross motion while it's just you once you get enough cash flow which you're
probably close to at now i would then have somebody who's doing basically the sDR
work for you. So sale development representative, somebody who's doing the outbound, who can just
basically set and qualify. Yeah, exactly. Because for you, I'm sure you can close in a couple calls
anyways. And so you just take longer because they're a big company. Sure. No, you're good. But
getting the SDR is probably the largest time constraint for you right now and also not that expensive.
And so I would step one, run conferences for sure so I could fill up the pipeline because that's like
that can happen fast and you have the cash flow to do it. And then second, in that same time,
because you could do these concurrently. I would just, I would just, I would.
I would put the ads out for our SDR so that I could bring somebody in to start feeding you.
I have somebody that could fill that role right now.
He's my.
What is he not?
Why is he not doing that?
Is it the marketing guy?
No, he's not the marketing guy.
Maybe we should let the marketing guy go.
No, but you know, I guess he's a recruiter.
He's a great guy. He's a good dude.
He's my recruiter that's like a salesperson recruiter.
Okay.
And he's working with us because he wants not to be a recruiter anymore.
He wants to be in sales in a technical field so he should learn something technical.
I mean, if you, if you did.
He's putting all the time and effort to really.
really learn.
If you did recruiting and you did outbound for recruiting, which is what most recruiters do,
doing SDR work is like the closest comparable role anyways.
Yeah.
So I'm fine with that guy.
So conferences, LinkedIn and then thought leadership, LinkedIn, just like so they
Thought leadership?
You mean just like post good shit?
Posting shit.
Okay.
No, but no.
Like I'm thinking about this.
Like trying to solve a client's problem.
Like, listen, you have this issue.
Here's how it works.
Mm-hmm.
Well, all you do is to be a thought leader, you just take the stuff you're doing privately and
then just talk about it publicly.
Yeah.
Exactly.
So yeah, just talk about your client work.
And no webinars?
Hold on.
No, okay.
No, I agree.
Go to conferences.
Go to conferences.
Hire somebody to do more.
Oh, no.
Making a shitload of money.
It makes work.
Oh, I love me.
Right.
So like, do the conferences, fish with a net, fill up your pipeline, get the SDR so that you get the stability that will happen.
So this is our events that are event leads.
This is our SDR leads.
Until eventually the SDR leads will stay here.
And then this will just continue to stack over time.
Make sense?
How many conferences per year?
How many a week can you do?
Oh, God.
No, I mean, I couldn't.
I have family kids.
How many a month?
Maybe two a month.
Cool.
That's fine with me.
Let's start there.
Thank you, Alex.
Thank you.
Thank you.
Hey, Alex.
Yes, ma'am.
Catherine.
Hi, I have a dance school, two locations.
Wonderful.
We do 2.7 mill.
Congrats.
Thank you.
I've been five years in business.
So, aiming for three mill this year,
and at least 10 plus in the future.
Constraint will be space, capacity, facility space.
Heard.
So, yeah.
Okay.
What would you like to know?
Well, is that just what's stopping you?
It's just getting another location?
I could do, if I can get to $3 million this year, I'll be at probably 80% capacity running my core programs.
Okay.
Right.
Which is the key.
I could add daytime.
There's things I could do on the side.
I don't think you complicate the model.
Right.
So next step in scale.
at that point is, is it additional locations or acquiring studios?
I want a franchise.
I think it's either acquiring studios that are already,
if people want to retire from and buy them out and run their,
their businesses and then sell the whole thing eventually,
or ground up, organic, built from location, location.
So do you want what you want to hear or the truth?
Both.
No, truth.
Do you want to exit?
Yes.
100%.
And when you say, okay, what size exit?
At least 20 mil.
Yeah.
So the fun fact for everyone here, the hardest amount of money to sell for is between 10 and 30 million.
Because it's just not big enough for people who have real money and it's too big for people who don't have real money.
And so like it's easier to get like a $100 million deal done than it is to get a $25 million deal.
$25 million deal is like one of the hardest deals to get done because it's somebody who usually has a way bigger checkbook and it's just like really scraping down the bottom and doesn't really care because it barely moves the needle for them.
just for context. Now, that being said, if you want to sell for more, the difficulty of selling
your particular business is that it's so people driven. It's so talent driven. And there haven't
really been, to my standard, any super successful, high service based gym businesses. The
closest one for a period was Orange Theory and then they went to shit during COVID and never recovered.
But like, they were the closest ones. And it's just because it's the talent. It's such a service-heavy
business and it's so reliant on the quality of the trainers, coaches, instructors, whatever
use the word you use, right? So selling it will be difficult. You would be able to sell it to
somebody who doesn't know what they're doing for sure, but you're not going to get a huge amount
of money for it. So some doctor who has no idea about business to think he does because he has money
would buy it. But you're probably like you might get, you know, it would be 10 with a bunch of hair
on it and earn, you know, clauses and a bunch of crap. So if you wanted to just do this forever,
then I would say like, just keep going. That's amazing. That's fine.
But most people make this work in a franchise model typically, I think, I mean, you can get gyms for free, studios for free.
Like that's not, it won't be hard for you to find, you know, ballet, dance, et cetera locations because so many people are in pain and don't want to run them.
Like, you could get them for free.
I mean, that's how I expanded, like, I got them for free.
So the good news is the business is good.
It's just what is your expansion path?
So either I'm in A, de novo, meaning organic growth, you open it yourself, or you go from like a franchise path.
the franchise and or licensing is for sure more sellable than those ones.
And I don't normally give this advice.
The issue is just that I understand the nature of the business obviously pretty well.
They're very hard to sell for a lot of money.
You can offload them really easily because somebody else has a dream and thinks that they're going to make it work.
It's like restaurants.
Like you can sell them for nothing because somebody else is a cook and people tell them their cooking's good.
And they're like, you should open a restaurant.
Like you love fitness.
You should start it.
Like that it's very easy to get people to say yes.
Not for a lot of money though.
So my honest truth is, I think if you look at your current business model and say,
how could I cut down the complexity by 80% and then franchise it?
So I'll tell you a story.
So the most successful fitness franchise right now is Alloy.
They do semi-private training.
Rick Mayo is a really good friend of mine.
He had a $4 million a year single facility.
And they had smoothie bar, merch, PT, semi-private, large group.
They had everything, right?
And when he went to franchise, he looked at it.
revenue per square foot across all the business units and saw that semi-private was by far the highest
revenue per square foot. So he had his 6,000 whatever square foot facility. He fired all of his
clients except for his semi-private. It was still profitable with a 6,000 square-foot lease,
opened up a pilot location with only the most profitable service that had three employees,
one manager that does mornings and evenings and does sales, and then an assistant that does morning,
and assistant does evenings and works back up. And so with a three-person model,
does five or six hundred thousand dollars a year, 50% margins, and you can just cookie cutter that thing.
And so I think your instinct on the front end was of like I could add all these things.
I think it's 100% right not to do that.
And then look at your most profitable times, look at your most profitable pricing and packages.
And then I would look at stripping this down to like, how could I get this to the fewest possible people who could run this so that I could open up basically somebody else could do this.
And that's probably the like that is the most likely path to the goal that you have.
I'm not saying it's easy, but it's the most likely path to where you want to go.
What about the licensing?
Same, same, same.
Different legal structure.
Okay.
Hmm.
Yeah.
All right.
Just being real.
Like, I mean, you could obviously open more locations.
Seems like you're competent.
I say this is a compliment.
But if you want the, if you want the exit that you're looking for, like, I can't, I mean, I know a lot of people in the fitness world who have five locations, 10 locations.
So, like almost every one of them did never sold the whole thing.
I don't know one who sold the whole thing.
Every one of them piecemeal it one to a trainer, one to a customer, one to a competitor, one to a competitor.
They had to break the whole thing up when they got tired.
Really?
Yeah.
Okay.
Interesting.
Thanks so much.
Cool.
Yeah.
Awesome.
Thank you.
Hi.
My name is Michelle.
This is actually my second time coming to the workshop.
You grew from like 400 to 1.2, right?
I'm hoping to you break a million this year.
Sure.
I did 356.
This is a good return.
Yeah.
Yeah.
My main takeaway from last year was I just needed to do more to even have more in the system to figure out.
I know.
Crazy.
So I have spent the last.
last this I'm going on my third year of my business. I'm trying to replicate gym launch in the
pet care industry. I am named Dogco launch. It's not that innovative, but so it is a wonderful
man. I mean, I like it. Okay. So I do coaching and consulting. I modeled off of, I've really
tried to study very deeply how you approach gym launch from what I can tell. Happy to answer any questions.
Huh? Yeah. Well, I even read Jim Secrets. It was great. So we did 350.
last year. I'd like to break
3 million this upcoming year.
You mean 26?
26 million?
No, no. Yeah.
What, yes. Sorry, this upcoming year
in 2020. Yeah, yeah. But this year you want to do
1-2. Yeah.
You're pacing 1-2 and then next year you'd like to do 3.
Okay, got it. So,
what's stopping you? I'm guessing you're not
supply constrained. Well, I...
Can you take more customers? No.
Huh. Word. Okay. So,
how are you getting customers now?
Organic.
Okay, that's why. All right.
So just you making content on Instagram, on YouTube?
Most of my market's on Facebook.
So I have an interest group for companies that want to grow in the pet care space.
And I also do a speaking circuit on the board conferences that are in our industry.
Great.
I'm throwing my own conference this year because I figured I'd bring leads to me.
So you're saying conferences generate leads.
Crazy. Keep going.
Yeah.
And thought leadership.
Yeah.
Yeah.
So yeah.
Organic content has been predominantly how I'm getting people.
people. Okay. So you want to sell more stuff, but you can't sell more stuff because you can't
deliver on more stuff. So who's stopping you from delivering more stuff?
I had bought the money in well as book because I did my original structure. It got me out the
ground very quickly. I did this scarcity-based core model. It's like, by 25 companies in a
grade, we know twice a year. And it's been a difficult model to continue growing. I'm also the only
coach in the business. So it, I'm doing everything right now. The model might be fine. You're just the
only person doing delivery. Yeah. Yeah. Um, so we need to find another person to do delivery or you
need to change how you do delivery. So I'd like to change how I do delivery initially. Okay. I'd like
to go to more of an evergreen model where people can join at any point in time. I don't know if
evergreen's the right word for it. Um, I mean, I know what you're saying. Yeah. Sell every day.
Yeah. Yeah. That's what I have been considering. Um, I don't actually think that's,
the approach that I would take though. Okay. I wouldn't change your selling model because your supply
constrained, not demand constraints. So why would we change anything on the demand side? So it's the
delivery. That's the part that's holding it back. So what is the delivery right now? One on one,
one to one a small group. Like what's the? Yeah. So I do a weekly coaching session with each cohort.
Okay. Of how many? I have six active cohorts. Okay. And so you do weekly and it's what an hour?
90 minutes. Jeez. Okay. Got it. So you do one nine hour day and then the other six days of the week you
chill? No, I'm doing
Zoom calls like 45 hours a week.
I do a daily office hour.
Okay, so then what is the other deliverable
besides the 190 minute thing?
So it's just very
high touch right now. Like I
Are you over promising? Or are you
just, and I say this not as a slight
insecure about worrying that
they're not going to get value and then you just like
keep hopping on on calls?
That is part of it.
Okay. In part because it's been so new
and I really want to establish like goodwill
in the industry.
I've been throwing everything into it.
But I've kind of created this monster
where it's hard to start to work myself out
because the expectations on me are very, very high.
Who do you think sets the expectations?
Me.
Yeah.
So I think we just need to change the expectations of delivery,
which either is just stick with what you promise
because you might not promise nearly what you're delivering.
So if they said yes to it,
just meet expectations.
Like, and that might just mean that you just need to learn
a script of how do I deal with people who ask for my time, which is like you route them to a
resource or you route them to the calendar when the next time is available.
Because the thing is you reward people for reaching out to you quickly by responding quickly
and answering their question and so then they do more of it because you've trained your audience
to do that. So you need to train them to do something else. What do you've prayed up?
Oh, so many things. But we don't need to go down that list. I think, I
I feel that one of my differentiators has been accessibility.
Oh, it's totally differentiator.
Yeah.
In the beginning, when you're an underdog, you do that because you say, hey, you know,
you could go to these guys, but you're just a number with me.
You get my cell phone, right?
But at some point, you get big enough that you're like, I can't give you my cell phone
because I'm good enough and I've proven that.
And so you have these cohorts.
Basically, this is the equivalent of, like, you can have, like, there's price raises
you can do.
You can also do delivery decreases.
Like, you're going to keep paying the same amount.
and you're just going to get less.
But the way you're going to pitch it is that you're going to get even more,
but rather different.
And so whenever I've done a delivery change, I don't position it as, hey, I'm going to do less
of what you liked.
I'm going to say, hey, I've listened to all your feedback.
And I'm actually going to change this in a way that benefits all of you guys in these 17
reasons.
And what you have to do is you have to position this as a moral high ground.
Right.
And so it's a, hey, I made a promise to you.
And I've realized recently that I'm actually breaking this promise.
And so I know that I can stay out of.
of integrity to what I promised to you guys.
And so in an effort to stick with my integrity, I have to change it to this.
And so that way, if anyone tells you that that you can do it, or are you saying, are you
telling me to question my integrity?
And then they're like, oh, that's right.
And they're fucked.
And so that's the, that's actually how you have to roll something like that out.
Mm-hmm.
Okay.
Most of my clients know each other.
Are there any concerns about- Well, you do to everybody.
Okay.
Okay.
Okay.
Okay.
Okay.
Okay.
Okay. So this is how things were.
This new thing has come to my attention.
as a result of this new thing, new information, new decisions, new actions, this is what's happening,
here's why it's great for you, 17 more recents that you didn't expect. And this way I can reinvest
in these things that you really care about that I haven't been able to do, which is a promise I made to you
that I have been falling short of. Okay. What if they don't feel like I have been under delivering?
It's not up to though. But like the kind of talking, the positioning of I'm doing this so that I can
fulfill with integrity. I don't know that they'd resonate with that. And I'm sorry if I'm splitting
here is it. I mean, you got to sell you right now. How do you mean? You're trying to sell me on the way that
you don't want to do. You're like, I hate this life, but I, damn it, I'm going to defend it. So, like,
you just have to, you have to flip that. Fundamentally, like, you're going to burn out because you don't,
like, you can't do what you're doing. You would like to help, you want to help more dog owners, right?
Or dog co-owners, right? Yes. You cannot do that with your current model. So if you said that you
have a mission of helping this many people. You currently are out of integrity with that mission.
So either you change your mission and say, I'm actually going to play really small and I'm not going to
help that many people and that's fine, or I'm going to provide something different that I think
is going to be even just as valuable or even more valuable to you guys in this way. And you will lose
some people and that's okay because you will make room for better people who pay more and didn't
come in with the old expectations. Yeah. Okay. Okay. Thank you. First of all, thank you for all
value you share. There's like a few number of people that are respect and you're one of them.
Well, that makes one of us. Yes. So my name is Lucas, right? I run a DTC skincare brand.
Okay. Oh yeah, you do like 12 million top line and you have like a bunch of different brands that you have.
But they're all white labeled, right? Yeah. So we do actually 10 million. Yeah. And you want to get to 100,
right? We want to get to 100. Yeah. The key constraint right now is margin.
So 15% margins.
Yeah.
Do you know why your margins are low?
I think we...
Want me to tell you why your margins are low?
Yes.
You don't have a brand.
So we...
Just to give you some numbers like...
We might have scale too fast or like skill too much to...
Because here's the thing, the more we scale the higher the CPA, right?
You're a performance marketer, right?
Yes.
You have to learn brand.
Yes.
You're not going to arbitrage your way out of it.
out of it. You're falling into the trap that I did and I was stuck there for three and a half years.
All right. So you can stay for three and a half years or you can take three and a half minutes.
All right. So what happens is you're going to keep scaling spend, right? And revenue is going to
keep going up. But your margin is going to compress, which you're already seeing, right?
And that makes sense because you go to less profitable audiences. You continue to scale.
Right. And so I think I like my visual for this is like in each rung.
we have like the same number of sales that are going to happen,
but I only have to buy this much traffic to get the same number of sales versus this much
versus this much versus this much.
And so for you to scale long term,
you need to get to the point where 70% of your advertising is brand driven,
not direct to buy,
but it's building founder story,
it's building narrative, unique differentiation, things like that,
that are top of funnel awareness like associations
with things that your ideal avatar would find interesting
so that you cannot just be a media arbitrage
white label thing because you're just always going to be beholden to like the newest hack,
the newest bidding strategy, the platform where you can get the cheapest clicks, and you'll never
build something that's actually like sellable in the long haul. I'm assuming that's what you
want to do. Yeah. So we want to build for an exit. Right. You have to build a brand. No one wants
to buy these arbitrage businesses. A few investments that we made right now is first of all rebranding,
like with a branding agency. Second is you need to master it. Like as a physical product,
e-commerce owner, like your core most important skill is the brand. Like, you can't outsource that. It's
the most important thing. Got it. Like, so you need to learn the skill of branding. Branding,
which is fundamentally making associations with things that people in your audience find positive.
Got it. Do you think we have a model problem as well? Because for example, right now...
You run ads, you sell stuff, you ship it, right? Yeah. No, I don't think of a model issue.
Because I was thinking about changing to a subscription model.
because we're not doing that yet.
You can have a percentage.
What is the, what's for all of them or for, are they consumables?
So we sell gadgets like skincare gadgets and then we also sell consumables.
We usually do bundles.
Well, the gadgets are going to be really tough for subscription.
Yeah, yeah, of course.
Yeah.
We want to, like we just manufacturing a new serum in the US and the idea would be.
Like hair or like supplement?
Skin care.
Yeah, okay.
Topical.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Lotions and potions.
Yep.
Yes.
And the idea would be to slowly be shifting towards subscription.
I mean, that's fine.
To me, that's, again, that's you still thinking with your performance marketer hat.
You're just trying to like, how do I increase cart value?
How to increase LTV?
Like, yeah, and that's fine.
There's nothing wrong with that.
So think about conversion optimization overall as steroids, which is like you can use them once
and then that's it.
You get a one-time pop and then that's your new baseline.
And so like whatever you're doing, you can get a double, sometimes a triple.
from CRO improvements. But after that, you still need to solve the big gaping hole in the front end,
which is like, how do I get more traffic? How do I get more repeat buyers? How do I command a premium?
Because the only way that you can outspend competition in the long haul who are just as good as you are,
performance marketing. Because again, it's not even you versus them. It's your employees versus
their employees. And if you have access to the same talent and you have the same undifferentiated products,
you're running on the same margins. So you're just going to be a completely commoditized business
functionally in terms of how much you make versus how much you spend. And so the only way to decommodize
this is that you have to build the associations that allow you to command a premium price that get people
to be more loyal to you. So you can attract better talent as well because they actually believe in
what you're about what you're about. You have for sure spreadsheeted your life in terms of how
you've thought about your business. Yes. Yeah. For sure. I get it. Yeah. But like you actually
have to put a different hat on if you want to get to the next level. Good. So you actually have
to stop thinking as quant and start thinking in terms of psychology of customers.
and not like, oh, this specific type of ad convert. It's not like that. You have to expand out your window in terms of
attribution of how long it takes to make a sale. You start looking at how many people actually follow the account.
There's a great article. I think it was a CMO of Chubbies wrote this. I want to say it was Chubbies.
But he talked about the Roaz Doom Loop or the direct response doom loop. And you're in, which is that you just keep spending more to make less.
And then you're like, oh, I'll just spend more and then you make less. And it just gets until eventually you're like, I'm just putting money in and getting it back out.
And I'm just like, I have a number, but I don't make anything. Right. So it's a very vicious.
loop and cash flow sucks for the business. Yeah. Yeah, I get it. And so the only way out of that is you
have to rethink, it's a strategic change to rethink how you're advertising. Got it. And in terms of
branding, what do you mean by branding? Because sometimes for me, branding looks like woo-woo, you know.
Totally. I thought the same thing. And then I built like multiple billion dollars off of it. So like,
like, like, I get it. But well, like, if you can put it in a framework, yeah, it would be like the key
levers of branding for you? You can charge more money. People buy more times. Don't need to go more.
That's good enough. You get higher CTRs, higher conversion rates, all of that. Yeah. But I mean in terms of
like building a brand. You post your stuff next to shit that people like. So they think it's cool.
Okay. And then eventually you take the cool thing away and then your thing's still cool. And so then they pay a cool
premium to buy your thing versus the other guy's thing that's not cool. And they keep buying your
thing because they feel cool when they buy it. Got it. So do you know Jim Shark? Yes. Why would they pay
Sam Seulek to become an ambassador? Why would they pay him money when he can't directly drive
for OAS? Branding is higher return on spend than direct response does over a longer time horizon.
The thing is your problem is you have a 30-day window for everything you're looking at, maybe 60.
If you look at brand, you have to extend to six to 12 months.
But when you do that, you actually start getting insane returns on capital.
But you have to start thinking like a capital allocator rather than just a dark response performance marketer.
I can talk to you more about it.
I want to go too deep in it.
But fundamentally, that's the frame shift you need.
And you having many businesses, I don't think helps you.
There's probably one of them.
That's your flagship one.
That's probably the best one that has the most potential.
No, I just have one business.
I thought you had multiple brands under there.
No, no, no, no.
I mean, we just have ones.
But you said you had gadgets and widgets and then you have...
No, no, no.
Gadgets is like skincare gadgets.
Okay.
So skin care devices.
Yeah, exactly.
And then...
But it's one...
Just one brand.
Okay.
Nothing else.
Fine.
I feel a little better.
Okay.
A little better.
But I stick by with that.
You have to have a frame shift.
Otherwise, you're not going to get past where you're up.
Okay.
Thank you.
Yes, sir.
