The Game with Alex Hormozi - First 5 Hires As You Grow | Ep 376
Episode Date: March 22, 2022Who you hire are the extensions of yourself. Today, Alex (@AlexHormozi) talks about hiring the first 5 people to your business in "reverse order" and being aware of what kind of debt you incur when yo...u start.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 on his path from $100M to $1B in net worth.Timestamps:(1:45) - First two hires: admin and customer service; third: skilled sales.(3:45) - Fourth hire: promotions and marketing; fifth: bookkeeper for finances.(5:40) - Entrepreneurship: buy back time, add more value.(7:41) - Starting a business incurs various debts, strategically plan repayment.(10:04) - Takeaway: hire in reverse value order, be mindful of debt.Follow Alex Hormozi’s Socials:LinkedIn | Instagram | Facebook | YouTube | Twitter | Acquisition
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You want to think about, especially for the first five, that they are really just helping you do more.
And so think of them as extensions of yourself.
Welcome to the game where we talk about how to get more customers, how to make more per customer,
and how to keep them longer, and the many failures and lessons we have learned along the way.
I hope you enjoy and subscribe.
In this video, I'm going to walk you through the first five hires that you need to bring on in your company as you are growing.
And as a fundamental framework to think through this, you want to think about, especially for the first five,
that they are really just helping you do more.
And so think of them as extensions of yourself.
Over time, we're going to transition from that philosophy to really building a team and departments.
But each of the five will more or less correspond to being an extension of you and doing the repeated tasks that are time-consuming,
but do not necessarily add as much value as some of the more strategic pieces of each of the roles.
All right.
And so if you don't know, I am, my name is Oxramozian.
I'm an Acquisition.com.
It's a portfolio company that says about $85 million.
Welcome to Mosey Nation.
I make these videos because a lot of people broke and I do not want you to be one of them.
So let's rock and roll.
So the first of these things, in terms of the order and sequence that you're going to be hiring them in,
it's going to be in the reverse order of the value that's being delivered and or what you can get in the marketplace in terms of dollars per hour.
And so the more valuable the skill, the more it will cost.
And so you want to replace the skills that cost the least amount of money for you, right?
Should make sense.
And so typically one of the first two hires, and this can happen in any order, is going to be one person who's going to be more of an administrative help to you.
Because as you start a business, especially in the beginning, there's lots of administrative.
work that needs to be done. It must be done, but it's not necessarily the high value work
that's going to move the business forward, but it must be done. And so number one will typically be
someone in that type of role. The second hire will typically be somebody in the customer success or
customer support role. All right. And you are still likely going to be heavily involved in the success
or delivery of the product or service that you have, but this person is going to help take away
some of the repeated tasks that you are doing that are not necessarily value additive, but must
be done. All right. So this is like handling returns.
talking to customers about repeated tasks, you know, switching out billing stuff.
And again, you'll see that there's some crossover between this administrative role and the
help with delivery because in the beginning, that's where a lot of your time is going to start occurring.
Note that you're still probably marketing.
You're still probably selling because that's what you need to do at this point in the game.
All right.
The third piece will likely be the first salesperson, all right?
And that's because, and again, this will depend based on how good you are at sales.
So like if sales is not necessarily your strong suit, then you might take this earlier, right? If it is a strong suit of yours, you're going to take it a little bit later because your dollars per hour in that role continues to grow. And so I don't want you to take these as hard and fast rules. These are just general rules of thumb that the corresponding framework that you need to be thinking this through is how much value am I making per dollar, sorry, per hour? And then how much would it cost me to replace that dollar per hour? So it's like if I do not generate a lot of dollars per hour and it doesn't cost a lot of money, then that will be the first.
thing. Now if I'm generating a lot of money and I can replace it for a medium amount of money,
then it's like, well, it's the net difference, right? And that's what we're looking at in
terms of how we're replacing each of these roles, right? And so right off the bat, you're
going to have some sort of administrative help, then you're going to have some sort of customer
support help. Then you're going to probably hire some sort of sales role, right? From there,
now it kind of depends a little bit on the role. You'll probably have someone who starts assisting
you with the promotion or marketing of your business. So this is oftentimes somebody who's doing
setting or doing prospecting for you, or if you generate customers based off content,
this is probably somebody who's being a videographer of some sort or helping you create the
content in some way, some of the more laborious parts that are not as value additive, that would be
kind of that fourth looking higher. And again, that can flip with the sales role. So like if, for example,
you're a killer salesman, then you might have somebody who's prospecting and doing some of the
intro calls for you so that the majority of your time is spent just closing, which is the higher
value task. So hopefully this common theme is working out and making sense to you because it's like
the number one question I get or one of among the top questions I get is like what order should
I hire people in when I'm starting my business, right? The next one is, and again, all of these
roles can be, some of these things can be fractional right in the beginning. So you'll probably have
some sort of fractional bookkeeper, which is really filling the gap for the finance hole. So they're just
doing basic level of accounting for you to get so you just know how much money you're making at that
time. They can help you take control of your expenses, et cetera. Over time, that rule will probably
come in-house, but much a little bit later, right? So like before you're at $100,000 a month,
you really, you probably don't have a ton that's going on. So just having a fraction bookkeeper
is sufficient. Same thing with a, you know, somebody who's helping you with your taxes,
somebody who's helping you with legal stuff. Like, you'll have a lawyer, but it's not going to be
in-house, right? And so as you're moving up this value ladder in terms of the value per hour
and the cost per hour that you can get this, the process of entrepreneurship, if you think from a big
picture perspective, it's always just buying back your time, right, so that you can level up
the amount of time that you're spending on high leverage activities. Now, here's a key point.
Hey guys, real quick for those of you guys who are $100 million offers fans, I love you. I added
in a lost chapter that has never been released. I'm releasing it now. Transparently, I'm doing
that to build hype for $100 million leads, but you will have the unreleased chapter. It talks about
your first avatar and how to segment customers to make more money. You can get it by going to
Acquisition.com forward slash leads.
It's low free in exchange for your email so that I can email you when we launch $100
million leads and so that you cannot miss out on it because last time I sold out for like
eight straight weeks really fast.
So that is my way of making sure that y'all get first dips.
I see this happen all the time.
I'll see entrepreneurs replace all of their time and then they don't do anything with that
added time to add more value.
And so in that case, your profit margins will go down because you are not continuing to add
and do the things that generate the income, right?
But now, as you progress, each of these roles become more solidified.
And these people, ideally, in a perfect world, actually can ascend up and then have teams
underneath of them.
The person who is helping you originally now has a team of people helping them.
The administrative person originally, you might have to ascend them into a director
of operations, who's really pushing each of the tasks and projects forward.
They end up being a mini project manager for you, if done properly.
The salesperson might become a sales director or a sales manager.
who's actually leading and training a series of salespeople.
Now, I will tell you that a lot of times people have the difficulty
of going from an individual contributor at a high level to a manager.
It's one of the hardest transitions in business,
and it's commonly messed up by most people.
All right.
And so one of the things that comes with experience in entrepreneurship is you recognize the people
who have the talent to do the thing that is required later.
So you can hire those people earlier on.
Now, you can't take a COO of a billion dollar company and put them in as your operator.
One, because you can probably get afford it.
And two, they're probably not that interested in the opportunity yet, unless you have funding
or some sort of vehicle that you can acquire that talent earlier.
And so as a final concept that I want to introduce to you is that whenever you were starting
a business, you are incurring debt.
All right.
And this is something that I'm now very, very convinced of.
And so you were incurring lots of types of debt.
You are incurring life debt.
You are incurring management debt.
You are incurring financial debt.
You're encouraging technological debt.
Right. So that technological debt, which by the way is probably the if you had another next full-time hire, it's usually a tech person who's helping you manage the CRM, build out sites and kind of make all the things that you want to have happen or know should be happening. The background actually happen in the real world. They're helping manage passwords on board new new people in terms of getting them logins, all that kind of jazz, right? And so in terms of the debt that you're incurring, if you don't have a good CRM that's in place, you will incur that debt and then you'll have to pay it back with interest later when the company's bigger. If you don't have a good book.
keeper in place, your finances will be a mess. And as you scale, you'll have to fix and pay back
that debt later. If you have not the best people or the values are not there, then you're encouraging
management debt, which means you'll have cultural debt, which means you'll have to pay that back
later. And so the idea in terms of moving quickly in the game of entrepreneurship is recognizing which
debt I want to incur in what order. And so I used to poo-poo the idea of investors and venture
capital and things like that who gave people money to start because I was like,
that's not real entrepreneurship. And I think as I've, you know, weathered or aged in the game,
I don't see it that way anymore. I just see it as just fundamentally an advantage is that they're
choosing financial debt to incur fewer other debts, incur fewer operational debt, incur less
talent debt, management debt, CRM debt. Like, you might have to have a bigger CRM that's better
for you so that you can scale with having to switch platforms, which is common. But it would cost
more money up front. So if you're bootstrapped, you might not be willing or able to do that. But if you
have funding or you have money that you're willing to invest in the business up front, then
sometimes you can do that. And so one of the things that is difficult with people who grow bigger
companies faster is that they skip through the earlier stages because they know how to do it.
And so it's the reason that each of the companies that we've had subsequently have grown
bigger, faster, stronger than the companies that preceded them because we are willing to incur
less of the other types of debt rather than financial debt because we have the finances, right?
And so we can skip steps in the growth process that would normally offrail a quarter's worth of growth by implementing a new CRM or offload a quarter or set me back another quarter because I have to fix my financials.
Or set me back another year because I have a whole bunch of management team in place where inexperienced.
And I need to get more been there done that on the team and fewer I'll learn as I go.
Right.
And so as we're thinking through this and you're hiring your team, the two major frameworks that I'd like you to take away with this is number one, you're hiring in reverse order of value.
that you are providing and cost to the marketplace that you can use to replace it.
And so typically, you will one, gets customer support, two, some sort of administrative role,
three, some sort of sales or setter role, four, some sort of marketing assist, five, some sort
of fractional bookkeeper, and or a sixth, which would be your IT person or tech person.
That is usually the beginning of the core team, and then it crispest trees down, so each of them,
right, now have five people hanging off of them.
Let me see as this doesn't freeze.
there we go. You'll have five people hanging off of each of these, not necessarily five IT people,
but hopefully you can understand especially on the marketing, the sales and on the delivery,
those are the teams that tend to grow as the companies grow. And the, you know, IT and finance
departments and HR departments, which end up getting built over time, there's a ratio that is a higher
ratio, as in you need fewer of them per amount of customers or employees that you have in the company.
All right. And so as you scale, that is framework number one. And then framework number two is be
mindful of the type of debt that you are incurring and make sure it is the type of debt that you
would prefer to incur if you have the choice. And so if you are new to the channel, welcome to
Mosey Nation. I have nothing to sell you and enjoy the next video. Bye.
