The Game with Alex Hormozi - GENIUS Strategy To Make Everyone Want to Buy Your Stuff | Ep 724
Episode Date: July 31, 2024"Customers are bloodhounds for value." In this episode, Alex (@AlexHormozi) explains a framework for different ways that you can make your offer more attractive and ultimately drive to more positive w...ord of mouth, repeat purchases, and higher conversions.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.Follow Alex Hormozi’s Socials:LinkedIn | Instagram | Facebook | YouTube | Twitter | Acquisition
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I talked to a room full of business owners for eight hours about how to make more money.
Here's one of the best moments about how to improve your offer.
So there's something in the software called willingness to pay, which is like what's the thing that gets people to want to buy?
And so they plotted everything across this chart in terms of the features.
Like, what are the things in the offer that had the highest willingness to pay that people value the most?
You want to be in this box over here.
And the four things that they found were exclusive.
one was access,
just so we have buckets to think about this through.
Exclusive content, exclusive events.
And the way they ran this research study,
they had newsletter, which to me is content,
but I'm assuming that this is,
basically this is probably video that was written.
And so those are the four biggest things
that had willingness to pay.
And so they also looked at like exclusive merch,
discounts that were associated with the community.
They looked at priority support.
They had a number of different things that they looked at.
But the four that had the highest willingness to pay were these four things.
So these are the things that people valued the most within the context of a recurring community.
If I were to build a community, these are the things that I would include.
Some of you may not want to do this.
But when I started gym launch, one of the things that we were able to get a huge boost in conversions
was my sales guys were able to say, like, you can talk to Alex every day.
And so I hopped on a daily call every single day.
And so they knew that.
And so I would hop on Zoom for 60 minutes.
Same format every time I was like, hey, here's how you ask a question.
Put these questions in the chat.
This is the format.
If you don't follow the format, I'm not going to answer the question.
But rather than hearing everyone's life story, I could just be like, what's your revenue?
What's your, you know, how many new members a month?
What's the main constraint that you're dealing with?
And like, what have you tried so far?
And so by getting that, at least in that context, I was able to just really quickly
hammer, I'd be able to answer 100 plus questions in an hour. And even if I couldn't get to
someone's question, the likelihood that their question was one of those questions was fairly
high. And so what ended up happening is like a lot of people ended up just like eating lunch with
Alex because I did in the middle of the day, because at the time for gym owners, the middle of the
day is the time when they have the most time, like the peaks are morning and afternoon. And so I
would agree that if you increase call frequency, you will have more people and it makes it very
sexy from a selling. It's like, you can talk to me every day. So if we're looking at this from a
Bucket's perspective, this is one of those things that we can add to improve any offer you have,
and it'll be more and more powerful, the higher the frequency, and obviously the lower the head count.
But if we're looking at very high-volume communities, then it'll just be frequencies.
It's the only thing that we can really control for.
Okay, so these are a lot of different ideas that we can do.
Oh, go ahead.
Do you have a team that is trained and really fit, and they offer calls instead of you?
How do you get people to want to get on a call with your team?
Because we have that, and when it's me, everybody's coming, when it's the team.
You mean like group calls with the team?
Group calls with the team, but it's qualified coaches they have been in there for over a year.
I think they interact with the members on a daily basis.
If you can answer the questions better than they can, then it means that they need to be better.
Like if someone comes to me and says, hey Alex, how do you run GDN display network?
I'm like, I don't know.
Ask Paul.
I don't click anything.
I barely, I don't even have my logins for my bank account.
I have no idea.
Like you're going to say you're still very good at that.
to say you should be bad at it, but it's more like, how do I get them to be more in the day-to-day
so that they can't answer it. Because customers are bloodhounds for value. And so, like,
if they're going to you, it's because you're providing more value than your team is. Like,
that's the big principle. You know, like, so I don't think there's, like, a quick hit tactic.
It's like the only way they will go is either if you just remove yourself entirely and they're
the only people that can have access to, or, because, I mean, I did this. I had my daily call.
And eventually I went from five days a week to four days a week to three days week to two days week to one day a week and I would replace them with other people.
Now at a certain point, the call attendance, I mean it went probably in half, but then it stayed there.
And especially because the frequency they could interact with me was much lower.
Like it took 12 months for me to completely remove myself.
So it's not like, all right, so I'm not doing daily calls anymore.
Coffee is with Hamad, you know, like it won't.
It won't work.
Yeah, it's very slow and then heavy on edification.
And then also coaching them on how to, I mean, like on presentation skills.
It's like literally teaching them how to present.
And have you ever had like sales teams with phone sales and things like that?
Okay, well, it's a lot like training scripting.
And so it's like, well, this person asks this question and you said this, let's play it.
And you do game to like, this is ops.
But like, play it, pause.
Now say it this way.
Okay, great.
Say it again.
Great.
change your tone like this, say it again.
Okay, next time someone asks, this question, what do you say?
Like, that kind of drilling, but that's what it takes to get yourself out of it.
And most people aren't willing to do that, which is why most things aren't sellable.
So these are access from a content perspective, that anyone have any like features,
products that were kind of zesty or had some, you know, zing to it that you found people were like,
this is the reason I bought.
The bonuses. So like the fast action bonus of like things that can cut it to get fast and do something down like the faster that they can get something done
The quicker they want to get in so like I'm a credit results so yeah
Yeah, I'm in credit right so like helping people clean their credit I don't do it for it anymore
But I give them my hacks to be able to get it done fast and most of the time it's a long
process it takes months sometimes but some of the things that I've learned to be a get stuck
for moving a day or two days.
So that result to become real faster
is what makes you go back right.
As soon as I say that day,
and you say the exact number of days?
Yeah, so one of my things is to get something
removed with them tuning for 72 hours.
And once I say that,
they don't even care about the rest.
I say, like, I'm going to get that.
You know, and that's what the bonus.
From a bonus perspective,
because I literally just finished the third book on this,
something that I've given a lot of thought to
is that people don't buy
because of the aggregate value.
They buy because one thing is worth it to them.
And so rather than trying to make this list that adds up
to this thing, it's more about how do I have as many very
legitimate value things that on their own are worth
in excess of the price.
And so trying to think about my bonuses for anything that way.
So how do I make this, just every single bonus
has to earn its weight that it has to be worth more than the price.
And that'll force you to also get a little bit more
consolidated on the bonuses and really just focus
on the sexiest stuff.
And usually for different avatars.
If you have like different psychographics of people who are coming into your business,
like I'm sure there's some people who have like really bad credit from a long time.
And some people just had like they had a medical bill or something and something happened.
Right.
And so having specific bonuses that are going to speak that in and of themselves for that one avatar is worth it.
I want to have like the punchiest, most distilled every one of these if you read it, you'd want to buy for this alone.
It's like taking mental rent.
It's like every one of them has to pay rent to be there.
because they only need one reason to buy.
I think just asking yourself,
what is something that if I removed everything else,
if I just offered this one thing,
people would still buy.
And then using that as the litmus test
for every one of the bonuses that you add.
And then I think it will force you to think
of better things that you can do
to make your overall offer more valuable.
And I would also think about that
through the different lenses of the avatars.
The guy who has a medical emergency,
the guy who has 10 years,
the person who gotten a bad divorce, like each of them,
For that person, this one thing alone is worth it.
Are you a Vince valuable, Hampton?
Like, what's your experience between doing anything?
I love you just like.
No, yeah.
No, yeah.
Last night about them.
Yeah.
So I've been running two in real life events
every month recently.
And interestingly, Churner actually went up, which
is so surprised.
But it makes up because, look, I do it in real life event.
I bring the boys out to like a big park.
We wrestle in the mud, and then we all dress up
and build this business mastermind.
Did you let anyone come?
anyone who's inside yet.
We were thinking about now locking it
behind a 12 month.
Yeah, I mean, that would have been my first thing.
It's like just move it.
So then it's like this big thing.
Because then it goes from I'm missing out on this thing
to I can't wait till I get this thing.
And I think that that alone would probably solve it
as a second little tidbit for anybody else who does events.
Whenever you do events, you want to also announce the next one.
Upsells happen at the point of greatest need,
not the point of the point
of greatest satisfaction.
It's a big misnomer.
Sometimes they happen at the same time.
Oftentimes they don't.
So like if I give you a steak dinner
and then eat your steak dinner and then I say,
hey, do you want a steak?
You're like no, because the timing's wrong.
And so we want to offer them the steak when they're starving,
not when they've just eaten.
And so after an event, they've just had like this massive feast.
And so like, I'm good for a while.
Like I got my value.
And so it's like, oh, let me open loop the fact
that there's gonna be another thing that's coming
and it's even better than this thing.
If you think you're like this, wait until dessert, right?
And you just keep pushing it out.
We learned this because my churn spiked
at one of these massive events spent like two million bucks
on the events, just make it this like wild crazy thing.
Everyone's like, this was awesome.
Thank you so much.
Like, and I was like, what?
But churn going into the event went down.
So it's like, okay, how do I get that to stay?
It's like, oh, you just always have one
that they know that they can come to.
And then I think put it past the 12 month
and you'll be golden.
All right, so events.
I'm gonna put two bullets here.
Number one is have next planned.
And then lock after six to 12 months.
Make it something people earn.
From a value perspective of something else
to add as a bonus, like conferences, events,
things like that tend to have real price tags
associated with them.
And if you're charging $7, you're like,
well, normally I would charge $99 for this
two-day virtual event or something you get that and again you can you can put it
later on so that they they lean into staying for it as an aside and probably
an obvious point but I might as well make it you can also sell stuff at those
events just they're out there like yeah yeah no no no no no no no no like no
no one sells at your event but you and if you're going to sell one of things I think
I think people make a mistake of is these people already
like you, you don't need to have a very long pitch.
You just need to present the offer and be like,
hey, by the way, I've had it, you know,
there's a number of you guys been talking about this stuff,
talking about you 15 minutes if you want,
do it before lunch or do it before, like,
do it before a talking period so that if you have sales guys
or whatever, they can help sign people up.
Having looked at data across our portfolio companies
that run events, one really interesting thing has come out,
which is that if you can segment the audience
of the people who are attending based on revenue and income,
I used to think about like what percentage
of the audience by converting,
and now I just don't care at all.
It's just of the qualified people in the room,
who am I converting?
Like you can absolutely go into a room
and close 80% if everyone's qualified.
And so a lot of those events from an upsell perspective
are gonna be about who's in the room.
Anyone even do a newsletter here?
Well, people value it.
That would be like posts in the community.
Yeah, I would post and then send email to everyone.
I think an easy way is to get your successful students.
and interview that it's like a testimonial and content and motivation i think a lot of you guys are
saying how do you get people motivated hearing that people that are like them winning is the best
one of the other things that um to talking about like what makes a company sellable the success
interviews so uh we do this thing in our portfolio company is called life cycle ads so there's a lot
of different ad types that you can do that are outside of your face and one of my favorite one of my favorite one
ones as life cycle ads.
You'll see some from school soon.
But basically these success interviews,
if you're smart about it, you actually walk
through an epiphany bridge.
And so what that means is, I'll just draw it.
So you've got internal, external,
and then before, during, and after.
Like I've looked at a zillion testimonial templates,
but that's the one that I've been able to teach
and my team can do it, which is,
what was life like before internally,
before you saw this?
did this, what were the external stats
that other people would observe about you
before you decided to do this thing?
What made you actually take the next step externally?
And then internally, what were the things
that you were most concerned about?
And this is like the key question, and I'll explain why in a second.
But someone's like, yeah, I was struggling.
My wife didn't respect me anymore, because I couldn't make money.
And then external stuff.
I was making $3,000 a month.
I was behind on payments.
I almost lost our house.
I had to downgrade our car.
External stuff.
And so then, you know, I saw an ad from Alex, whatever, and it kind of caught my eye.
We're like, well, what were your biggest concerns?
Well, I didn't know if it was legit.
Well, then what made you decide to do it anyways?
Well, I saw all the other people that had, you know, had testimonials and they looked like
gyms like mine and actually found somebody on the page that had almost the exact same model
as me.
And I was like, okay, well, if it worked for that guy, maybe I'll give it a shot.
and this is why it's so key in the decision-making process because you're literally talking to the prospect from a prospect not you
walking through them making a decision about why they laid their fears and their concerns and took the next step anyways
and then you're on the interview now and you say okay well what's life like now externally and internally
well now I was able to get back the car I upgraded we moved to a better neighborhood my kids can go to a better school
and I feel better about myself blah blah right and so this is one point
part of the life cycle.
And so you can condense that into a 60 or 90 second ad
with just the highlight points, and it also becomes an ad.
And so when you're running these interviews,
it's content, its bonuses, and its ads.
Let me hit a couple of these.
I think I can probably just round them out pretty quickly.
Attracting the right people comes down to what bonuses
you're promoting and what promises go with them.
And so most times we're like, I want to get richer people,
but when someone poor comes on the phone,
I still take their money.
If you want to attract better customers,
have to be able and willing to turn away worse customers.
All right, I'm going to tell a three-minute story,
but that way you'll remember it.
I did a consulting day years ago
with a guy who was in my space, in the gym space, many years ago.
And he had the same sales velocity as me.
So he was selling the same number of people as I was.
But we're making 70 times more profit than he was.
And his cost to acquire customers was about the same as mine,
selling about the same number of units.
But the main difference is that his customers were worth $5,000,
and my customers were worth $42,000.
And so the thing is that he just ran ads about like, hey, if you're in fitness and you want to make money, come to me.
And my ads were you have to be a gym owner, you have to have a signed lease, you have to have at least one employee, and you have to have at least 30 members at your gym.
And the way that we figured that out was that we looked at all of our customers, found the top 20%, said, what do these people have in common?
And then we made that the qualification.
And then that ran through every part of the funnel.
So that was in the ads.
We said, this is who it's for.
This is who it's not for.
If you're a trainer, if you just want to make money online,
if you want to do all these things, this is not for you.
And then our people were like, thank God.
I just wanted to have like a legit place where real gyms, real businesses are here,
who are dealing with employees and all that stuff.
And so also to that same degree, if you have bonuses and you know that these beginners
love that bonus, cross it off.
Because the people who are going to be the better avatars
are going to have a very different set of things that will be valuable
for them and so it's a it's a big strategic change like your offer changes your
bonuses change your marketing changes your funnel changes like you change the
business entirely when you when you decide to attract better customers if you
are serious about it otherwise it's just a complaint forever like for example of
really business a busy business owner to to your point they might not want
calls but they might love the fact that they can just DM or slack or something
like that that's like you know like DM to
get access and have quick responses,
that might be more valuable than even having calls.
And if you're dealing with founders,
then it's like, founders is very broad,
but if it's like tech founders, then it's like,
okay, well, then that's, now we can get,
we can get really juicy on this
and make stuff that they would want.
Like we also have our pitch deck
that has already journeyed over $100 million
in fundraising and you can just copy and paste
your logo in and then your benefit in selling points.
That alone is worth more than the price of this thing
for five years.
So that's about attracting the right people.
We covered what to add.
So let's talk high ticket versus low ticket,
coexisting versus transition.
So as long as the price points aren't like too close,
then I don't think you're gonna have an issue
of cannibalization.
And the right type of customer just wants to pay more
to have more support, more implementation help,
more, et cetera.
Fundamentally, like I like to think of the clear line
between the two as implementation versus stuff
that's unlimited, has no marginal cost.
That's how I would do.
differentiate those things. The things that are not immediately scalable are the things that you charge more for.
So you're doing a lot of ticket, when do you, when should you even think about adding a higher ticket then?
You have a lot more team, a lot more employees, you have more reputation risk that goes like,
the amount that people are upset for for $7 a month is very different than $10,000.
Just a very different level of upset if something doesn't deliver. And I will hit on the
the scammer thing because we might as well hit it now.
The big reason the information market has the reputation it does
is not because of what they teach,
it's because of what they promise.
We have workshops here.
We don't do them for free because we incur costs
in order to like put these on.
We have caterers, we have all the stuff, right?
No one's upset because I don't promise anything.
I say I'll share the stuff that has worked well for me.
And if it works for you, then great.
You get in trouble when you say you will make $10,000 a month,
in 30 days and they don't make $10,000 a month in 30 days.
And the vast majority don't make $10,000 a month in 30 days.
That's like that is fun.
Like Dave Ramsey, so like, let's, zooming all the way out, like the people that you
want to look at from a brand perspective, Dave Ramsey is a guru.
He sells courses.
He sells events.
He sells an app.
And he sells coaching.
Literally his four products.
He sells media two technically to advertisers.
But those are the four main products that he sells.
How does he do it in a way that no one calls,
Dave Ramsey a scam because the promises that he makes are absolutely justifiable.
If you save $2,000 a month, you will have $2,000 more dollars a month.
No one's going to fight him on that.
If you didn't save the money, you didn't save the money.
Now that's part of the unique thing about his particular business is that everyone makes
some amount of money.
And he says if you spend less of it, you will have more left over.
And if you listen to any of his stuff, he doesn't even make claims.
He just provides value.
And then enough people, because when you're just providing value, you grow at such a faster
rate that then people just want to they just want more and so I think someone else was
early asking questions like what is free versus what isn't in terms of content
honestly the same stuff and that's why and to be fair I take that more as my
free stuff should be just as good as my paid stuff more than my paid stuff is it
is now junk because my free stuff is not good like I spend a year on a book that I
give away every year and I just want that to be
be so exceptional that it spreads on its own.
And so I think if you think about how do I
make my amazing free stuff just as good
as my amazing paid stuff, at some point,
you draw a line and you say, if you want more of that,
you can pay for it.
And people will be like, well, I consumed all this.
I want more, and they'll pay for it.
Because this was worth more than the price of free.
And it was worth more than the time they gave.
Go for it.
Yeah, so my question, I guess, is more specific on not
that it's difficult to say.
satisfy customers, we have no issue that we have had not a single complaint for people calling
us a scam.
Sure.
From the program, the issue is because it's high ticket, people want to look it up, people that
didn't buy that just want a sales call.
They're those that are posting this negativity.
Sure.
A lot of times we just tell these people are crazy, but just by the way they write.
But we've had a threat, yeah, but we've had a threat and ready for example.
When people start, it shows up the bar.
And so it's like, what do you do?
you do to combat that?
Let me zoom out for you.
One, every single YouTube video that I post,
people are like he's just trying to sell his course.
I don't even have a course for sale.
So like, point one.
Point two is that the only way that you combat that
is being 10 times louder.
So think about it as like a percentage of mind space that
exists.
They're this loud.
If you're this loud, then they're 50% of the talking about you.
So you drown it out.
You shrink them in.
to a relevance.
It's the only way you deal with it,
because you're not going to change humans.
People who don't know you will make an assumption
because you teach anything about making money,
that you automatically have these things
that they've seen from other people who teach money.
And so they will just make that association on their own,
which by the way is what branding is.
So as long as you do this stuff, that will happen.
And so the question is what do you do about it?
I don't think buying the Reddit thread is the answer,
because another one will come up.
It doesn't really matter.
You just need to do this.
Prove them wrong.
Yeah.
Like, zero attention.
Like, and I'm only going to highlight this because you're here because this is important.
The fact that, like, you flew here and, like, the most pressing question, or one of the most pressing questions you had was this, is them winning.
Because all of that mind space could just go towards making more money, making the business better, making the product better.
Like, they get zero.
Like, in general.
Also, if someone, like, makes a big public blast or they do a hit piece, and I'm sure I will get.
one in the future at some point I will never acknowledge it why would I why
would I why would I why would I tell my audience about this thing like that's that's
the biggest gift in the world now all these people are telling their audiences
about you and they're doing it for free okay so that was that was about
attracting this was this one coexisting between the two and the when it's yeah
it's an entirely different business if you want to do that like it'll
absolutely be absolutely be a increase in
in income, the process is basically weaving it
into the customer journey.
So if you have your journey for the customer who comes in,
they get an event at months, whatever, three,
and they've got their coffee with hams every day,
lots of coffee, this is awesome.
We want to make sure that the communication that's going to them
during this period of time, we want to have a point that's
an activation point, which basically demonstrates
that they're ready.
You don't want to pitch everybody in the community
because it's not for everybody and everyone wouldn't benefit
and it just won't look good.
But if someone has now reached a certain level,
like they hit a thousand subscribers or whatever
the metric is for you, say, hey, guess what?
You won this and then you have a call.
And so that call, you provide value
and then you just ask them if they want to do next steps.
It's just, and all you do in that call is say,
you're here, you want to get here,
you will absolutely get there on your own.
The question is whether you want to take five years
or you want to have it take five months.
Yeah, go ahead.
Oh, I've got a good one in terms of when you know if you should offer on my ticket.
Because I think Hamza was kind of talking about this.
Okay, yeah, that's the process.
So what I found when I was selling lower ticket input first, because that's how I got started,
was that a lot of my successful students wanted more.
They kept coming to me and they were like, how I've already hit the goal that this course was for.
And I want, I've got more money, but I want more.
I want to go to the next level.
And you don't have anything.
Like, I want more, like, look, they were, like, basically offering to pay me money for something more.
And once there's enough of those happening, that's when you know that there's a need for a second level, basically.
Does that make sense?
Yeah, you need the demand.
You definitely don't put it in.
Yeah.
So there's a, you can see a clear need.
Because then all you do is when you see these people get this level.
A lot of them will ask for it, and then you can just message those particular people.
That way you're not like smashing everyone in your community every day about your high-ticket
thing.
It's more just cherry-picking.
And you get the best people in without even really promoting it.
Does that make sense?
That's what I've found works well.
You can engineer the activation point by telling them that as soon as they hit the objective
metrics, they win an award.
Like for us, we had a sword.
So when Jim hit a million dollars a year,
they would get a sword.
And so we do the live event, like when we do our events,
we'd have a award ceremony and everyone would get knighted,
whatever, they get the sword.
But whatever that number is for you,
they're going to turn in a video,
they're gonna turn in substantiation,
all of that becomes ads, by the way,
the second way of getting ads from people.
And then you also can then just,
they will just lean into you
because they want the thing, and then you can then ascend.
But I really, I will re-emphasize Sam's point.
that like you can you can never do it too late you absolutely can do it too early
because like if you waited four years and you have this massive community it'll just be better
like the engine's still going to be the front of like the community the low ticket on the front
is still going to be the main economic engine that drives the demand into the higher ticket
did you guys see the guy who won the school games this month in march so this guy's a high
ticket guy selling insurance stuff or whatever and he sold a 10,000 dollar thing that was
his whole business. He came on school and then he wanted to win the recordings from today. So
by the way, shout out. And so he just got on the phone with his normal customers. And instead of
selling the 10K thing, he just sold them $1,000, like $999 for a year and put him into the school
community and just got three of them on because he wanted to get the free recordings. But then
the sales were so easy that he switched his model and sold 50 people into that. And so,
in like 20-something days.
And so, I mean, Sam and I've talked about this at length,
but I think there is a movement that's moving more from high,
like grass is always greener.
There's tons of operational challenges
that exist with high ticket in general.
And you'd also have to factor in profit.
I know in the inflores space,
you hear a lot of numbers coming around.
It's revenue.
Yeah, like a million a month.
It's everyone's goal,
but I've met many people that make money a month
that actually profit less than AMS.
so like
because he has no ads
and he just employs his sibling
and he lives at home
so like
and the easiest way for Hamza
to double is just to do affiliates
so like he could get
to 400 grand a month
and I know a lot of people that make a bill a month
don't make 400 grand a month profit
for sure like a hundred a dozen
so always be more realistic
about it like you hear these big numbers
but by the time you're
If you had a sales team and ads, a lot of that money's gone.
If I could go back in time, again,
we talk about sellability of a business.
Gym launch was by far the most expensive player in the market.
So ours was $4,000 a month, 43 technically,
per month to gym owners who on average take home
$30,000 a year.
Tough.
There was another guy, actually in the UK,
and I noticed,
this price point continued to reappear, but there were guys who were able to get like 36-month,
40-plus-month LTVs selling more or less the same thing, not the same thing, obviously,
but like at like $800 to $1,200 a month. And so the, what I realized from gym launch,
and we've, you know, obviously we've since changed the pricing and whatnot, was that we had to
price to people's worst month. Because even though if we made on average, so the average gym for
us add an extra 120,000 in profit per year, just using the system that we had. And so for me,
I was like, okay, well, net of us, it was 120. It was 160 with us, like, if we didn't, if we were
afraid. Right. So we made them 160, net of us is 120, an extra profit. Now, again, these guys
are making 30, so I quadrupled their income, like pretty sexy offer, and we did that on average.
But they would still cancel if they had a bad month. And so I saw that these other
people were able to maintain customers because they had they were above their worst month they
still could afford the thing and so because of that they knew that if got one thing a year it would
pay for it and they were willing to continue to pay at that price point and so there's a wild
difference between what someone will pay at their searing hot pain point versus what they will pay
after they had a steak dinner like do you still want to have some steak well I might want to have
some steak tomorrow so maybe I'll be willing to pay but significantly less like that price
price point compared to the value is where people continue to pay.
It's just, it's, I was impatient because I wanted to make the money.
But if I had known, like, but for context, if I had 6,000 gyms right now paying $1,000 a
month, I'd be making $6 million a month, or that business would be doing $6 million a month.
Just on that side, we had the supplement side too.
And so that would have also been significantly more profitable.
I think if you really do provide value, you might find that there's an amazing spot
at like $700 a month that people.
people just like you the thing is is you'll be able to sell like end for selling will go up like
8x right and so that's where like that this is literally just a pricing graph and then you just look at
max units and LTV by the way for everybody small group is the most profitable way to do it wrong way
okay good on offers
