The Game with Alex Hormozi - How I Lost Everything Twice and Kept Going (Rachel Hollis Interview) | Ep 852
Episode Date: May 6, 2025In this reshare of his interview on The Rachel Hollis Podcast, Alex (@AlexHormozi) opens up about the painful personal sacrifices, betrayals, and brutal lessons that shaped his journey, from losing ev...erything twice to rebuilding with more clarity, discipline, and drive than ever before.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 | Acquisition Mentioned in this episode:Get access to the free $100M Scaling Roadmap at www.acquisition.com/roadmap
Transcript
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Welcome back to the game. This is a guest spot on Rachel Hollis's podcast.
Main things I talked about in this podcast are the reality of hard work and sacrifice.
You can't get around it.
Learning from some of our failures and investing in companies in the early days of acquisition.com.
And I also mentioned a little bit, as is the Hormozie Way, talk about death to gain freedom of mind.
There is a little bit of my story in this one.
And so if you are somebody who's heard my story, then I would, you know, skip for it a little bit.
then you can get to the meaty stuff that is not my story that you've probably already heard.
All right, rock and roll.
Love you.
Enjoy.
Okay, so I know this is annoying, but I do feel like we have to give a tiny bit of your backstory
to the audience who has not met you before.
Because a big part, I'll just like lead you down the garden path in advance,
a big part of what I'd love to talk to you about today's mindset.
Okay.
Because what I'm so in love with in your story is how many times it has all four.
falling apart and that you've rebuilt yourself. Because I feel like the world is in a place of
really needing that conversation. So will you take the audience on a backstory of how you got to
where you are today? Yeah. And I will highlight my exceptional proclivity for finding a way to lose
everything, you know, pulling defeat from the jaws of victory. Yeah. Yeah. The quick story is that
I was a management consulting out of college, got to what I would consider a rock top experience where I was
22. I owned my own condo on like a pretty nice high rise, had a balcony, I was looking over the
city. And I was like, is this it? Like, I'm just, I just do this until I die and maybe marry somebody.
And I was like, this feels terrible. And so I quit with that whole quitting process took me six
months from like when I decided that I didn't want to do this anymore until I actually quit.
And I still think to this day, that was the most, the hardest decision I've ever made.
Because I think in the beginning, it's like you, you have to forego what you know for something
that is unknown. And so you can quantify what you have to lose, but not what you have to gain.
And I think that's what makes the decision so hard. Now, obviously, in the other side, it's very
easy in retrospect. I can't believe it took me so long. It's like, yeah, but you didn't know.
Right. It's like saying, oh, I should have just, you know, invested into the stock market for every
year, for 20 years. It's like, yeah, but every single time you're about to do it, it's like,
oh, but it's down now. It's about to go, like there's all this uncertainty. Maybe it's
different now. But just for context for the audience, so that I don't seem more heroic than I am,
I ended up quitting my, I'll say quitting my family, not hardcore like that, but more so like
the harder discussion was getting my family to be on board with the idea that I was going to
quit my job more so than me quitting. Like quitting the job actually felt like the easy part.
The telling everybody else that I was changing my life was the hard part. And so I drove across
the country. And when I was in it like halfway point, I called my dad to let him know that I'd
quit my job and I was going to do this other thing. He was like, well, just come over,
we'll talk about it. Because he'd like talked me off the figurative ledge a bunch of times over
the last however many months. And I was like, I'm gone. And then that's when obviously like he was
upset about it. I feel like that's an important moment to pause because there are a lot of people
listening who have these dreams and ideas but are terrified of the people closest to them and what
they will say. And I think because I know your story, I know that culturally it was really important for
your dad that you went to college and had this amazing job. And he was a, sounds like a pretty
authoritative force in your life. So did you care that you were disappointing him? You finally got
to the place where you're like, fuck it. Like, I'm out or? Yeah. So the biggest decisions I've had in
my life have always been in the face of like imminent death or what feels like it. I don't want to like
go into this like it's a sappy moment or something. But when I say I had like that rock top moment,
it was a, there was a period of time while I was in that job where I just hope I wouldn't wake up
the next day. And so like there's like levels of being sad about things. And I think trying to
operationalize sadness, like what is sadness? It's a perceived lack of options. That's why I feel
so hopeless. You just don't know what to do. There's nowhere to like you're like, you're like,
you just feel very trapped. And so basically the conclusion that I made was if I would rather
not be alive than what I'm currently doing, one of our dreams must die. His or mine. And so I think my
my father's dream for my life had to die in order for mine to live. And so I guess upon realizing
that it made the stakes of the decision so much larger. And at the same time, it made my, for lack of a
better term, give a fuck around his perceived judgment of the decision. It minimized it a lot. And so that's
what allowed me to kind of move forward. Basically, I had to accept the fact that I would be dead to my father
for an extended period of time.
And so I was like, well, I'd rather be dead to him than dead to me.
And I think that's what allowed me to really make the decision.
But I basically went into it with, I will accept the fact that he will not talk to me again.
And I will accept the fact that most of the people that I know will not be around me.
Now, as you played out long term, some people come back, some people don't, whatever.
But like in the moment, I had to be, I think, willing to lose it all on the emotional side
in order to do what I wanted to do with my life.
It's funny because I've experienced not the same path at all, but so many times people will look at the success that I have now and ask women especially, like, how do you convince the people who love you that your dream is a good idea? How do you convince them? How do you convince them? And I'm like, you don't. You prove that you can do the thing you're saying. And then suddenly everyone is like, oh, we always do it. We knew she was going to be huge. And I'm like, fuck you. Did not. I just feel like, so.
many nuggets in what you're saying for people who are. I'm going to look up a quote. Yeah, finding
themselves in the same place right now of like, oh, I need to convince so and so I need to
convince my husband. I need to convince mom and daddy. No, you need to stop putting energy into trying
to convince those people and convince yourself. So Epictetus has this really good quote. Let's go Stoics.
He says, if you're ever tempted to look for outside approval, realize that you have compromised
your integrity. If you need a witness, be your own. Okay. And so I think to the same degree,
It's like how do I get my husband or my whatever, my kids, my cousin, my uncle, that person who I
give all the power in my life to, how do I get them to approve of me?
How do I get them realistically what you're asking for is permission?
Yes.
Which means that you're actually not in control of your life.
A million percent.
And so I think a great frame for anyone who's in this spot is asking for support not
permission, number one, and number two, being willing to accept the fact that they will not support you.
Yeah.
Oh, absolutely.
And there is a freedom that comes in that. It's like, I'm just going to go do this thing and we'll see how it turns out. But it does free up so much energy for you to focus on. Oh, it's huge. It's like you have this massive exhale. Yeah. And everyone who's had one of these hard decisions that's pending in your life, whether it's quitting the boss or telling the husband or whatever it is, it's like as soon as you do it, you're like, why did I wait so long? You're like, you don't realize how heavy it is. One of my favorite kind of little isms is the heaviest thing in the world is an iron or gold. It's an unmade decision. Yeah. And I think,
that a lot of people are carrying around too many of them.
Yeah, there's a great Tim Ferriss quote that I steal a lot, which is the quality of your
life is often determined by your willingness to have tough conversations.
And I think a lot of people listening probably need to have a conversation like that
with their version of your dad.
Yeah.
So you're halfway across the country.
You have this call.
You're like, peace out.
What happens then?
Then I show up at a gym owner's front doorstep because I'd found him on the internet.
Why that?
Because I, so I had, I wanted to be an entrepreneur.
I wanted to start a business.
I had three different ideas.
So I was either going to do frozen yogurt.
I don't know why I laughed.
I'm so sorry.
No, it's fine.
It would just be amazing if you were like the king of menche's right now.
Yeah.
And I'm, hey, in a different timeline I might be.
I wish I was like in Cincinnati.
So I could be like the Froyo King of Cincinnati.
Like I want to have a city associated.
Yeah, exactly.
Like I want Frozen Nation.
Oh, dude.
It would have been.
Actually, if you guys do a live event, you should do a pop up like that because the insider
peeps would know.
I can talk about Frozen. I know a lot about the business. I really do.
No, I've heard you. I've heard you give advice to things. I'm like, okay, you could do this with any category, actually.
Okay, sorry, so test prep was an option. So test prep was the third business. And that one, I was good at standardized tests.
And it kind of, and it didn't require a ton of startup costs. And so between the three, I actually was leaning towards doing. First, I looked at the Froyo thing.
I had only had $50,000 saved up. And it costs like $200,000, or at least that's what I found.
online and I was like, oh, no, I don't know if I can do it. And so then I was like, okay, maybe I'll do
the test prep thing. I spent like four months to like basically creating like curriculum and like all
the stuff. And I was going to partner with one of my professors from Vanderbilt to like do it
together. The long story short is that like, I flew back in. I presented all the stuff. And I was like,
so this is what we'll do. And he's like, this is awesome. And then he just like took it and
he stole it from you. I don't use those words. But, you know, I know like he used it and I didn't have it.
And so, yeah.
Man, you've had some bad luck with partnerships.
Parenthood.
Yeah.
So, yeah, I used to tell Layla that my big red flag with her is that she was into me.
Yeah.
Yeah.
I was like, the big thing.
I was like, the thing that really throws me off about you is that you like me.
I was actually really disheartened at that point because I was like, this was going to be my thing.
I had the whole business model worked out and everything.
And I was always into fitness.
And so that was kind of the third kind of third bucket.
And, you know, the guys that I worked with were like, dude, you do nothing but talk about fitness.
Like we're tired of you talking about fitness.
Just like they were like, we'll chip in to help you start a gym.
And so that was when I started looking to the fitness business stuff.
I found a guy who like had a fitness business like mentorship.
And it was for gym owners.
And so I drove across the country and I showed up at his front door.
And he was like, what?
Everyone has this idea in the movies that people were like, oh my God.
Yeah.
Yeah.
He was just like, I've got meetings right now.
You can like hang out at the gym if you want.
And I was like, he's like, well, where are you staying?
I was like, I don't know. And he was like, what do you mean you don't know? I was like, I just got here.
I was like, there's my car. That's all my stuff. He was like, all right, well, you can, you can stay at my place tonight, which is super generous of him. And so I stayed at his place.
What city are you in at this place? I was in Chino Hills. Okay. I went from Baltimore to Chino Hills straight through 36 hours. I packed all my food.
You were the diaper and just, yeah, like that diaper and just, yeah, like that astronaut. Okay, great. Cool.
Yeah, I didn't wear diapers. I just, what I did do, the secret is I just didn't drink fluid. And then it's like,
I just got my fluid from the food and called him today.
I'm just being real.
I was like, I was, I wanted to, I wanted to leave Baltimore behind me.
Yeah.
I was like, this is, I'm going.
Yeah, I wanted to go.
And so anyways, I got there, started being basically, I think this is kind of interesting.
So I'll bring it up, which is I joined this mentorship for gym owners.
I didn't own a gym.
I'm also 22, just per context here.
All right.
And this is like a lot of old grisly, like grisly dudes, you know, who own gyms.
It tends to be the archetype.
And I'm like, hey guys, some of the best money ever spent because the first time they had
like a meetup, I was like, yeah, so, you know, I'm trying to start a gym.
And I'm thinking about this.
And they were like, oh, no, you want to have like rent has to be below this.
And I was like, well, this is how many square feet?
They're like, oh, you don't need that.
You need this.
And I was like, okay, well, this is the equipment I was buying.
They're like, no, that stuff, that brand breaks.
This one has just great marketing, terrible product.
This one, although good, girls will slip and break their shins on it.
Don't do it.
And I'm like, oh, my God.
And they're like, oh, no, you should get is these ones.
These ones, you can get them at like these auctions that are like.
So they just, I saved like $200,000 or probably like three years of mistakes from that first.
Just like all the things that they had made mistakes on.
I just was sitting there just taking notes.
Out of curiosity were these gym owners who were not going to be in the area you wanted to build a gym?
So they weren't direct competition.
There's so much mad value in that.
I started as an entrepreneur as an event planner.
And I was so desperate.
I didn't know what I was doing.
And I wanted to find other people who would talk to me about the business, just like you're saying.
and nobody, it was like so closed-door policy
because everyone was terrified of competition.
It's small business stuff.
Well, it's total small business.
But what I ended up finding a wealth of information with
were vendors within my industry.
So the florist, the photographer, the baker,
they all knew the best venues, the best people to work with,
don't talk to these clients, you should be charging this much,
and they became my community.
So if you can find that group of people
where there isn't inherent competition, like readily available,
I feel like you can find your gold mine.
And zooming out even one level to push on this for anybody who is worried about
helping a competitor out, I have found that a business will fail or succeed based on how good
the business owner is.
And let's say that there are three event planning business owners that you know in an area.
There are probably like 500 event planning businesses in that area and you probably will
never know any of them.
And if all three of you help each other, there will just be three good event planning
businesses and the other 497 will not have an advantage.
And so I would encourage you to disregard the idea that there really is competition.
And I now, you know, I'm friends with a lot of the people that some people might consider like,
I mean, like in the M&A world for private equity, it's like we share a deal flow.
Like, hey, this is a company that's probably not as much of a fit for me.
Like maybe like you might want to take a look at it.
And I think you just get a lot more out of collaboration.
And I think the world's significantly larger than most people give it credit for.
Absolutely.
And so.
Well, also if you're an entrepreneur and you have that kind of scarcity mind,
you're fucked.
Yeah.
Truly.
Like you're only going to see the most basic level of opportunity and you're going to burn
out.
So.
Yeah.
So I learned all this stuff.
I spent three months kind of being like a mini apprentice just like watching everything,
soaking it in.
The guy who did the sold the mentorship group just allowed me to be his like EA essentially.
Working for free or actually getting paid?
I got paid minimum wage.
Okay.
But honestly, I think that's a really good tip for if you're listening to this and you don't have
responsibilities, you don't have a family, and you have the opportunity to go apprentice for someone,
it is, it's a gold mine. And you're going to learn stuff you would never learn otherwise.
Yeah. And I've repeated this process over and over again in my life. And so I think I actually do,
I am grateful for the work that I did as a management consultant, which was the first job I had at a
college, the one that I was miserable at. But I am grateful for doing it because it taught me the
learning process. And so as a consultant, if you want to, you want to, you.
You have to, like, I'm 22, and I have to go into a room with, like, four-star generals and all these,
you know, lieutenants and colonels and all this stuff, whatever.
I have to then go present or compile information in a way that has to be better and some
interesting insight that they don't know as 30-year, you know, literal veterans of the
career, of the path.
And so, and you have to do that in, like, three months.
And so the process of, like, rapid learning for a consultant is you go and talk to experts
and then you ask them every question you can about what they think about everything.
And then you say, can you give me like three to five other people who you respect,
who you think have really good insight on this?
And they give you three to five people.
And so then you do the same thing with them.
And then you ask them for three to five people.
And so eventually you kind of like map the network of like expertise.
Because the same names will start coming up over and over.
You're like, I already talked to Tom, already talked to, you know, Jack.
And then you'd have like 600 pages of notes.
And then you recategorize the notes by topic.
And then basically you take that and then you distill the notes down into kind of the clearest like this is what the kind of priorities are.
And that's how we would go into, you know, how do we, you know, use satellites to kill the most bad guys based on resources, like between different, you know, armed forces, like just wild stuff and I'm 22.
Yeah.
And so I was doing like space cyber and intelligence for the military back.
That was my first thing out of college.
And so taking that idea, though, of like experts already consolidate information.
for you ahead of time. So no one has a lack of information. It's everywhere, right? The problem is
sifting through it. And so when you go to an expert, they've already done a huge amount of the lifting
to sift through the information for you so that you can just get the best information as fast as
possible. And so that's why I was willing to pay as a 22-year-old to go to this gym mentorship thing
because I was like, well, they know more about gyms than I do. And I'd rather not waste five years
trying to figure it out. If someone's hearing this for the first time, how would you tell kids today?
to properly disseminate the right expert to take advice from.
Because now anybody with a TikTok is like an expert in the field,
and it's leading people so astray.
So how, I know this sounds super basic,
but how can you figure out who actually knows what they're talking about?
It's a really good question.
It's a really good question.
I'll walk through how I think about it,
which is you have, you know, in degrees of expertise, right?
You have people who, you have your close friends, right?
These are the worst people.
to listen to because they have no idea and they'll just give you opinions. And if, let's say if you're
in the in the wanting to make money space, if they are poor, they will likely give you more
poor person advice, which is probably not the good advice. After that, you've got, you know,
strangers on the internet. Above that, you have people who have done what you want to do, which I think
is at least the first real foothold into this of like maybe some good information here. And then you
have above that people who have helped people like you get to where you want to go and have
repeatable kind of like metrics around like how they can do like how they've helped people do that.
And then I think the ultimate version of that is someone who has both been there themselves
and helped other people just like you get to where you want to go in a way that's measurable
that you can see like, okay, this percentage of people who do this. You know, it works out. And so that's
probably from a how I would look for vetting. The second thing is a totally different take on this,
which is that expect that you will not succeed the first time.
time and that you will need to learn from multiple people in order to kind of make it your own.
And the easiest kind of visual of this is like if you imagine you've got a bridge and you have to
like assemble all these bricks on the bridge to get to the other side, it's unlikely that the first
person that you talk to will give you, let's say there's a hundred bricks to get to the other side
is going to give you all 100. They might give you 80 because you know nothing. So it's really easy for
them to get you a bunch of bricks. But you might be like, wait, but I didn't get a dollar to the other
side because the dollar's got to walk the way the cross the bird's the dollar can't jump it's got to walk
all the way all the bricks the dollar has no you know no jumping ability and so so then it's like the next
person you go to you know you pay and get help or you just watch their stuff whatever and it's like
and they give you another 10 so now you're at 90 but you're like man I haven't I'm I still haven't
made anything yet and then all of a sudden you know somebody gives you the last 10 and you're like
this guy's a genius but really it's kind of like saying oh well I hate my arithmetic teacher because
once I learned calculus, I was like, oh, this guy's an idiot.
It was like, he just laid the foundation.
Yeah.
No, but it's ridiculous.
But like, I see it all the time on like internet stuff.
Like I used to consume this guy's stuff and now I consume this guy stuff and the other guy is bad.
It's like you needed this guy to get to this guy.
Absolutely.
They're requisites.
Yeah.
And so the meta concept for me is directional rather than exact.
So I asked myself the question, well, this person got to be closer to my goal or not.
And if it is closer, then I will, I'll start walking in that direction.
When I get a little bit more information? Of course correct. And I think that that series of approximations is a
is a much faster way than trying to have what I call the fallacy of the perfect pick, which is that people
will just stay for years trying to pick perfectly when really it's like, well, I know it's not that way.
So let's go north. And then as we go there, we'll ask more people. And they're like, well, it's kind
this way. And you're like, okay, it's northwest. And then you start working your way towards it. And that's,
that's how I kind of wander towards my destination. Yeah. I actually love that advice. I was just talking
my husband about this this morning. He was at the gym. And he's like, man, there's this guy at the
gym. I see him there every single day, like full on decked out, like those shirts with like the
very, you probably own one. Just like total gym, bro. He has all the equipment. And his body never
changes. I see him every day. His body never changes. And I feel so bad for this guy. Because I'm like,
how do you not realize that whatever you're doing is not working for you? And I was like, oh, that's a great,
That's a great analogy for me to talk to Alex about that what does that self-awareness look like to understand?
I've started on this path.
This is year three of doing the same thing and it's not getting me anywhere.
Yeah.
It's interesting when you said that.
My immediate thought was a different direction.
So I'm a circle around.
Yeah.
So one what's interesting is that when I have been made a fool of for assuming
that my goals are everyone's goals.
That's real.
And so I, so with the guy, because obviously I've spent a lot of time in the gym.
No, crazy.
But personally and then business wise.
What's interesting is that the reason someone buys is not the same as you sold.
Not always.
And so sometimes people come.
I remember I was having this conversation with a lady was in the same position, right?
So she's been here for six months and I'm like, Janet, what the hell?
Like, you look the same.
Yeah.
You know, and she's been paying me for six months.
And she was like, I, I love coming.
And I was just like, yeah, but like you wanted to lose weight.
You came her to lose weight.
You're not losing weight.
Like, you know, what's going on?
And I was almost a little bit aggressively.
I didn't have as much, you know, tacit knowledge of navigating the situations as a 23-year-old
talking to a 40-year-old woman about her weight, right?
After her second child, whatever.
Yeah.
And then it kind of dawned on me.
I was like, she's not here for weight loss.
I sold weight loss because that's what I assume I would want.
Yeah.
But she was here.
Like, there's a saying we have in the gym world, which is they come for the bikini, they stay for the community.
Right? And so, you know, community is one of the things that someone might want.
The other is, like, some people just like want to feel good. So they just want to get their sweat on and they just want to feel good or whatever.
Some people, it's their penance. Right. It's like, I went out last night and I'm going to work out just so I can cancel it out.
Right. And that's their version of it. And so I have over time been like, if you want to come to a hundred events, then you might be coming for a different reason.
And so to the same degree, I think through like, okay, how a customer derives value from a product or service is their choice.
And so it's been helpful also from a product perspective in thinking about different customer archetypes in terms of what their goals are so that we can maximize value across all archetypes.
Because if we only solve for the person who just wants to lose weight, there's actually a smaller percentage of people who actually want to lose weight versus respond to weight loss advertising, which is a different thing.
Absolutely.
And so anyways, that was like immediately where my head went.
Yeah, I love that.
I've dissected fitness goals for a little bit.
Yeah, no, I love that.
That's so real.
And it's a really good reminder, too, the idea that not everybody is after the same goals.
But I do think I would love your perspective if you're willing to give it on if you are wanting.
Yeah.
But you want to raise the revenue numbers.
You want to do.
And it's just not working.
But you are working so hard.
You're sort of spinning your wheels.
Yeah.
typically, at least in a revenue situation, but I would say the same thing for a fitness goal or a relationship goal.
I think it's more or less the same is that so under the assumption, and this is a big assumption, that you are working all the time, which when we look under the hood, I would say that that is not often the case.
There's the perception or the feeling that this is hard and therefore because it's hard all day, I must be working all day.
But that those two are not the same thing.
What does it look like from your perspective, which I know is going to be intense, to work really hard?
Like no bullshit, what does it actually take from your perspective?
Yeah, I'll probably be canceled in the culture that we have today for how I work.
I get it all the time.
I get a lot of hate for it, which is ironic because I'm like, you don't need to work the way I work.
Yeah, you don't have to do this.
You can do whatever you want.
It is a very funny thing about everyone will ask, how do you do it, how do it?
And you're like, okay, this is how I do it?
And people are like, how dare you?
That's not a, I'm like, don't do it then.
Don't do it.
So I'll give two answers.
So the first is that, so really tactically, I'll give the task.
answer first and then I'll give the larger answer. So I work seven days a week. I take off days when I
feel like I need to take off. I don't subscribe to the five day, two day set up or even like
holidays in general. They are almost entirely manmade. The weekend system is only in the last hundred
years that that was a thing. And so I reject the vast majority of kind of like societal norms for
working. To the same end, I know that I can work usually pretty well.
about I can work 12s pretty much straight through, but I would say that I usually work from like 5 a.m. to call it like 5. Like 5 to 5 works fine for me. And on the weekends, maybe it's like 5 to 3, something like that. And that works well. And if I feel a day where I'm like, man, I like, I need a day, then I take a day. Yeah. And so that's that's just like how I work. And I've done that for a long time. And I'm going to guess, I'm a reading between the lines here, a big distinction.
is that you enjoy working.
Oh, yeah.
Yeah.
I love to work too.
If I did not have four kids,
I would legitimately work 18 hours a day every single day.
And I often believe the universe put me in this exact scenario
because it knows that I would have slowly destroyed myself
by working nonstop because otherwise,
like when they finally are grown, buckle up.
But I think that's the thing that people don't get
is if you genuinely love it,
if it's so much fun to do, because it is.
assuming you've found a path that you're into, it doesn't feel maybe like it might for someone else to go work at the bank.
Like it feels like something completely different.
Yeah, someone will take their context and then project it onto your situation and say, I could never do that.
That's terrible.
And because I could never do that, I have to find something wrong with you and your character in order to make myself feel okay that I didn't take that stuff.
Absolutely.
From a little bit also more tactical is I tend to organize my day.
For me, I work best in the morning in terms of like my brain's freshest.
And so I will work, use, like, I call it Maker Manager Time.
And so Maker Time is like, there's nothing on my calendar.
And I make stuff.
There's manager time, which is meetings and everything else, Slack's, whatever.
I think that you cannot mix the two times.
And the unfortunate part is if you want to start something, I recommend like a 4-4-4 schedule.
So it's like four hours of promotion, which is letting people know about your stuff.
Because otherwise, like your biggest threat to your business is that no one knows you exist.
Yeah.
The second four hours is delivering what you promise to those people who find out about your stuff.
And then the third four hours is figuring out what you need to do next.
Now you can change those four blocks about where you do them.
The figuring out what to do next is probably the first four hours.
The promotion might be the second four hours and delivery might be the third four hours.
But fundamentally, that's how I would divide it out if I were starting out.
And then the more leverage you get, the more you can have kind of more maker time.
Like Layla and I have kind of shadow images or like contrast schedules.
So I would say four or five days a week for me, I have basically nothing on my calendar.
And then I have two days where I just tell our team, I was like, just load me up.
Just put as many things on my calendar as you can.
Because if you think about the nature of management, the goal of a manager is to have no blanks based on their calendar and to maximize, have as many interactions as possible to make as many decisions as they can to move things forward.
That's my actual nightmare.
But that is like super, I mean, it's an effective.
that's how you manage, right?
And so the problem is, the alternative is makers where, you know, a manager can have time blocks
as small as five minutes on their calendar where they can move things forward.
For a maker, the time blocks are you have like two a day.
And so you're looking at four to six hour blocks is one block.
And like there's memes about this, but like there's nothing worse than a 10 a.m. meeting
and nothing else on the calendar because it's like, okay, well, that's my morning.
Because you're not going to like really get into whatever you're just.
trying to do. Right. And so because if you're doing maker stuff, you want to lose yourself into the
work. Absolutely. And so the problem is when makers managers have to work together. Because the manager
says, hey, it's only five minutes. Why is this a big deal? And the maker's like, well, that's half my day.
And so the, you have to protect that kind of at all costs. And so if you're like, well, Alex,
it must be, it must be nice to not be able to have things on your calendar for many days in a row.
First answer, yes, it is nice. Second answer, it wasn't always that way. And so what I, the reason I, I mean,
and partially that I wake up so early is because I come from the fitness world.
And it's just like, I think that habit dies hard.
But the guy that I did that little mentorship with, and I came from a job that started at 10 am.
So it's a totally different like shift for me.
And I got to the gym at four.
So it was a totally different, you know, perspective.
And so he worked 12 hours a day and he had multiple kids.
But he wanted, he was a family man too.
And so he just figured out, he's like, I need to work 12 hours a day, though.
And so he would work four to four.
And then you'd go home, pick the girls up from school.
school and then have dinner with them and be president, be dad or whatever. And so I would get to the
gym at four. And so I basically just would know that between 4 a.m. and noon, I would get all of my
moving stuff forward done. And then afternoon, I just knew my day was shot. I was like, I'm just
going to be doing fires and doing everything else. And so I think that split has worked really well for me.
And like to this day now, if for whatever reason something has to get booked on the calendar and it's
like on an empty day, they booked back to front. And so it'd be like,
The first appointment would be at like 4.30 in the afternoon so that I have uninterrupted time until
then. And the second one, they'd be like at four to 4.30. And so they book me back to front.
And so those few things have helped tremendously for getting things done. The larger, so I said
that was going to be really tactical in terms of like the work. Bigger picture, I think what's
really interesting about entrepreneurship is that it is always hard. And I think what makes it hard is
that you don't know the nature of the sacrifice that you will have to make to get to the next
level.
Yeah.
And so a lot of people, myself included, I always, and I always like make this fallacious
thinking process where I think like, oh, whatever I have to do to get the next level is just
more of what I'm currently doing.
And it's just what's hard about the next level for whatever it is, is you have to sacrifice
something different.
Yeah.
And so the currency changes to get to the next level.
So it's like you're paying in pesos and then you're paying in dollars.
And you're like, oh, I have to pay more dollars.
It's like, no, no, no.
Now you have to pay more rupees, or you have to pay more euros.
And you're like, wait, I have to pay more euro.
I didn't think I would have to give euros up.
Like I have to pay.
So it's like you actually, you're the currency of the thing you pay for changes.
And so like in the beginning, you know, the first person they have to conquer is you.
Right.
And I don't think that ever really ends.
But like, you know, you have to get over yourself.
And then the next one is like you have to conquer, you know, not being beholden
to the desires of friends and family.
But like, it's a different currency.
You're like, I thought it was going to be all about cold calls and advertising.
It's like, well, you have to first get over the first get over the
fact that everybody is around you doesn't want you to do what you're doing. Yeah. Because it reminds
them of the risk that they were unwilling to take. But anyways, but it's like, you have that.
And then it's like, okay, what's the next thing that's going to come? Then you have like the mechanics
of the business. It's like, okay, now you switch into that mode. You have to learn all this,
all this new language and all like, it's a whole new field, right? So you start learning that.
And you're like, okay, so I think I'm going to have to learn a new field. Well, you have to
keep doing that. But then the next level is like, okay, well, now have to deal with people.
And so you have employees and you have management. You have all that stuff. And you're like,
oh my God, okay, so this is a whole thing.
And then, like, at another level, it's like,
then you have legal stuff that starts happening.
You're like, oh, God, this stuff.
So, like, it just, it does.
The thing is, is you have to keep paying in dollars.
And then you start now also paying in euros.
And then you start also pay.
And so it's, and I think that,
because most people who I've seen who either quit entrepreneurship
or what I would consider, like, stop the good fight,
they're like, I'm good here, is that it gets to a level.
And I want to be clear.
I don't think there's anything wrong with us.
They get to a level like,
I don't really want to pay in euros.
Yeah. And I think that's fine.
Yep.
And I think people mistake my message.
I'm like, I'll talk about what it takes.
You can decide whether that's worth it for you.
Absolutely.
Yeah. God, so good.
I have distracted you from this journey many times.
Oh, but circling.
I know, we're on a journey together.
But for those people who are building or don't know the story, I don't want to miss out on this.
So how'd you go from working for that guy?
No, this is my favorite kind of conversation because we're offering these nuggets.
along the way and I'm the one interrupting you. It's not your fault. But how did you go from being
essentially an assistant to this guy to starting your own gym? So I'll speed run this. So I took all the
advice that I could. I found a place that was 45 minutes from his place, maybe an hour from his place
in Huntington Beach, California. So you know his down on Beach. Like I'm not competing, right? For that
for anyone who's worried. And I didn't have enough money to pay for two rents. And so I slept at the
gym, which seems like more hardcore than it felt. I just felt like it was like a fun adventure.
I was 20-something. I was like, I'll sleep by the gym. But started the gym. I found out two weeks
before the gym happened, I was supposed to have a partner who's going to be 50-50 with me. He
backed out. So then all of a sudden, I was going to have some savings, but I had already signed
the lease. So I was like, all right. So all of my savings are going into this. And so I had
basically the $50,000 that I had went into the gym. And I had basically no money. And rent was
$4,972 a month. And I'd never.
made money before. Not really. I only found this out a year later that I looked at my processing
for my first month of business and what was settled post fees, like not in payment plans,
what actual cash was processed was $4,972. I found it out a year later. Like I'd never,
like I'd never pull up my processing stuff. Oh, that's amazing. Not wild. Yeah. Yeah. So I slept at the
gym and I went to this little thing two weeks earlier that was this new marketing thing that was
cutting edge. It was 2013. It was called Facebook ads. And so I ran, I went to a,
two-day workshop on Facebook ads in 2013. And that is honestly like if I had not gone to that
workshop, I don't know if I'd be here. Now, on one level, you'd be like, well, I would have tried
again. I would have maybe. But having a big massive first loss would have sucked. And so I learned
Facebook ads and I started running ads and it worked. And by month nine, I had managers and trainers
and all that stuff and it worked out. And by month 15, I had my second location. And every six
months after that, I opened a new location. I decided I wanted to do a turnaround business. So I was
like, you know, I'm really good at filling these gyms up. I could fill the gyms faster than I could build
them. So I was like, you know, it would be easier if I just went to gyms that already existed and just
filled them up and just figured out something around that. And so I spoke on a stage for showing what
I was doing with my gyms. And to this day, kind of weird, I've never been more bombarded afterwards,
which is weird because it was such a, it was like not a huge stage. And like I had people for two days
around me nonstop.
And I got like, was it a conference for gym owners?
It was like an internet marketing conference.
And so and but there were fitness people there.
And I had 120 people give me their contact information.
I've never had this happen.
One guy gave me his credit card and just said charge me and tell me what I get later.
And I was like, I'm a gym owner.
I don't like, I have gyms.
Like I just got asked to speak.
And so anyways, I got home and I called the guy up and I was like, do you really
want me to charge the card?
And he was like, yeah.
So I charged the card for $5,000.
And he was like, what do I get?
And I was like, I don't know, but I'll make you more than $5,000.
And so it just so happened that he had a gym that he was about to open.
And I was like, perfect.
I'll fly out and I'll launch your gym for you.
And so that was when Jim Launch was born.
Flew out to his gym and launched his gym and launched a couple others in the area while I was there,
just reached out to people and was like, hey, want me to just send more people to your gym?
And the deal is, I get to keep the money and you get to keep the customer for free.
like that sounds like a pretty decent deal
and people said yes to that.
I started doing these launches, started working out.
The guy that I did that first launch with was like,
hey, man, we should do more of this stuff together.
I'm a really good entrepreneur.
And I was like, oh, cool, I'm young.
And I have six locations, but I am insecure
and so I don't value that.
And so I was like, yeah, I should partner with you.
And he said, yeah, but here's the deal.
I have, you know, I'm a little illiquid right now.
And so, you know, my credit's a bit weird, divorce,
you know, misunderstanding.
You should sign and personally guarantee all the stuff
and fund all the new locations.
and we'll just split it 50-50.
And then you can also work them.
But like, I'll come behind you and, you know, operate them.
So I ended up being like, okay, this launch thing works.
So I sold my six, put all the cash into this new, like, launch and go model where he was
going to come behind me.
And the first gym crushed the launch that we were going to do together.
And one morning I wake up and all the bank count is just empty.
And I was like, hmm, that's not good.
And it was just a deposit straight to him.
And I was like, that's weird.
And so I hit him up and I was like, hey, like, what's going on?
He was like, hey, I was just taking my half.
I was like, that was all of it.
And he was like, well, I figured you're just skimming.
And I was like, so you're accusing me of stealing?
I was like, you haven't even been here.
Like, first of all, you haven't been here.
Second, like, what?
And so I was like, I'd never been accused of any.
Like, I was like, I can't even imagine this.
And so I had a, I had a mentor who I was talking to at the time.
And he was like, might have been a misunderstanding.
He was like, print out the bank statement, go line by line and just show them where all the expenses were.
And I was like, okay, I'll do that.
So I printed it all out, highlight everything.
I annotated it and I went to go meet with him.
And I remember being like, let's just figure this out.
I've got the stuff.
We'll go through it.
And he pushed it off that.
He's like, I don't need to see that shit.
And as soon as that happened, I just remember like my stomach drop.
I was like, oh, I just got robbed.
Yeah.
And I was like, oh, fuck.
Because, you know, I had my, I had six gyms.
So, like, it was years of work that went into this new thing.
And then it was gone.
And I was like, what do I do?
Anyways, very stressful for time for me.
I got into a head-on DUI collision, walked away, 60 miles and
are, yep, walked away. Layla picked me up from prison or jail or whatever, whichever one it is.
You were drunk. You were drunk. I was drunk. Oh, dang. I was drunk. Oh, wow. I was at a low point
you might, you might consider. And so she was like, hey, you know, we're dating at this time.
We're six months into dating. Plus her heart. Yeah. And she came with me a month. So a month after
we met, I was like, I'm going to do this launch thing. And mind you, when she met me, I have
multiple gyms. Yeah, you're crushing it. I'm crushing, just got off stage, all these people
want to do business with me, I'm the man. And then, you know, fast forward six months,
she's coming out with me to do these launches because I wanted her to learn how to do it
so that we could, you know, do more of these together. And she was like, hey, we should,
we should go back to doing that thing that worked instead of this whole partner thing. And so
Layla went and launched a gym in Hawaii. I had to keep this gym running, but I didn't want
to sell any more customers because it was clear that he wasn't going to run it. And so I had to
watch the very small amount of savings that I had left, go to pay,
roll in rent, but I couldn't do, I couldn't generate sales because if I sold, then I'd have to keep,
I'd have to keep pushing out when I would close the gym. 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've got customer success, you've got IT, you've got recruiting, HR, you're
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-O-A-D map, road map.
I ended up close in the gym and basically losing everything else that I had at that point
in paying for all like refunds and things like that.
But everyone talks about harder to start a business, much harder to shut one down.
Oh, my God, so hard.
Much harder.
So I had Layla write the check.
So I was like, I can't do it.
Like this is years of my world, like my whole everything I have.
And so anyways, we're back at zero again.
So that's, you can consider that big failure number one.
Yeah.
And so at this point, we're starting the launch business.
And so we're like, we're going to go all in on this.
She's like, focus, please.
because I also had a chiropractor agency, a dental agency.
I had this launch business and I had my six gems.
And so when I had the DUI, my mentor was like,
your stress will kill you.
Yeah.
And so from the beginning of this, I said,
I only make my decisions when confronted with apparent death.
And so this was the second time that I made one of these big decisions,
which is I basically ended all my partnerships.
So I called up, I was partnered with a guy on a couple of locations back home.
I said, hey, I'm out.
And then I talked to the people I was partnered with on the chiropractor and the dental
agency.
And I was like, I'm out.
The problem was that I was the one that was bringing all the business in.
And so, like, they're like, what were we going to do?
I was like, you're half.
Yeah.
You know, like, figured out.
Those all failed eventually, which was sad.
But I was, I was out.
We started the new launch business.
And so Laila was like, okay, this is what we're doing.
I'm going to get all my friends from high school to quit their jobs.
And we're going to go all in on this.
And so she got her six friends from high school to quit all of them to quit their jobs and
join us in this like, we're going to launch gyms now. And of course, because I'm dumb. I was like,
yeah, we'll go from one to six a month immediately because I was like, we got to make up for lost time.
We would be here if I hadn't been an idiot. So we have to start there. We had one, we had one
month in between when I basically lost everything and when I'd set up these next launches and when
her friends were going to quit. And in that month, one gym came up. And I was like, this is perfect.
Like, this will replenish the bank account so that we can fund these new launches. And so a launch for
context would make about $100,000 in a month. A guy hits me up out of nowhere and says, hey, I saw you speak
at this thing years ago. I've got a newborn baby on the way and a two-month-old. And I need a job.
And do you have anything in sales? And I was like, well, I have this gym thinking about launching.
And he was like, I can't really travel. And I was like, okay, well, this is where it is.
And he was like, that's 10 minutes from me.
Oh, cool. Crazy. Like, he met me at not there, like just random. I was like, all right, this
actually might work because he could just because it's all day when you're set like when you're doing a
launch like it's you know 12 hours 14 hours a day of sales all day long and so I was like if I get the 14
hours back I could build all the materials that I need for this for the real business and that could be
great and so we launched the location it does awesome the guy crushes it we do $100,000 in sales
but what's weird is that all of a sudden I'm like where's the where's the money like I'm spending
money on ads I'm looking at the the payment processor and the it's it's saying successful but
there's nothing coming in.
And so I call Heartland, which is my processor.
And I was like, hey, like, it's too.
My deposits come on Tuesdays.
Like, I've been doing this for many years.
Like, why is it not there?
And they're like, oh, it might have just been like something.
I don't know.
It'll come next few days.
Didn't come.
Next Tuesday.
Nothing again.
And I was like, okay, it's been two weeks.
Like, what's going on?
So I called back up and they're like, oh, the person you talked to you probably
didn't know, you're doing, we're doing an annual review of accounts.
And I was like, I've been with you for like five years.
Like, what do you mean in your review?
And they're like, ah, it's just a new policy, blah, blah.
And I was like, okay.
So now the next Tuesday hits.
And so there still hasn't been anything.
This is now Christmas Eve.
And I'm now at Layla's parents' house because I've lost everything.
And I'm a winner.
And I get on the phone with them.
And I was like, I am not getting off the phone until you send me the money.
Like, I was like, it's, it's my money.
Yeah.
But like, it was my money.
You know, like, just take your fee.
and deposit it, whatever. And they were like, well, we've seen some irregular activity. And the issue was,
one, we'd done all those refunds at the gym that I had had, that I had to shut down. Oh, right.
The second issue was that I was processing payments for different states and areas out of my local gym
processor. But I didn't know how this worked. I was 20 something, right? So like, I'm processing
transactions in Virginia in a gym in California. And it just like didn't make any sense. And so they were like,
we're going to shut your account down and we're going to hold on to all of this for six months.
And I was like, that's what do you, what do you? How I was like, how is this legal? Like I was like,
this is like theft. I was like, if you need to keep some of it to cover whatever, like, fine,
keep it. But like, give me like, give me half. Like, give me something. And they said no. And so at
this point, I had $23,000 left in my bank account from the launch that Layla did to cover our asses
during all the refund period. I owed $22,000 in commissions.
to the sales guy for sales that I had not collected on yeah and so it was kind of one of
of these like moral like what do I do and so I send him 22,000 because he was the with the guy
kid and the baby and whatever I just didn't want to give myself the opportunity to not I just was
like to send it yeah that was the screenshot that I have a thousand dollars left of my bank count
in December 26 sorry December 2016 so I still have that screenshot because I was like remember this
yeah and so that was tough that was the second time that that
I kind of lost everything. Big mistake there. And then, so then, you know, Lela has all of her friends
quit her, quit their jobs, but I have no money. So they all quit their, like, real jobs to do this
with me, and I have nothing. And so this is when I told Lela that I thought that she should probably
leave me. It would be a wise choice. I was like, this is probably not going to go well.
Statistically, this is really low likelihood. Like, I can appreciate, like, I still have some
brain power. Like, I don't think this is going to work. But I was like, but I'm not, I'm not, I'm going to
do it, but I don't think it's going to work. And so I still had my gym credit card to head a $100,000 limit on
it. I went to go turn on the ads because it was for New Year's. So it's 26th is Eve, right? I was like,
we can make it all back. You know, like, come on. And so we're, we're, so here we are. So I turn on
all the ads the next day. After getting off the heartbreaking call on the 24th, on the 26th is when I
turn all the ads on. And I was like, I'm going broke at $3,300. $300.
a day of money that I don't have to make this work.
Because I have six guys, hotels, airfare, per diemns for food,
and then marketing spend for the location every day.
And that was shoestring.
Like those guys were living in hobbles.
I'll just put it.
I'd be honest.
Like they were young dudes too.
They stuck it out.
But within the next, you know, month, we made exactly the amount of money that my credit
card bill was.
So I basically broke even.
But like, we had payment plans that were coming after that.
So I was like, okay, this could work.
The next month, I made like an extra, we did like $100,000 the first month.
The next month we did like 170 or 80 or something like that.
And I was like, this might work.
I made like $30,000 or $40,000 in profit.
Like, holy how, like this will work.
The next month we did another little bit more and made a little bit more profit.
I was like, this could be a thing.
But then all of a sudden, Layla hits me, like she tossed my shoulder one morning.
I'm working early.
And she was like, she just turns her laptop towards me.
She was like, what's this?
And it was just like this.
ever-ending waterfall of negative transactions.
And I was like, what's going on?
And so it turns out that the gym owners that we had sold all these people into,
we had one guy get on a chair inside of his gym and just say, like,
this is too many people.
I can't handle this.
Just refund and go home.
And we'd already left the gym.
Like, we'd already launched the gym and filled it up.
And our guy is at the next gym.
But like, the way business works is that you don't run 100% margins.
And so if you have to refund 100% of your sales, you had costs.
Like the credit card company will take 100%,
but you had costs that you spent that you don't have that money.
So that happened.
And then Ward got around,
and then the second gym owner did that as well.
He did a little bit more cleverly.
He said, hey, I saw how much you paid that guy.
I'm the one delivering the service.
Refund with him.
You can sign up for me for half.
After I already paid the price of basically the cost of our customer,
paid the commissions, paid the marketing,
paid the hotel for the sales guy, all that stuff.
And so I learned a very important lesson,
which is that you need to control the money and the delivery.
And so that was my big lesson there.
Yeah, I just heard, I've been listening to your stuff forever, and I just heard the story the other day because I was listening to the audio book.
No, no, the audio book from the newest book.
And I was like, oh my God, how many times have they been wiped out?
Yeah.
Which is such, like, brutal inside of it, but such a superpower.
Like, if you actually look, because I think about this with you guys, from like, this was not that long ago to where you are today.
And I think you have this super skill of moving fast because you've got your ass kick so many times.
And the difference is you're standing back up.
You have the knowledge of why it went wrong and you're moving forward at a quicker pace.
But how the fuck do you stand back up?
I don't know.
Millions time you feel like you've been screwed over.
Yeah.
I think it's always been looking at the don't I call it, which is like the other path.
So I teach this with sales too, which is that like someone will present with some sort of obstacle.
And a lot of times it's like, I mean, you can obviously overcome the obstacle, but I think it's a lot more powerful to be like, I understand this is your concern.
But what about all the other things you could do that aren't this?
And it's just selling against the don't.
It's like, so like the biggest competitor in fitness is not the guy down the street.
It's the couch.
Like that's who you're competing against.
For me, like in these situations, it was like, this sucks.
But the alternative is what?
Like, I stop?
And like that was just like not really an option.
I used to repeat this stuff to myself a lot,
which is like you'd be amazed what you can accomplish when you have no choice.
And so just like wasn't a choice.
It wasn't on my, on my menu of things that I could do.
Yeah.
And I was like, I'll just try again.
Yeah.
I'll just try again.
Yeah.
In 2020, I had my business was based on live events.
Yeah.
Which is a brutal time.
I was on gyms.
Yeah, great.
Great.
had 60 employees, had four huge events on the docket for the rest of 2020, and just slowly, yeah, just absolutely wiped out.
And truly swear to God, the reason that I could stand back up and go again is for kids.
I'm the person who supports my family.
Like, these are my kids.
I got to take care of them.
There is no other option.
Yeah.
Because there is a sort of wounded part of me that would have loved to just been like,
fuck all this. I'm going to take what I have and go, I don't know, live on a farm and just be okay.
Yeah.
But that, like, you got to find something in you. And honestly, if you don't have something
that's easily accessible, create something. Create something in your own mind.
Create an enemy. Like prove the girls from middle school wrong. Like prove your parent wrong.
Like do something to make yourself stand back up. Because it's like, God, you might be so close
to a breakthrough. And if you walk away.
now you're never going to know.
Yeah, I see a lot of it is like chapters in a book where like this isn't where I want the
story to end.
Yeah.
And so we just get to it's like, I think if you continue, it's like I'm just going to keep writing.
Like we're just going to, we're going to add another chapter.
And another chapter has.
And here's the interesting thing is that regression to the mean is normal.
So like if things are good, it's likely that they'll be less good in the future.
Yeah.
If things are bad, it's likely they'll be less bad in the future.
And so I'm like, okay.
Well, things are, I mean, it's hard for things to get worse than this, but like, you know, I have high probability that it'll get better.
Yeah.
And so, and I think Joe Rogan has this really great way of framing.
It's like a lot of video games, you kind of like wake up as a character and then you have a backstory.
But then it's like at that point, you decide what you want to do with the character.
Yeah.
And so in a lot of ways, it's like, this is just my backstory.
And in a very like weird, you know, weird woo-woo way, it's like the past doesn't exist.
And so if I'd started at zero, I'd already started at zero before.
And I've started at zero multiple times now.
And so it's like I know what to do because I've been at zero before.
And I was really excited the first time I was at zero.
Why should I be heartbroken now?
Yeah.
Except now I have way more experience than the kid did in the beginning.
So I probably have a way better shot than he did.
And he was stoked.
So why shouldn't I be stoked?
Yeah, that's sick.
There's a friend of mine, Brooke Castillo, you might know her.
Yeah.
She asked a really good question on like bad situations, which is like, how could this be awesome?
So it's like, I'm about to get divorced.
How could this be awesome?
I'm about to get sued.
How could this be awesome?
Like in what storyline or what timeline would this terrible thing be awesome?
And what do I need to change about myself and my surroundings so that that becomes the pivotal moment to basically become the foundation for the next thing?
Yeah.
And so, yeah, I'll close the loop for everybody.
We ended up basically having to make $150,000 in profit in the next 30 days.
And I never made $150,000 in profit ever in a month.
I worked 48 hours, asked Layla, I said, you know, she had these side clients that she was doing fitness with because she had a personal training business before that. And that was basically paying for the groceries. Lela was basically supporting. So like, Jim Lodge was making all this revenue, but like no profit and like making money just losing everything, making money losing everything. And I was like, how long does that take you? And she's like, I don't know, four hours a month. She's like, why? Because she thought I was like attacking her. And she's like, why? Like, hey, it pays for her food. And I was like, I'm not, I'm not saying it's bad. I was like four hours. That's not bad. You're making four grand a month. I was like, you know, four hours, four hours, four.
And I was like, if we did 40 hours, we'd make 40 grand, you know, a week.
That's not bad.
Right.
And so I, like, took a bunch of prescription stimulants and, like, didn't sleep for two days
and banged out, like, one of the best sales letters.
What, like Adderall?
Yeah.
Oh my God.
I made out one of the best sales letters ever written.
And it was, and it was Lela's story of how she lost 100 pounds and then did a fitness competition.
She was like, this is ridiculous.
She's like, this is so heart-wrenching and you don't even know my story.
She's like, I would, you know, and I was like, I was like, my thighs are rubbing together
because I was overweight.
And I was like, and I would always wear the cover-all, like, when I was on the beach with my family because I didn't want anyone to see it.
I would always be on the edge of pictures.
I just tried to think of all these, like, terrible moments.
Anyways, I started running ads to it.
She started, we just started doing sales and doing like a thousand bucks a day in sales.
And I was like, okay, at this point, we had eight sales guys because I had to sell more to start to, I had to keep selling more every month to cover the refunds from the month before of these gym owners who were doing this.
I didn't know a way out.
Yeah.
So that was how I started doing that.
And then that's when it was actually really stressful because I was like, I,
I have to just keep selling more to cover refunds from them before.
Like, this is not sustainable.
And so that's when we started doing this, $1,000 a day.
I was like, great.
I take the eight guys, bring them in.
We can do $8,000 a day, almost all profit.
We could get $150,000 of profits.
I got really excited.
And so I ate more gyms that were supposed to launch the next month.
And I was calling them up.
And I was like, hey, we're out.
We're changing our model.
Like, you know, wish you the best.
And that's when, you know, I said, I'll just, I'll show you how to do it rather than me
flying out there and doing it myself.
And then the guy was like, well, how much?
And I said, I just picked a big number because I wanted to get him off the phone.
I was like $6,000.
And he was like, six-k.
He was like, done.
And I just remember, I just remember like floating out of myself being like, because
I'm used to selling memberships here.
Like I'm just to making $300, $400, $500, $200 supplement sales.
Like, that was that.
So me adding is, me 10x or 12xing what I'm used to collecting was like, just like an unfathomal
number.
And you said, yeah, I was like, holy shit, six grand.
And I had seven more calls that day.
So then I was like, okay.
he's like, well, when do I get my login?
And I was like, it was Friday.
I was like, Monday.
And so, and he was like, okay, cool.
Call the next guy, same conversation.
And he was like, how much?
And I was like, eight grand.
And he was like, yeah, done.
And I was like, holy shit.
And so by the end of the day, I collected $60,000.
And I was like, and Layla came in from doing all these sales doing weight loss sales.
I was like, how's your day?
She got two for two.
And I was like, I think we're still in the gym business.
And now she's like, you just told me.
You just told me we were going all.
on Queen's Transformation, which we called it.
Like, you heard this whole sales letter.
You sold me on how we're not doing the in-person thing.
We're doing the online thing.
And I was like, yeah, I think we were just doing it wrong.
Yeah.
I then called back all the 30 plus gyms that I had done turnarounds for and was like,
hey, remember how I just made $100 grand out of your gym and you're really upset about it
because I'm just some kid and you're an experienced gym owner and I still filled it up.
Want me to show you how I did it?
And they were like, yeah.
And so I just went back at 30 more sales and I was able to cover the $150,000 and basically
refunds I was going to have to pay for within 30 days.
and got like back to neutral, back to zero.
Yeah.
I was $150,000 poorer than zero.
Yeah.
Just wanted to get even.
And so, yeah.
And so then that's when that's when Jim Lodge took off.
And so that's when it.
So I'll give you the rest of the story is the is less fun.
It's like we went from zero to four and a half million a month in like 20 months.
The fact that you just said it's the less fun part.
I mean, that probably says something about your psychology.
But actually this is the victorious moment.
is that it went on to be very successful.
You guys launched a supplement brand as well.
Did you sell both of those?
Are you still retained?
Yeah, okay.
So you sold those together.
Now you're in acquisition.
Will you tell us a little bit about that?
Yeah.
Hopefully the audience is bored of tears.
Are you kidding?
They are peeing their pants right now.
They love this conversation.
Layla and I had probably taken about 40 million in distributions
from Jim launched during the time that we owned it.
And then the sales was for 46.
And so we had a decent enough amount of money to start like a family office.
Well, from investing perspectives, like, that's small, like, we need about 50 to, like, really start a true family office.
Got it.
Otherwise, it's like, fraction.
It's different.
You know what I mean?
We're like, I think we can do this.
And so we started making investments in companies that were, when we started this, it was going to be e-learning businesses to try and basically run the same playbook that we did with Chimodge.
It turned out that was not a good model for a variety of reasons.
We have now just transitioned to taking larger and larger stakes in companies.
and we now really just look for revenue retention,
which is the only thing that we really care about.
And then because we know how to do the marketing and sales.
And so it's like we just want to find products or services
that people never want to stop buying.
Right.
And I will tell you, for anybody who's listening to this,
one of the big pieces of advice that I can give you is that instead of trying to find
a product and then being like,
how do I get people to not stop buying this?
Just find stuff people already don't stop buying.
Yeah.
It's a lot easier.
It's like, if you're like,
I promise you that there's nothing that you can do to a gym membership to get someone to stay
more than their insurance or their internet.
Yeah.
Just like, it's just, it's just the dynamics of the service or business.
And so, and that took me probably like two years to learn that.
So there's, you know, two years and one minute.
Well, and I think e-learning in a lot of ways, I know this is going to feel maybe harsh for people
who are in the e-learning business, tends to be trendy.
So certain things will spike and become more popular.
Yeah.
Become more popular.
Something that blows up in 2020 or 2021 might not be relevant in 25.
Yeah.
And I've heard you guys talk about that, that you're interested in businesses that are retaining profit, not just hitting a certain revenue goal, which is so crucial.
So that's the big learning in the last couple of years.
How long have you guys been doing it now?
The first deal was 2020.
Okay.
Okay.
So it's been a hot minute.
I have like a, I would say investors usually are like 10-year cycles.
So I'm like halfway through a cycle, basically.
learned, I mean, learned a lot.
Most of the things I learned will probably not be interesting with the audience.
But yeah.
Let's steal some bits from you.
Let's talk about mindset, right?
Yeah, no, no, no.
I would love to steal a bit from your brain, too, because I've heard you now, and I really
want to encourage the audience.
Your podcast is fantastic.
And I feel like you guys do a great job of doing so many different types of content,
which I love, because it's not all going to be relevant to every type of business owner.
But what are some of the biggest mistakes you see new business owners make or the
most common questions you get in that from the newbies. I'm pumped for this. Great. So there are
five that I see that happen on a regular basis. Great. And they come from apparently impossible
choices overcompensation of employees structurally. It's like, for example, I've got, you know,
I've got people at my chiropractic clinic and I pay the therapist 50% of revenue. Tough to scale.
Underpriced, my facility. I'm using brick and mortar, but this works for, you could be
digital doesn't really matter. I'm at capacity and I'm not making profit. Yeah. You're not charging
enough. Yeah. A million percent. And with each of them, though, there's an apparent rock and hard
play scenario, though. If I pay people less, I'm going to lose all my therapists and I'm going to
lose my business. If I raise my prices, I'm going to lose all my customers. Right. And next one is
woman in the red dress. So more commonly known as shiny object syndrome, chasing multiple rabbits and
catching none and spinning your plates because, and if you, if you heard at least backtrack into the story
there like I had a chiropractor agency, a dental agency, I had six gyms, and I was doing a launch
business. I made no money. I mean, I made revenue, but I didn't have enough attention to go deep
enough on anything. So all I was do was pure fires all the time, which is one, a miserable existence,
but two, you just make way less money. Yeah. And the guy you're competing against who's beating
you is only doing that. Yeah. And that's the thing. And I think it's actually, believe it or not,
I actually think it's arrogant to believe that you can do multiple things and beat somebody who's only
doing one. That's so real. I'm on a book tour right now. And I do a Q&A.
at the end. And this woman stood up in, I want to say Toronto. And she's like, I have a business and I'm doing
this and I'm doing this and I'm doing this and I'm doing this. And I was like, can I tough love you right now?
Yeah. And I said, you don't have a business. You have a bunch of side hustles. None of these things are
connected. You got to pick one. You got to go all in. And a lot of people need to hear that. I've never thought
about it as ego, but you're exactly right. Like, why are you the one person who can successfully navigate
10 businesses at once? Of course you can. Well, Elon does it. And it's like, well, if you were-
A million staff members.
And he, yeah, we wouldn't even talk about it because he's an alien, so it doesn't really matter.
Yeah, a million of us.
And this, I'll tell you this little framework.
So if you're like, well, Elon did it?
It's like, well, did you, you know, drop out of whatever Ivy League school that he dropped
out of and then code from scratch zip two when you were 21?
No, you didn't do that.
So you're probably not Elon.
Yeah.
Well, I'm going to be the next Warren Buffett.
Did you buy your first stock at age seven?
Did you make a huge person?
purchase right after Pearl Harbor got bombed when you thought the nation, like when people
didn't know if America was going to be here. Like do you are? No, you are not. No. It's just like,
okay, I'm going to have a hold co. And, you know, I'm 30 years old. It's like, with love, I say this
with so much love. And I'll take this on myself too. If you were a phenom, we'd know it by now.
If you were a genius, we'd already know. So just assume that you're going to work hard, like a lot of
other people and find a way. If you were those people, we would already know. There's this great quote. I was a little
nervous. I was on my run this morning. I was like, Jesus, I hope I don't accidentally quote Alex to Alex.
I listened to so many podcasts. But I heard this thing the other day that was like, if you're the guy,
you don't have to tell anybody you're the guy. Like, if you're her, you don't have to tell anybody you're her.
We already know. So yes, good advice. You're not Elon. So pick one freaking thing. The next is over expansion.
I just opened my second location.
And I'm just talking brick and mortar terms with the supplies for everything.
And it's almost like the shiny object one, except the businesses are interrelated.
And it was the correct next step, just not now.
And so typically overexpansion is actually a function of being under talented.
And so, yeah.
Someone just got punched in the stomach right now.
Someone just like, oh, I needed that.
And so when I say undertalented, there's two components.
One is there's you, right?
the other side of it is that the talent on your team is just insufficient.
And so, like, could you have gone to the second location?
Could you start that second product line or the second service line?
Absolutely, if you had enough bandwidth for you, which you can only get back with somebody else who's good.
Right.
And so it's usually a who issue for over-expansion.
Number five is you're serving too many different types of customers.
And I want to be clear, it's super normal in the beginning for you to have one qualification for a customer, which is credit card impulse.
So I guess that's too.
Very normal.
the problem is as soon as you start selling a little bit more,
you're like, oh my God, I have to, like,
I have so many different things that I have to deliver.
And this guy's a little bigger.
This guy's a little smaller,
but my product's not that, whatever.
You have to pick.
But obviously, this, again, these are rocking hard place narrows,
but this is half my business is this type of avatar.
At some point, I'm fast-working a little bit,
but usually it's between $1.3 million is where you have to start being like,
I have to be narrow on my avatar.
And the fear is, and for each of these,
the fear is logical and also wrong.
And that's what's really interesting.
So like, so Roy Sutherland, a big marketer that I love, he's chairman of Ogilvy.
He talks about psychological and logical solutions.
And so like, for example, if I want people to like the elevator ride better,
so people are complaining, for example, that the elevator ride is too slow.
You could then think, okay, we'll have to reinstall a new elevator that has a bigger engine
and make it go faster, right?
And that would cost us lots and lots of money.
An alternative is just put mirrors inside the elevator so they can stare at themselves
and no notice is the fact that it's slow.
psychological solutions.
And so what's interesting is that like all logical solutions, if you have a logical problem,
sometimes you have to use a psychological solution rather than the logical ones because
the logical ones have already been tried and don't work.
Yeah.
And so when you have the apparent rock and hard place, there's usually a different way around it,
which is that like, how could this be awesome?
So what if when you change your compensation structure, your team feels more at ease because
the business actually has a profit and has a chance for expanding so that they can have a
career path. What if that was how you positioned it, which is I've walked, I've had to do this
myself, but also for other people. If you're underpriced, it's like, well, what if when I raise
my prices, I attract better customers and because I have more profit, I can attract better talent
and I can ultimately provide a better service and their lower maintenance and like all of these
things cascade down from this higher price. If I focus all of my attention on one thing,
I remember I met a business owner who was telling me, I don't call it, all the businesses he had,
I was like, and I knew roughly, I think, how much money he was making, and it was not a ton.
And I think he had 78 things that he was involved.
It was the biggest thing I've ever seen.
And he couldn't name him all.
And he's like, I have an Excel sheet that has them all.
And I think he was doing about eight figures a year, which, I know some people were listening,
this is like, oh, that's a lot.
I promise you, between 78 businesses doing that would be unbelievably stressful and who
knows what the profit is, right?
And so then I said, if I had a magic wand and I said, which of these 78 is the one that
you're like, this is my baby?
this is the one that I think could go all the way. I was like, do you know which one it is? He was like,
yeah. I was like, if I waved a magic one and I cut the other 77 and you just did that,
I was like, how easy would it be to double the business? He's like, oh my God, I could do it in my sleep.
And I was like, then why don't you do that? Yeah. That's, you know, like how you handle that one.
The over expansion is, and this is the tough one, you either got to, and it usually happens
at that that same like million, two million-ish level. And I have a theory around it,
which is that if you think about the cost of talent, right? So let's say you have a
a 20% margin business and you're doing a million dollars a year. So you're making $200,000 a year
in profit. You either have to work double time or you have to not have a profit and bring someone
in who's really good. Those are basically your two choices. And they're both tough. To open us up
at second location. Yeah. Right. And so like that's, I mean, by the way, this is why you get
compensated as a business owner outsized returns because you take outsized risk. That's why we get paid
what we do because we're willing to lose it all. Right. And so, but it's based, it's usually right
at that size 1 to 3-ish because your margin is almost equates to one or two good employees.
And so you have to make this bet. Or you just work like crazy. It's one or the other.
And so when you're in that over-expansion area, it's like you just have to work like crazy
and then train someone up or you have to bring someone and then obviously they can help you take it
over. The third path is that you just accept the fact that you don't have who you need.
you cut the short-term loss for the long-term gain so you can get the one location or one
product or service right so that I like this framework of quote scale zero which is like every
business that I've had that's been exceptional has been a business that I didn't start to become a
business they became they were things that I just was like I'm just going to make some money and then
and I don't want to work a lot and when I do that because you actually solve for zero ahead of time
and so you're like I'm solving for something that is super profitable that doesn't take a lot of time it's
like, well, shoot, then why can't I do a ton of that? And that's what ends up happening.
Whereas every time I've been like, I want to just build a huge business. I was like,
I end up building something that doesn't like actually work. Yeah. And so it's just very
weird that every time that I, like, when I look back on my life, the times that I've had to make
money or wanted, you know, to make money and not build a business is when I build a business.
When I build a business, I don't make money. Yeah. Yeah. It's just kind of like interesting.
So that's solving the over-expansion issue. The advertory issue, you usually.
solve with data, which is you look at all the customers you've sold up to this point, and you're like,
okay, look at the top 10% and say, what did these people have in common? And so I think about it in
terms of demographics, like what do they look like, where are they from? I think about it in terms
of psychographics, which is like, how do they think, what are their beliefs and values? And then I think
about actions. So what things did they do while a customer that other people did not do that caused
them to be successful? And so then I start selecting for those people in the advertising and the offer
so that we just only get those people.
And so if you're in that spot,
my recommendation is you don't have to kill your business.
Just start advertising only to the one avatar,
which is usually the higher-up avatar.
I'll just give you the...
The cheat code.
It's probably the guy who's probably the one
that you have fewer of, but that are better.
It's probably that one.
You advertise to them.
And what happens, though,
is that you will still get the minnows that are coming.
But you'll get a greater proportion of the better ones
by just saying,
I'm only working with these better ones.
And you can basically slowly shift the percentage of the pie
so that a small and small percentage are minnows
until eventually you can, you know,
maybe when you're at 80%, you just say,
I'm not taking minnows anymore because of the distraction.
I just want to work with whales.
Yeah.
And so that's the transition there.
The bonus sixth problem that small business owners have
is no data daddy, as I like to call it,
which is that they don't know anything about their business.
Yeah.
And so, I mean, if you've seen like Shark Tank or anything like that,
like the thing that they always tell me was like,
just know your numbers.
Yeah.
Because you can't, if you don't know what to do, it's because you have no data.
And so the actual constraint of the business isn't the action you need to take, or rather,
the action you need to take is to get the data.
Because when you have really clean data, the next step actually is usually pretty obvious.
So you look like a genius from the outside because you're making these good decisions
and the business continues to grow.
But you know that deep down, it's just because you collect good data.
Yeah.
And so it's like, you know, you should be able to know what happens from click to close and from
close to renewal.
and you should know what all of the metrics are between those steps.
And I mean, at the most minute level, because that's where all the alpha, to use an investment
term, that's where all the huge gains in business growth come from.
It's like, okay, let's say we've got a 2% CTR in our ads, fine.
We've got a 20% conversion or a landing page.
Okay, it's a little bit low, but fine.
And then we've got a 7% schedule rate.
We're like, ooh, okay.
Well, we could probably go from 7 to 30.
And if we did that, we would 4X the business.
Ooh, that feels like that's worth tackling.
Right.
But you're like, I don't know how to grow.
You don't even know.
That's the thing.
It's like, I don't know what to do because you don't know what the reality is.
Given just to break it down to a basic level in case people don't know some of the terms that you're using.
So I'm imagining like you own a small town coffee shop.
And you, you know, you've done your best.
You're just getting things done.
You're making sure there's enough coffee.
Are the muffins there?
you're just doing the things of running your business. But you hear you talking right now and you're
like, I don't, what data? What would I need? So for example, what is the average, what's the average
tally for each customer that comes through? You know, if you're like, oh, I have no idea. Okay,
well, if you have no idea, you don't know how to improve those numbers. So if you find out that the
average person who comes through spends $6. And, well, here's a easy hack. What if I train the people who
are at the cash register to ask if every single customer would like a muffin to go with their
coffee? What's the percentage of people who increase and suddenly it's 1050 per person and you're
increasing the value of that interaction? But if you don't have those specific data points, you don't know
what to push on. Again, I was at this mastermind this week and they would do hot seat so people
were, you know, talking about their business. And I'm not in the mastermind. I'm just there as a,
as a speaker. But every person who would ask, they'd ask questions to, they'd say, you know,
how much did he make last year? And they'd say, we did between and. And,
I'm like, you don't know your numbers.
You didn't do between.
That's wild.
An entrepreneur knows exactly down to like, oh, man, we really wanted to do two million, but
we did 1.73.
Those are our numbers this year.
There's no between.
The average person pays almost, I'm like, girl, you don't, like, you're stretching.
So knowing that kind of information, like you said, helps to figure out what to actually
move against.
Like, for instance, if you can get, if you can book 20 calls and you.
you know for a fact that you're really good at closing.
You can close 50% of those customers.
So great.
If I get more calls, can I close more?
Just for anybody who didn't understand.
This is great.
And I'll just say that for if you're sub a million in revenue,
the answer is almost always more.
And there's a math reason behind that.
And so like improve, you know,
because if you're sub a million and you are actually, you know,
you are making sales and you are making a process.
You have priced it such that you haven't, you're not selling $5 bills for $4.
Let's assume that that's true here.
All right.
If that's the case, I'll give the simplest example I can, which is that if I have one salesperson
who works for me, and let's say that guy does outbound and he generates, you know,
business for our IT services, whatever, I could probably try and take his close rate from
30% to 40%.
I could probably do that.
How much time would that be?
How risky is it?
How likely is it to happen?
We can go through all that.
But it would probably be better just hire a second sales guy.
to do the outbound, because that would have a high likelihood of doubling my business.
Now, later on, when you have 20 sales guys, you then have to see, okay, if I'm at, you know,
we're at 30 to get to 40, okay, that would be a 33% improvement in revenue.
If we made, if we just got everybody to go from, you know, 30 to 40, okay, that sounds reasonable.
But the alternative would be to get that same increase with 20 guys that have to hire seven more sales guys.
And so then you look at the risk adjuster return from each of those actions and say,
okay, well, I think there's a higher likelihood that I could just improve the sales guys from 30 to 40,
then onboard hire, train, recruit, seven more productive sales guys that are at the same KPI as the rest of the team.
And so you'll actually notice that it's a little bit like a pinball or like an accordion where it's like you'll do more and then you do better.
And then you do more and then you do better.
But in the beginning, you're usually just not doing nearly enough.
And I'll give you this little ism that I end up repeating a lot, which is that volatility is a symptom of low volume.
So if you're like, man, you know, it's word of mouth and I, you know, I get a sale every, you know, every month I get one or two sales that come in.
So the reality is that there's a certain amount of advertising that is occurring.
So a certain amount of people are telling other people, a certain amount of posts on Facebook, a certain amount of outreach attempts that you make,
are creating one to two sales per month.
The businesses that are doing one to two sales a day
are doing that amount of advertising activity per day.
Yes.
And so I'll tell you the story because I think it'll resonate with the audience.
So when I was younger, when I started my gym,
and there was a period of time where, like, lead costs went up
because some Facebook change, whatever.
I talked to a mentor of mine, and I said, you know, how are you advertising?
And he had 22 locations, and it was tanning stuff.
And he said, I use flyers.
and I was like, okay, I'll use flyers. I'll try that. And so I printed out flyers and I put 300
flyers out on cars or whatever and, you know, I waited to go collect my money. And one guy called and
he said, are you the guy who put the fly on my car? And I was like, yeah. And he's like,
you dinged my Mercedes. And then I was like, oh. And I turned up and I just like, and he never called
again. Thank God. But anyways, I called my mentor back and I was like, hey, and he's like,
how the flyers work out? And I was like, I was ready to like give him like a talking to. I was like,
it didn't work. Huh? You know, like, what are you going to say about it now?
And he took it really, he was just like really great, he gave me a lot of grace.
He was like, well, what was your test size?
And I was like, well, what do you mean?
And he was like, well, would you test?
Like, how many did you put out that you test first?
And I was like, well, I put out 300.
And I was like, 300.
And he was like, oh, man, we test with like 5,000.
And I was like, oh, he's like, and then after that, we do 5,000 a day.
So he was doing 150,000 flyers a month.
And I thought that 300 was a campaign.
And so a lot of times when you're starting out, you have such a dramatic misunderstanding
of the sheer volume that people who are ahead of you are doing.
So like, Mozy Media, us, we put out 450 pieces of content per week.
Yeah.
It's a lot.
Yeah.
It's 60 or 70 a day.
I can't do the math.
Somewhere in there, right?
And so when people are like, well, I won't even get into like, it must be nice.
But like, you're making one post a day on Instagram.
Instagram. Yeah. And you have seven and I have 450. And I've also been doing it longer. Right. And so I have
450 a week times years. Yes. And so we like it is a volume game. And in order to accumulate more
volume, you have to allow for time to pass. Like there like, you know, hypothetically, could I get to
a thousand a day? Probably. I'm just, we're just not there yet. And I'm sure five years from now,
look back and like, I remember when I was doing 60 a day. My God. I was so cute. You know,
give myself a little...
But also just to give people a frame of reference,
how much has social grown for you in the last five years?
Because you're in the millions now.
Yeah.
And I swear when I started following you...
It's like 10K on Instagram.
Yeah.
Like you've grown so much.
Yeah.
I think we have like 13 or 14 million.
Yeah.
Yeah.
No big deal.
I mean, who's counted?
But yeah, no.
And I like to bring this up, which is that...
Just like Rich was saying earlier with like,
you'd know if you were the guy or you'd know if you were the girl.
I think we're making this for everyone who's not that.
Yeah.
And so I didn't have a clip go viral and then all of a sudden become this person.
Right.
This was a deliberate choice that I was like, I'm going to try and do this.
I started by making three, I mean, I started in July of, well, if you were on the podcast, like my, so this is actually kind of, probably the coolest thing I think about my story, hopefully in the future that will be cold, is that 90 days after I had lost everything, the last time.
clarity on dates.
90 days after lost everything the last time is when I started my podcast.
And so one, if you're like, I'm at zero, like, what do I have to say?
Well, there's that.
Number two, my rule was that I only talk about things I know.
And so the first 300 episodes are just like how to run a gym because that's all I knew.
So it was called gym secrets.
And it was like, and I had six locations.
So I had some stuff that I could talk about, but I just didn't go into topics.
I was like, I just, when someone walks in, this is how, you know, like, I just,
I just talked about what I knew. And for years, it was at, you know, 100, you know, downloads. And then it went to, I think it took like four years to get to like 2,000 downloads an episode. Not a lot of people were listening to Jim Secrets. I bring this up because the whole thing is documented from zero to here. And I think that's like, I think to me that's like the coolest thing. And so, you know, a couple years ago I started doing the YouTube. That was like my next big commitment. I was like, I'll make three YouTube videos a week. And then I had a guy randomly to reach out to me and say,
hey, these shorts things are going to be a thing. And he was like, you already have longs. I'll just
take the stuff you already have and make them into shorts. And then that did really well for us.
And then we're like, and then we started bringing it in house. And that's pretty much what we've done
ever since. It's just do more. Do more, do better. Do more, do better. And we just keep doing it.
I keep referencing this thing that I was at this week. But they're, everyone's trying to figure out the
next marketing hack. Like, what's this thing? And how does it? I was there to speak about books because I've had a lot of
success as a writer and they were like, what do you, what do you do? And I was like, well, you show up
for your audience every day for 15 years and you just provide a shit ton of value again and again and again and
again and again and again. And every once in while I like, hey guys, I have a book. Yeah. And then
everybody buys it. Yeah. That's my whole plan. That's what we do. And, um, master plan. Exactly.
Like I just, I don't, I've never figured out ads. I don't know how to, I don't have a funnel. I don't have
And I was like, but what is the book a lead for? And I'm like, nope, just readers, just trying to, you know, have. But I, that's, don't commit to something if you aren't willing to give a decade. Because I really don't know any other way. Yes, could you have something go viral? Can something pop off unexpectedly? Can you hit a trend right when the wave is cresting? Absolutely. But I don't know how you have a long term play if you're not actually trying to provide value in a real way.
I think so this is this is just something that I feel like I've seen across a lot of business owners
because I talk to many of them. That's basically my my full-time job. It takes about five years to figure
something out. And it takes about 10 for you to probably realize the success that you were hoping for
in one or two. So just like just as a as a baseline for anyone who's listening to this is like you're
like, okay, let's say you have some corporate job that's, you know, you make $150,000 a year.
You will for sure make less money for the next two, three years that now you might make
revenue, very different than what your take home is. Right? Like, you might start making sales,
but you imagine that it's, you're going to immediately, like one, that revenue is profit and it's
not. And that you're going to immediately have more time. You're going to have less.
There's all the, but to be fair, though, sometimes it's good to be ignorant of it so that you take
the jump. But it's literally just harder, it takes longer and you make less for a while.
Yeah. And I say this as somebody who was a management consultant before this. Like I had saved $50,000
when I was 22. And I was just because I made decent money and I was,
prudent with my spending. But it took five years before, like, we figured out the gym launch thing.
Now, I had the locations that made money, but then you make mistakes and you will lose things
and you will take backsteps. And so I think, you know, I talked to a really close friend of
mine last night and he said this. And he said, you know, in my, in my 20s, it was all about the
destination. And he was a Goldman Sachs guy. Like, for those who don't know, it's probably one of
the most prestigious investment banks. Guys there make $10, $20 million a year at the higher level.
very smart people and very type a driven area and he said in my 30s I realized it was about the journey
right he said and in my 40s I realized it was about the company and so I was like can't wait to see
what it is when it's 50s you know like but like I just I really like that process and so I think
if you solve for forever you can go for a very long time like when I started YouTube I told
the vendor that I was working with I was like I'll make a call whether I keep doing this in 10 years
Yeah. And he was like, at six months, I was the fastest growing, whatever that he'd had. And he said,
I just want you to know that I've never in my whole career had anybody say that they were going to do this for 10 years.
He said everybody is always like 30 days, 90 days, if they're like, you know, long-term thinking or whatever.
And I was like, I just figured if I do so much of it that it would be unreasonable that I suck,
I'll probably be better than average. Yeah. And so there's a certain amount of volume that's
required to get good. And so my approach has always been like violence is the answer,
which is just just unbelievable amounts of execution and just trying to get, just get,
I remember I read outliers when I was in college, I think, which is Malcolm Gladwell's book.
You talk about 10,000 hours. It was such a pivotal book for me to read because it set the
bar for what I expected volume to look like. Yeah. And so it's like, well, if I want to be a master
or something, like one, I have to start now. Like, oh my God, I'm so old. But secondly,
the part that I thought was really interesting was that like Bill Gates, he considered
like a genius or virtuoso coder at like six or seven years, whereas some people would take like
10 or 12. And so that one little nugget for me gave me the realization they're like, oh, I can
cram. I can take 10 years of normal work and cram it in four or five. Absolutely. And so that's
where saying like, you know, I have the rule of 100 for people who are starting out for getting
their first customers. So you make, you know, 100 outreach attempts per day.
You spend $100 in ads per day, or you make 100 minutes, you work for 100 minutes on content
and you post it. And you post it is the key. That is key. Get it out of your draft folder and on
to social media. And I'll tell you why you have to do it in a second. And then you do that for
100 days. And I promise you if you do that, you will have a customer. Yeah. Period. You will have a customer.
And what's crazy is that I get these screenshots of people who are like, holy shit, dude. I'm on day 31.
and like and they show me their stats on like TikTok or Instagram or whatever and they're like
and look at the leads that like they just do it. You know what I mean? And like if you actually
count it out and you actually do the whole like I have never to this day had somebody do the
full hundred all three and not have customers. Yeah. And the reason that you have to put it out and do
the do the outreach, test the ads if you're going to do ads or just do or do the content is that
the only, at least my favorite way to learn is to do a huge amount of effort, a lot of repetitions,
and then look at the data of the last 100 and say,
what were the top 10%?
What do these have in common?
Okay, my next 100 are going to be just like those.
Yes.
And then you do 100 more of that.
And then because of variability and variety of life,
you're going to have another top 10% of those and say,
what did those have in common?
How do I do more of that?
And this is the process of learning that you won't get in any course
because it'll also be specific to you.
Can I also add something to for people who are using social media
as a way to talk about their business
is to make sure that you're paying attention
to the right metrics
because there's such a hustle for views.
Not all views are created equal,
not all followers are created equal,
and you could get a million views on something
that will not be relevant to your business at all,
but will create sort of vanity metrics
that make you believe that your channel is really successful,
but if it is not making you money
in the way you want to make money,
it's not the right video.
It would be better to try,
a different style, different approach, long form versus short form, like change it up to get the right kind of customer.
Because there's so much content right now telling people how to game the algorithm.
And it's not actually serving you.
No. As a visceral example, if I go up to a stranger and slap them and then like I will probably get a lot of views.
Yeah.
Does that increase or decrease like that someone will purchase something for me?
Probably not. Right. It just sounds like it's just like sometimes I just like asking the just the simplest question.
And when you look at this meme that you're posting, does this increase or decrease the likelihood
that someone's going to buy from you?
Right.
In all likelihood, it just does nothing.
It does neither.
Waste of your time.
Yeah.
Because you spent nine hours trying to make that one video.
Right.
And so that's always been our litmus test in terms of basically what we're, I think what we're really
teasing out here is the difference between getting views and building a brand and building
the brand is what are the pairings and associations that I want people to associate me with.
And that's the people that I appear with.
That's the subject matter that I discuss.
and everything else that surrounds that.
What are the values that I have that come through in the content?
And I will say that me personally, the more I just try to think, like, and this is probably
useful, if you have a customer that is your favorite customer, and if you don't have a customer,
think about who that customer might be, make content for them.
Yeah.
And if you just do that, you will be already like in the top 10%.
Yeah, for real.
I want to talk to you forever, but I want to be conscious of your,
schedule and a very busy day that you have ahead of you. I just want to say one more thing to you
before you wrap up. I know you talk a lot about not really caring about your legacy, which is fascinating,
but whether or not you care about what it is, it's going to be really big and it's going to be
really impactful. As someone, you don't think I'm your demographic, but I receive a lot of
help from you and have for years through the books, through the podcast, really want to encourage
the listeners to go check them out. So whether or not you care that you have a legacy, you do,
and you help a lot of people with what you do, and you don't have to help people the way that you do.
So I am grateful for your time and your wisdom, and I know the audience is too.
So thank you for being here.
Well, I appreciate it.
And I would love to respond if that's okay.
And if it ends up sucking, you can take it out.
This has been something that I think is so interestingly, in the last 24 hours,
I had like two massive accounts try to like take a tax at me because of this.
No.
Yeah, no, it's fine.
Not a big.
My worldview allows me to deal with these things pretty easily.
Right.
But also people who.
create content just shitting on other people's content.
Wholeheartedly agree.
Yeah.
So stupid.
And I feel like I can actually like make this as about like I will not make content
that insults people.
Yeah.
Same.
And I think there's and it's probably useful for anyone who's listening the difference
in insult and criticism.
So criticism is a discrepancy between actual and desired.
Hey, Sandy, you didn't show up, you haven't shown up on time three days in row.
The expectations that you show up at 9 a.m.
This is criticism.
And because of that, you're a lazy piece of shit.
That is an insult.
And so basically, making a judgment is where insults come from.
Pointing out to an observable description C is what criticism is.
For those of you who are like, how do you do with criticism?
It's like, well, make sure that it's criticism and not insults.
Yeah.
I had, most people insult me.
It's fine.
I survived about this.
And I really want to take the opportunity if you'll allow me.
I'm just the ultimate believer in freedom of choice.
and many people
there's both sides of this
on one hand there's many people who don't start
because of out of fear of what other people
are going to say about them
and that ends up paralyzing them
and so when I talk about death
and the fact that most people will move on in weeks not years
and like they're going to go from the funeral
and go to a pizza place and they're all just going to like have dinner
and then they're going to like go to school the next day
it's it's it's crazy but it's also reality and i think in minimizing that for me when i when i
stay this message it's so that people it decreases the perceived fear around taking the action
and potentially failing yeah no one's going to care anyways yeah on the other extreme i think that
there are many people who want a legacy and i tend to take a universe look at it
which is, you know, if I try to make it real, I'll say, okay, do you know who your great, great,
great grandfather is? You probably don't know their name. And they're the reason you're here today.
And so that's not that long ago. Yeah. And so we have this. And I think it's just we all have a desire
to matter. We all have that. And I, in my life, that obsession handicapped me,
which is why I make so much kind of countering that, which is that.
I think I've had a deep-seated fears around judgment of others and things like that.
And so I have to constantly remind myself that these people will not even be at my funeral.
Yes.
And like if they're not going to talk about me at my funeral, why should I give them the power to speak over me in my life?
And so it's, it's, that's, that's the essence of what I'm getting at.
And I can understand that when I make these comments about how people at your funeral are going to argue over your belongings and that they're going to talk about the food.
and the venue. And some people aren't going to make it because something came up because they were
busy. Some of the people that you love and care about today aren't even going to be there.
Yeah. Because they haven't even been there in 20 years in your life. And your friends' family
won't even know to have invited them. And does it even matter if they're invited because you're
already dead? Yeah. A lot of people get very triggered by that. And I think it's because
humans have a fear of death and that makes sense. But I think that for me, trying to use death as my
ultimate motivator insofar as if I can embrace the idea that I will die and I will eventually
be forgotten.
Now everyone's 10,000 years, 100,000 years, eventually I will be forgotten.
There'll be a start, you know, the son will have a mega death and who knows, right?
Like, whatever.
And when, I mean, who are we really paying attention to the people in the 1100s?
Are we really?
You mean?
Like, okay, there's six people who we've had that one book.
You know what I mean?
Like, okay, maybe, right?
And that's not that long ago.
Right.
The reason I saw for like or try to really look death in the face and become comfortable with it is because if I can accept that as zero, then everything that I get to do in my life is free range.
It's carte blanche.
I can make my own way.
And I think that that has been something that has given me tremendous freedom of action and agency around being able to.
make up my own damn mind for my own life.
Yeah.
And I think that that is why I hit on that.
And I push on that button because also because I have so many people who message me being like,
I was borderline suicidal.
And when I really thought about it, the way you broke it down, I was like, all these people
that I cared so much about their opinions, like, they don't even, they're not even
going to remember me.
Yeah.
Like they're going to have like a couple jokes too soon about my death.
Too soon, bro.
Yeah.
Like they're going to say it.
Like, you know, like.
It's going to happen.
And I think that that allows me to not take my failures as seriously or my successes.
Yeah.
And I think if that idea resonates with people, take it.
And if it does it, ignore it.
Like, it's so simple.
And I'm good with it.
If you're like, screw this idea.
Like, by all means, do you?
Yeah.
Well, I am grateful for you and your work.
I appreciate it.
And thank you so much for coming on the show.
Seriously.
This was such a treat.
Yeah.
Instead of leaving a legacy, try.
living one.
