The Game with Alex Hormozi - Most Businesses Are Worthless | Ep 371
Episode Date: February 22, 2022No one wants to buy a job. Today, Alex (@AlexHormozi) talks about why most businesses are considered worthless, the actions you need to take to bring more value, and making your business sellable.Welc...ome to The Game w/Alex Hormozi, hosted by entrepreneur, founder, investor, author, public speaker, and content creator Alex Hormozi. On this podcast you’ll hear how to get more customers, make more profit per customer, how to keep them longer, and the many failures and lessons Alex has learned on his path from $100M to $1B in net worth.Timestamps:(1:23) - Small businesses lack value; they're jobs, not businesses.(6:25) - Hire skilled people to run the business efficiently.(8:50) - Money-focused approach leads to burnout; structure and support necessary.(11:11) - Targeted sales, proper hiring, and sellability determine business worth.Follow Alex Hormozi’s Socials:LinkedIn | Instagram | Facebook | YouTube | Twitter | Acquisition
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99% of businesses end up closing down over a long enough time horizon.
Welcome to the game where we talk about how to get more customers, how to make more per customer,
and how to keep them longer, and the many failures and lessons we have learned along the way.
I hope you enjoy and subscribe.
99% of businesses end up closing down over a long enough time horizon.
Only 1% of businesses ever get sold or train chance.
And the reason for that is not because, you know, what you might think, right?
You might think that it's because business owners don't know how to sell their business or don't know how to market the business too.
get sold but that's actually not the real reason the real reason is because most businesses are
worthless and so what i want to talk about today is how to go from a worthless business to a business
that has actual value hi my name is alexer mosea own acquisition.com we're in a portfolio
companies that is 85 million dollars a year all right and so my goal here is this channel is that
there's a lot of people who are broken i don't want you to be one of them all right and so right now
if you're a small business owner which you know there's 30 million small businesses or whatever
it is a lot most of these businesses don't actually have value and the reason
for that is because they are not businesses, they are jobs, right? And so if you remember Robert
Kiyosaki's, his wealth quadrant, I think it goes employee, self-employed owner and then an investor.
I believe that's the quadrant. I could be wrong, but I'm pretty sure that's what it is.
Or at least that's how I would draw it in my head in terms of some progression. So most of us have,
you know, most people have jobs first, right? And then they make a certain amount of money. They're
relatively skilled and they think, you know, I could do something like this on my own, right?
Or I could do something else on my own. And so then they switch to self-employed. And what they don't know is
that switch from box one to box two is that you actually take a decrease in pay.
And the reason for that is because you actually aren't that good yet.
You know how to do one thing well here.
And because of that, because you fit into a larger machine, you're able to earn higher pay
because as a sum of parts, you can actually provide more value, right?
But when you actually have to be each of the parts, you're not that good at it yet.
And so you become self-employed and you actually make significantly less for a long period of time.
The thing is that most people who are self-employed have an LLC, right?
And so they consider themselves to be business owners, but the reality is that they are not business owners.
They are self-employed.
And even if you have other employees that work for you, you are still self-employed.
Here's the litmus test for this, right?
What happens is, and I have these conversations all the time because there's companies that apply to become portfolio companies with us,
so we can invest in the companies and help them grow.
And that's just for FYI, that's when you're over $5 million a year.
So if you're not there, then don't worry about it.
And all this stuff is free, so just consume it.
The thing that happens, though, is that they stop doing the actual full.
fulfillment of the thing, whatever the widget is, whatever they're selling, whatever the services,
they're not actually doing the fulfillment. And so in that moment, they're like, I now own a business,
and I am a business owner. And now I can sell this business. And that's so far from the truth because
there are so many other things that must happen, right, in order for a business to be sellable.
Because for a business to be sellable, it must be an asset that can run without you. Now,
you might think, again, here's the fallacy, that your business can run without you. And that's because
maybe you don't do the actual thing, but you are still involved in maybe the marketing and the
sales, right? If you can't get someone to replace you in that, then you can't sell it.
Now, you might think, oh, I'll just sell it and then somebody else will do that. It's not
going to be a sellable thing. No one's going to do that because they're like, well, you haven't
done it. Well, why would I believe that someone can do it besides you? Because you haven't
proved it. And so what you have to do is prove to what a future buyer would be that this
business can operate on its own without you, right? And so the next step, right, is that you
replace the acquisition. So first, you have the services that you're not doing, then you
replace the acquisition process to be something that is reliable. Pick one of the channels you want.
You could pick referrals. You could pick affiliates. You could pick manual outbound, which is cold calls,
cold emails, whatever. You could pick owned media, which is like all the people that you already
have contact with that you can message. You could have earned media, which is that you start
creating a channel of your own that a platform will distribute your content. That's how you generate
business. Or you can do paid traffic, right? You could do paid media and start running ads on a
consistent way to generate sales. No matter what it is, you have to have a consistent process where
you know, if you put X effort or X dollars in this side, that you will get Y outcome on the other side, right?
And if you don't have that, then you don't have a sellable business. Now, here's what happens next.
So first, you productize your service. So it's a consistent thing that you deliver it over and over again. You're not custom. If it's custom, it's going to be terrible.
And it's going to be valued as a service-based business, which is going to suck. And you're not going to be able to sell it. You're going to have a massive earn out, which basically means you're going to work for the next five years to earn the exact same pay, except you no longer own the business and the person who gives you the earn out, has all the upside.
and you take all the risk and they get all the upside.
So no buono there.
And so you've productized the service.
You have a predictable acquisition process, right?
And you're like, now I can sell the business.
Ah, wait, there's more.
Because the thing is that you still own all the hats.
You still might be managing the sales team.
I might be managing the marketing.
You still might be innovating the product.
You still might be making all the chief decisions, right?
You still might even be operating the business,
just not actually doing any of those things.
And so to say that, like, I'm now a business
owner and this this works without me is not true. You were just you were doing higher level skills
which believe it or not are more expensive to replace believe it you know and so now you have to
go find someone who's going to become your VP of sales so you can take that hat off and who's
going to become your your your your director of marketing so you can take that head off and
who's going to become the the chief product guy who's going to be consistently innovating the product
and improving it so that it delivers excess value to your customers right so you have all these hats
on. And so the process of entrepreneurship of transitioning from self-employed where you literally
have a hundred hats, right, to transitioning to business owner where you take all the hats
off your head and you were just a shareholder, which is how I prefer to see it, is like,
you have to think of yourself not as the owner, but as the director of the board, as the,
as the chief shareholder in the company, right, rather than the owner. Okay, even even that
change in language, I think is helpful and it was for me. What we have to do here, and if you're
like, man, that's going to take a long time for to do that. Duh. That's why most businesses don't
get sold. And that's why sometimes it takes years to build something that's great, right?
It might take you three years. It might take you five years. It might take you 10 years,
right, to get the business to that point. And if you're like, man, if I only just had
X, Y, Z insert person, I could do this. Welcome to entrepreneurship. Like, the game is about people,
right? Once you have the model and you have some of the tactics in the beginning so you can get some
initial traction, like the rest of it is people, right? People are the thing that are going to run this
machine for you. And that means you have to learn how to recruit, have to how to hire, how to manage,
and how to lead, right? And those are the soft skills that are harder to, to, they're less tangible,
but they're just as important, if not more so. Right. When you look at the biggest billionaires and
multimillionaires out there, they have, they keep their space around them very clean. They know what they
stand for. They know, and people are attracted to them because they have admirable qualities and
traits. And that is how you get the higher level people. So think about this. So let's say that you've got
somebody who, who's a, who's a brilliant marketer who can generate demand like crazy for.
for you, right? Well, that person isn't going to work for someone who's lower skilled than they are, right?
You have to have more skills to attract the type of people that you want who are going to help you run this business and grow it because they have to believe in the vision.
They want to do something that's meaningful. And so the journey here is understanding, and this is the piece that I think most people miss, is that they don't even know the hats that they are wearing.
You making decisions is a hat. It's an important hat, right? And so selling it without the person who can make decisions isn't a business, right?
If you're selling it and you're still the chief marketing officer,
you're the one who's controlling the messaging and the branding and all of those things,
it's still like that, that role still exists.
Mosy Nation, real quick, if you are a business owner that has a big old business
and wants to get to a much bigger business, going to $50 million plus.
We would love to talk to you.
And if you like that, we would like to hear more about it.
Go to acquisition.com.
You can apply anywhere on the page and talk to one of our team and see if we can help you get there.
And so there's typically far more leadership that has to occur in order for the business to be sellable.
And here's the thing.
Now, all of a sudden, all of these roles that you've been doing up to this point, you've been taking profit, profit, sell discretionary earns, SDE, right, from the business.
When in reality, a lot of that profit must be allocated back to the roles that you're doing, but you're not choosing to pay yourself for it.
What happens is a business will become more sellable as you replace all of the pieces that you're doing.
And oftentimes the margin will drop.
But that is okay because now you have 100% of your time back and then you are truly a shareholder in the company.
And this takes years, not months, not weeks.
And the thing is that you're going to hire somebody who you think is going to be good at marketing and they're not going to be.
And then you have to hire another person.
And then you think they're going to be good at marketing and they're not.
And then you're going to hire another person, right?
And if you're like, man, that sounds tiring.
That's the reason most people who own big companies are like, it is hard to do this.
This is not easy.
This is not for the faint of heart.
You must have a long-term vision that you are committed to because you will burn out if you're only doing it for the money.
you will because once you've satisfied your personal needs you'll just stop being you'll stop being
inspired by the reason that you're doing this right and the thing is is your employees will be even less
inspired because all of it starts with you and then gets diluted down and so if you are not extremely
potent right you are not extremely distilled down in terms of your vision of where you want to go and
why you're doing this why this business even exists then other people be even less so and less
committed to that vision and you will attract lower quality people and they will they will turn out
and they will not be skilled etc what happens is the small businesses become big
businesses because you need to slowly grow them so that you can accommodate more people,
right, who can actually do all of the things that you do. And the reality is that you're not
going to find, because right now you're like, well, there's one of me, so I just need to hire
one more person. But that's not, that's not reality, right? You might be doing six things and you might
have to hire six people to do what you are doing. And of course you do, and that sounds unreasonable,
but welcome to business. And so for businesses to be scalable, oftentimes they have to have
significant enough gross margins and volume to be able to pay for high quality talent to be able to
actually do these things to take decisions off your plate. And where you get into the point of
kind of like hyper growth and hyper scale, where you're starting to talk 10 million, 20 million,
30 million plus per year, right, is when you have people who come with solutions preloaded.
They come with experience of having done the thing that you need to solve already. So this,
like you'll notice the transition to the business owner, and I'll tell you this right now,
is that once you start crossing multiple eight figures, the people that you are hiring are better
than you are at everything. And that's one of the, that's one of the, that's one of the, that's one of the,
That's one of the weird things that happens.
Because in the beginning, most people don't have the skills that you do, right?
And so you have to hire people who are not as good as you are, and then you have to train them, right?
And then later on, you start hiring people who are okay at some things.
You still have to train them on how you want it done.
So they have, they've done the type of role in the business in the past, but they don't know how you want it done here.
So you have some training, but there's less and there's some experience, right?
The level above that is when people come in, they know what to do and they know how to do it better than you for you.
your specific business. And when then that happens, then you realize how little utility you actually
have in the business and how your really only role is to just recruit people, right? Recruit people
and cast the vision of where you want to make the bet for the company of where you want it to go.
And so anyways, the reason that most businesses are worthless is because they sell entirely
customized things. They sell it to everyone, which makes it completely unscailable. They're the ones
who are still heavily involved in the acquisition in the rainmaking. And so because of that,
And then even then, even after they've graduated from getting out of the selling and getting out of the fulfillment, the business still doesn't have value because they might still be the talking face. They still may be the spokesperson, which means that the business has no value outside of themselves because no one else could take it over, right? Unless the person agreed to a three or five year earn out, which then means that you transfer the ownership to someone else. They get all the upside. And if you don't hit the milestones, they get your business anyways and you get none of the money. Right. And so it may sound arduous to do this. And it is. But I can tell you.
you that having now gone through this process, it is one of the most worthwhile things that you
can do is look at the business as a true sellable asset. Because I heard this quote from MIT
dude who spoke from John Worrello's book. But anyways, he said, all of you guys are busy selling
your services. What you should be doing is selling your business, right? You as the CEO or the
owner, your job is to sell the business. The job of the salespeople is to sell the products, right?
Once you can make the transition from your businesses are your products, rather than, you
your services of the business are the products, you move up in a level of an order of magnitude,
right? And so I'm not saying that you should immediately be selling your business, right?
But you should be making your business sell a bull. And the beauty of this is that when you go
through this process, you end up having phenomenal leverage in any kind of negotiation that you want
to have in the future. And this is a key hack for negotiating, FYI, is that don't need the deal.
The guy who needs the deal the less is the way that you negotiate. Like that is, like everyone wants
these tricks and tactics and things for negotiating, the way to have the best negotiation is to have
the most leverage. The way to have the most leverage does not need the deal. Simple, not easy. How about
that? And so if you want to sell your business someday for a lot of money, then the business must be
sellable. And in order for you to do that, you must get to the business to the point where you
don't even mind keeping it because it's still cash flow so much money to you and you don't do anything.
That is the position of FU. That is the position where you'll get the most money because now you have
something that people want. No one wants a business where the owners, you know, no one wants to
buy themselves a job, right? And they don't want to buy themselves your job. And so you have to
think, and this is the critical self-awareness of thinking like, what are the actual things that I do?
Everyone else is going to think, oh, no, I don't do anything. This thing runs itself. Except if you
step away and didn't answer calls for two months, would the business still run itself? Probably not,
right? So then we have to look at. What are we actually doing? And it might be little,
little fractional things that we're doing all over the place, but we still have to quantify
those things and we still have to put processes around them and then hand them to people and then see how they do
and then continue to improve them until eventually you get to that promised land where you don't actually have to do anything
and you can still own the business and I mean to prove this like you can probably own shares of companies on the public
traded market they have figured this out right and you can own a piece and participate in the upside without ever
ever looking at what Apple is doing for their for their roadmap right and so we have to get at that point as business owners
in order to make the asset that we own the most viable thing that we have probably the biggest
thing on our net worth balance sheet is all the equity that we have in our businesses. And to
increase the value of that equity, we have to make it so that it actually a business and we
transition from employee to self-employed to owner, right? And then the transition there goes from
owner to investor because when you make that transition, that is when you start seeing your
business for what it is, which is a sellable asset that sits on your net worth balance sheet.
All right. And so this is one of the hardest lessons that took me the longest amount of time
to learn. I'm hopefully just translating this to you because I see so many people who are like,
I want to sell my business, but the business is not sellable.
and it is worthless without them.
And so we can't just say, oh, the next person's going to figure it out because they're not going to.
I'll tell you right now they're not going to.
You have to figure it out.
And what most people do instead is they just start another business because they don't know how to solve the problem.
And so we must confront the problems that we have, which is you have to articulate the thing that you don't know how to do as a problem that you can solve.
Which is, I don't know how to insert, find hire direct a marketing director.
I do not know how to find a VP of sales and train them and manage them and grow them.
I do not know how to find a chief product officer who's going to innovate the product on my behalf and make it better than I ever could and make a better product and make a better client experience around it and consistently improve it based on these metrics.
Until we can articulate what the problems are, we cannot solve them.
And if we consistently live in this world of like, I just want to sell my business someday, you're not going to be able to until you put these pieces in place so that the business is sellable and actually has value in and of itself separate from you.
And then when that happens, your net worth will skyrocket because now you have something.
that everyone wants, which is an asset that produces cash
while you sleep.
So anyways, my name is Oxframosi,
own acquisition.com, which is portfolio of companies,
that's $85 million a year.
I have nothing to sell you.
Keeping awesome, if you like this,
hit the subscribe button.
If you didn't like this, I love you either way,
and I'll see you guys the next video.
Bye.
