The Game with Alex Hormozi - My Biggest Mindset Shift I Made As An Entrepreneur | Ep 775
Episode Date: November 22, 2024Welcome 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 m...ore 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
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What one thing, if it were true about my business, would change everything?
Of all of these other things that are on my to-do list, if I were able to accomplish all of them,
would it be as big as me just doing that one thing?
Welcome back to The Game.
Today, I have a special fun episode about making more money.
So that's a common theme on The Game.
And so today, I want to talk about the difference between optimization and orders of
magnitude, aka step function increases in a business. I think that this may be one of the most impactful
shifts in thinking that I've had as an entrepreneur and one that I would at least encourage adopting.
First off, what is the difference between these two things? Before I even get into that, real quick,
why does this matter? If we think about the function of every entrepreneur as the person who prioritizes
the resources of the business, then you are the person who's saying, what gets,
invested in? What are we allocating time towards so that we can get the best return? And I talk a lot
about the difference between, you know, doing more, doing better, doing new. And so fundamentally,
whatever you're going to do is going to fall within one of those three buckets. Are we going to do
something better? You know, are we doing what we're currently doing a little bit better, little optimizations?
Are we going to do some, you know, just straight up do more of it? Or we're going to do something new?
You might think that this whole optimization versus step function is going to be new versus better.
And that's actually not the direction that's going to go in.
I bring this up because I see business owners come out to our headquarters.
This is, you know, companies that are either, you know, just coming to a workshop that we have
or companies that we're looking at investing in or both.
When I talk to the founders, the pranial question is like, what do I need to do to scale?
Or what, like, what's the next thing that I've got to look at?
What's so interesting about that question is that there's unlimited potential options that
you can take in order to grow a business, right?
Like if I, no matter who you are, if I increase your lead conversion rate by 10%,
then pretty much everything grows, right?
but obviously notwithstanding some sort of constraint on delivery,
which would then prevent you from capitalizing on that,
that 10% increase in lead flow or you don't have enough sales guys to handle it.
So yes, the theory of constraints still reigns supreme.
But under the assumption that you can fix those down-street impacts,
you would be able to see that improvement increased throughput.
So, for example, if you had excess capacity or let's say your sales guys
were not at 100% utilization, they're at 70,
a 10% increase in leads would be swallowed up by the sales guys
and they would make more sales and provided you had,
enough delivery capacity and you're not at 100% on your call it customer success,
then you'd be able to swallow up or realize that increase as well, right? And so it would follow.
I want to be clear, I'm a big fan of conversion rate optimization in general. That means, you know,
split testing headlines and offers and price points, like all of these things are things that
we regularly do. I'll briefly explain the kind of like the mathematical structure between the two
in terms of making the decision, but then I'll transition into the optimization versus order of
magnet to your component. I think it's good to have this as kind of the foundation for that for the next
piece. If we think about more as the lowest risk adjuster return thing to do, because you already
know it works, so simply adding more will typically just also do more for you. The problem is that
it's not fun, it's very boring, but it is also the reality of a lot of businesses. Once something works,
let's say you try 20 things to get something to work. You trying something new as your 21st thing
has a likelihood of failing that's about the same as the 19 out of 20 that you did before. Now,
I'll give you a real word example of this.
So at school, we run split tests on the sales page
that converts free trials pretty regularly.
And so from the first version of the test,
the first version we launched with, to beat that control,
we ran 16 different split tests.
Here's the funny thing.
14 of them failed, as in like the control beat it.
And the thing is that the better things get,
the more a change from that thing that works,
the more likely it is that that thing will not
be an improvement. And so I just find that as a very interesting. And also, to be fair, there's
typically decreasing incremental return for the improvements, right? You can only go to 100%, right,
hypothetically. Back to more versus better. There is an actual way to figure out whether you should do
more versus better. And then I'll get into optimization versus orders of magnitude. The simple example
I like to use is if you have one sales guy in your business and that's it, go and let's say that
person has some level of control over demand. And just keeping this the example simple. Then if you double
the sales team, which going from one to two, then you would figuratively double the revenue of the
business, assuming there's no other constraints, right? Okay, that's straightforward. If you have two
things that you could consider doing, like you could take effort to, you know, train that one guy
that you have better, that guy might get a, you know, 10% or 20% increase in conversion rate based
on his ability to close better, right? When you have that straight up example difference of like,
okay, I can hire somebody on board and train them and double my revenue, which would be a more
solution, where I can take the one guy I have and get them to increase his close rate by 20%
a better solution, which also includes training. Which of these yields me the best return for my time?
Well, it makes sense in this instance to do the more. It makes sense to go from one to two.
You double your you double your throughput. Even if the next guy is 50% as good as the existing sales
guy, you'll still get a 50% increase in absolute return. Right. So this is just like just basically
basic brass tax, so I'm going here. And if you're like, man, but what about the situation?
That's not the point of this example. Now, when you have 20 sales guys, if I do that optimization
of training all these guys and I get a 20% lift, it would be the equivalent of hiring four more
people onto my sales team. We go from 20 to 24. The question then follows, okay, is the effort
of getting a 20% improvement in sales equal to the effort of recruiting, hiring, training,
onboarding for more new guys? It may or may not be. But this is fundamental.
the paradigm, or at least the decision-making framework that you can use to say,
okay, should I do more?
Should I do better?
If your sales team in general is a little bit low because you have, let's say, a bunch of new
guys on the team, then it would make sense to just let's prune the tree, let's squeeze
what we have.
Let's increase, you know, let's get it more concentrated instead of diluting down.
And then let's focus on better.
But the thing is that what appears to be these like random flip-a-coin decisions really aren't.
You should be able to think, okay, and there's this lovely framework around this.
I can't remember if I've said this in a pocket.
lately, but there's a framework in the product world that's rice, which is reach, impact,
confidence, and expense, which is fundamentally, how many people does this affect? How much does it
affect them? What's the confidence of that? And then how much does it cost me? And so fundamentally,
what this really teases at is risk-adjusted return. What we put in here is how much do I expect to
increase my sales team? And how likely is that? And how much will it cost me? I mean, fundamentally,
those are the questions that we're asking. And so let's say your sales team is crushing it and
they're at 50% conversion, the likelihood of going from 50 to 60 to get a 20% lift is probably low.
Now, if the team is at 10%, then the likelihood of going from 10 to 20 or 10 to 30 even would be
pretty high.
So you might be able to triple your sales with the existing team by going from 10 to 30,
whereas tripling the headcount of the team might be significantly more effort.
And so the risk adjust return would say, yes, let's do more of the better.
Not to be confusing.
Do the better solution rather than do the more solution right now.
Okay, so that's kind of the basis of this foundation of what I'm talking about between
more better.
Okay.
Now, where does optimization versus orders of magnitude come into play?
I remember hearing this years ago and a guy that is very wealthy said this thing.
And I remember thinking about it a lot.
And then I was like, I understand where he's coming from.
And he said, CRO is a scam.
So conversion optimization is a scam.
And so obviously I'm somebody who really loves, you know, I'm very data driven and I love to
just see throughput, put through funnels and things like that.
And so I thought to myself, well, that doesn't make a lot of sense because I have, you know, generated tremendous amounts of profits and revenue as a result of conversion optimization.
So I thought a bit more because that guy was very successful.
So I thought about more.
And I was like, hmm, his point was, hey, why don't we ask the question, what would it take
to 100x the amount of people who see the page rather than how do we get 10% more out of
the page we have?
And I think that's really what I wanted to hit on today, which is a lot of times I see
smaller businesses, sometimes even middle-sized businesses, get obsessed.
And it's less with the big ones.
and I think it's because of this shift in thinking,
which is why I'm making this podcast.
In the beginning, everyone wants to be incredibly efficient.
And that's good.
It's good to want to be efficient.
But what happens is we start to get obsessed with like squeezing every last dropout
rather than thinking, why don't we just get more fruit to squeeze juice out of.
And so I'll see people just spend honestly sometimes like a year.
Like I had a guy recently say, hey, I think I should optimize the front end that I have
from my business.
He was getting 17 to 1.
were there things that he could probably do to improve it?
Yeah, there actually were.
He just found a cool niche and it's working out really well for it.
But the thing is, that was not the constraint of the business.
The point is he probably would have been better served by just being like, cool,
how do I get four times more traffic to this page or five times four traffic to this page?
And the reason I bring this up is that oftentimes beyond a certain point, there are
incremental, you know, diminishing incremental returns, meaning you get less every single improvement
you get, again, because you have a hypothetical extreme of 100%, right?
And that's the thing with optimization is that there's only 100%.
You can't get above that.
But you can 100x traffic.
You cannot 100x conversion unless your conversion's at 1%.
In reality, if you have a Shopify page, for example, selling e-commerce products,
you're not going to go from 2% conversion on your page to 50%.
It's just not going to happen.
You're not going to get a 25x improvement in conversion.
But you can, and here's the cool part, you can get 100x increase or a 25x increase.
in traffic. Because listen, at the end of the day, you can spend all of your trying to optimize
your tax situation and get your taxes down to zero percent making $40,000 a year. But sometimes
it just makes more sense to ask the question, what would it take for me to make $40 million
a year? And solve that instead and say, the hell with it. And I just had an entrepreneur friend
actually reached out to me saying, hey, you were right. And I was like, about what? And I probably
haven't spoken to him any year. He's like about the tax thing. I was like, what do you mean?
He said, well, I just spent the last like six months deep diving and all this tax stuff.
And I realized that if I spent that same amount of time and attention just growing the business,
I would have made more money than I'm going to save in taxes. And I was like, yeah, duh.
And so this is again, one of those like little optimization versus order of magnitude changes.
Like what would make my tax bill irrelevant to me? Like, I'm upset that I pay, you know,
30% on my $100,000 a year. So I keep 70 and I have to pay 30. Okay.
Well, then what would it take for me to make a million dollars a year or $10 million a year?
And then solving that, you might be like, you know, I wouldn't even care about paying 37% on
10 million if I could make 10.
The questions that we ask, we have to be so careful because we will actually solve them.
Oftentimes, we spend a lot of our lives solving questions that aren't worth answering.
This is really what I wanted to hit on.
My thinking around decisions when it comes to where do I want to invest the team's time,
effort, et cetera, has more often been, what's that one thing that I can do? That if I accomplish
that one thing, it's so significant that the remainder of my objectives became irrelevant.
They shrink into irrelevance. If I got 100 times the traffic to Acquisition.com, I wouldn't
care about CRO because I would have more than I could already handle, kind of already do.
To be fair, it's because of kind of this thinking process, which is like if I, and the thing
is that within every business, there is that one thing. There is always that one thing. The tricky
part is that sometimes that one thing isn't on your to-do list. And that's why I think in my opinion,
strategy is such a valuable thing to have, which is sometimes the best move is one that's not on
the board, is one that's not on your to-do list right now. And so when you struggle to prioritize
things within your to-do list, it might just be that all of them are wrong. Because not wrong in
that they won't grow the business. It's just that none of them is an order of magnitude change. And to
be clear. I'm not saying you have to do something new in order to get that. Now, that is more
common that if you're going to get an order of magnitude that comes from a new thing. But I would say,
where do I want my order of magnitude bets to be? Order of magnitude bets are typically, for me,
not going to be something that's done what I would call in funnel, meaning like once we have
a click from wherever the source is going to be, whether it's an email that's outbound or a DM
or an ad or content, you have some click, you have some engagement that occurs, right? Everything from that
going forward is all conversion optimization. Putting something brand, brand new in there,
unless you have like, it's unlikely that the change, which will have a guaranteed cost,
will net a big improvement on an existing control, meaning something that already works.
And so I more often than not save my order of magnitude changes for things that are,
I would say, media driven or product driven. Okay. So I'll, I'll,
zoom out here. Media driven meaning, if I take a big bet, there's, there's a possibility that I can 10x
clicks. That's something that's doable. It's achievable. And there's tons of demonstrations of that.
Product. If you have, let's say, a thousand dollar thing and then you decide to charge $100,000
for something and you have obviously the ability to deliver on something like that, you can have
a 20x increase in revenue. Absolutely. Where you need the conversion and optimization is to unlock
more media that can create a stepwise function increase.
It was like, okay, well, how do you thread the needle here?
If I have, let's say, an e-commerce store, for me to CRO this thing to get a 5x improvement
unlikely.
Now, in reality, I might be able to get a double by improving, you know, four or five steps
that occur in the process, having better follow up, maybe a call team that, you know,
calls all the abandoned cards, some sort of scarcely or great bonus or seasonal thing that I do
on a regular basis.
Like all of these things that add together, a bunch of splitests on the landing page,
whatever, you know, add payment options.
All these things will have, we'll add points.
But that unlocking of LTV of lifetime value might be the thing that might allow me to
5x my advertising.
Right.
And this is where it's like, wait, I thought you said, well, yes, welcome to business.
There's many variables and therefore many variables must be studied.
But the point is, is that when I look at a lot of businesses, they, especially if your,
if your growth has been, I would call it slowish.
And if you're in a small business, I would say anything below 20% is slowish.
And again, like, I just tend to be aggressive when it comes to growth.
But if you're in that, you might not benefit from trying to do more optimization.
You might benefit from just finding some big thing, big move, big brand association, big giveaway.
This is where offer changes, by the way, the purple book that I have $100 million offers.
that is, I would say, more of a step function.
That is an order of magnitude change that occurs in many businesses.
And it is strategic in that it will force you to prioritize against all resources in the business
because it will affect all functions.
Right.
It's going to affect pricing.
It's going to affect.
So it affects fun.
It affects delivery.
It affects advertising.
It affects sales.
It affects everything.
The offer itself, right?
If we're thinking about this list of unlimited things that we can do in the business and
you are in a position where you have not grown much lately, unless your ability to spend money
to get customers has been the limitation of the business, in which case, maybe having conversion
rate optimization look at three or six month period where you just aggressively test, you know,
three or four things at a time per week to get to kind of squeak out a lot of these improvements.
Once you get to a certain level, you really need to ship because the thing is this is where
one of those, what got you here is not going to get you there, which I don't really like
as general sayings, but in this instance, it would apply.
which is that maybe you have already done a lot of testing on the process, the landing pages,
the copy, et cetera, follow up.
And so you might just need to be like, what's that big thing that's going to make 10 times
more people or 50 times more people see my stuff?
Or what's that one thing that's 50 times more expensive or has 50 times the LTV that I can
sell to a large percentage of my customers?
Typically within the box, within the pipeline of the business, you will have the little
optimizations. But the big orders of magnitude usually come at the front or the back. It's either
something that's very big in media or it's product-driven, service, you know, a new service line,
new product line that you roll out that then creates these kind of step function increases in the
business, which then obviously circles back to the front, allows you to spend more, and then you can
scale, right? And I feel like this varies some weight because I probably, I tend to be the type of person
new. I love optimization. Like, you know, it's just a, like, I just love seeing these little
improvements. Like, got a little 10% there. We've got a little bit.
little 6% there.
We got a little 25% there.
That was a big one, right?
I love seeing those because it's these nice fast wins,
these fast feedback cycles.
But what's interesting is that we get addicted to these fast feedback cycles.
And sometimes that makes us blind to that one big change that makes all of those
little improvements irrelevant.
If Mr. Beast, for example, decides to launch another product, is it the one thing that
matters most, which is his massive audience and brand that will dictate the success or how
optimize the page is?
probably just the big brand and audience and media that he has command of that he can generate
towards that. This is my one takeaway for anyone who's listening to this. And this is the question
that I would ask, what one thing, if it were true about my business, would change everything?
Really think about it. And sometimes think about it from a product perspective, think about it
from a media perspective, sometimes it's technology perspective, but typically it's going to be
media or product. After answering that question, what one thing if it were true would change everything
about my business or take my business to make it 10 times bigger or make it 100 times bigger if you're
if you like to be more specific. And so then the follow up question to that, if once you have that
answer of all of these other things that are on my to-do list, if I were able to accomplish all of them,
would it be as big as me just doing that one thing? And if the answer is no, then it would be logical
although contrary to allocate zero more attention towards that big bucket of list of things that
you could potentially do that would give you that incremental improvement, that optimization improvement,
and put all of your effort and focus on getting that one thing to become reality.
The more I have thought this way in my entrepreneurial career, the more step function increases
in wealth I've been able to experience for myself and obviously across the portfolio companies
that we own. And so this is, yet again, a strategy conversation. But the reason I talk about this
so much, and to be fair, this is probably because this is where a lot of my day is spent, is trying to
think of the highest leverage decision or move that we can make within a business where we're going
to bet all of our resources. And where this gets very interesting is that if you have, say, a big
list of things that you could potentially consider doing, right? There are resources that are required
to do all of those things. The big mistake is the fallacy of thinking.
that you can accomplish all of these concurrently.
You can't.
You just can't.
You think you can.
But it's been very well documented switching tasks,
going back and forth between things, kills productivity.
And for some reason, we think that in a company,
because there's more people, that that doesn't apply.
But the resources of the entire company
can still be dedicated towards one thing.
And so this is kind of like human systems
versus machine systems.
And so if a business by and large still is,
to this day at least, very comprised of humans.
Let's say that there's five things,
that would change the game for us. One of those five is more important than the others.
And if you can't figure that out, then you're not doing your job. There is one thing that's
more important or has a higher likelihood of success that has a bigger impact. If that thing
is number one, then it would follow to say, hey, let's direct all of our resources towards
accomplishing this one thing. And then as a fun bonus, once we accomplish that thing, we can go
on to the next thing. Now, this then gets confusing because some of these other things might be
screaming hot problems. But if we have a how much this is going to impact the business,
then if that screaming hot problem is really, you know, threatening the existential, the existence
of the business, then that becomes number one. And then once you do that, then you can do the
fun thing, right? And so what happens is when you create the, when you put these things in sequence,
what I have found happens is that the level of urgency that the entire team takes to accomplish
that one thing goes up tenfold. And so you can in a very real way do five things sequentially
faster than you can do five things at once, which seems obvious when you,
think about it for yourself, but for some reason, when we think about our companies, we don't think
that way. And so this has, again, been a change in thinking for me in terms of how we get things done
at Acquisition.com and how we can move quickly. And also, obviously, how that translates in terms of
making priorities for the portfolio companies. I feel like this is a, I want to say, I don't know,
a mistake is the right word, but like, it's an inefficient utilization of resources that I see
that's very common, especially amongst low and mid-sized founders. And to give you context,
I'd say low and mid-sized.
I'd say like low would be, you know, sub-3 million,
and then mid-size would be like maybe sub-20 million,
just to give context, maybe 50.
This is just one of those things that it seemed important enough
to make a specific podcast about.
And so I will repeat the final question one more time,
which is what one thing, if it were true,
would change everything about our business?
And then what resources are required
to just make that one thing occur?
And if we use those resources do all the smaller tasks,
if those do not amount to as much as that one big thing,
then it is logical, although controversial,
to just put all of your resources on that one thing to make it true.
So with that being said,
I hope this at least gives you something to ponder on your way to work
or while you're at the gym about your business.
And if you work for a business,
then I would say it's a really good exercise to walk through
and also demonstrate to leadership how you think strategically.
Or you can also think about this also within the function of the business.
Like what one thing, if it were true, would change the finest department?
What one thing if it were true would change the IT
department. What one thing if it were true would change our people strategy in terms of attracting
talent? What one thing if it were true would change our product or our marketing? You get the idea.
With that being said, have an amazing day, amazing week. Keep rocking and rolling and accomplishing
your dreams. Bye.
