The Game with Alex Hormozi - Q&A. Growth Is Just Constraint Removal | Ep 933
Episode Date: January 14, 2026Welcome 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
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Please help me welcome.
Host of the game.
Author of the $100 million series.
Guinness World Record holder.
Alex Ramozy.
Okay. Fantastic.
Talks fast.
Ready to rock and roll?
All right.
Yes, sir.
My name is Mike Carlson.
I sell a high level to online fitness coaches.
I would eat $2 million in revenue and we'd love to be at a million a month.
Okay.
This is what is stopping me.
So what is stopping you right now?
Why can't you do more what you're currently doing?
Yeah, we basically developed and built up the better product because we had terrible retention.
You had terrible retention?
Terrible retention. And now you have good retention?
Yes.
What's true now?
7%.
Monthly?
Monthly.
Okay.
We have a 9,000 LTV.
Okay.
What's KAC?
6 to 5, or 4.6 to 1.
Okay.
So it's like 1500 bucks.
Okay.
Yeah.
Cool.
Got it.
So how do you get customers right now?
We have 40% come through strategic partnerships of other.
mentors business sending their clients to put out the funnels.
Okay.
And then organic.
And I would say the last piece is actually the meta ads or Instagram ads.
Are those working and profitable?
Yes.
Okay.
So two of those are reliable.
Word of mouth, we'll just put a pin in for now.
So fundamentally, why can't we either do more meta slash Facebook ads
or more strategic partnerships in terms of the outreach required to get more of those people on board?
Yeah.
We totally think that meta is where to go.
We used to do it. We turned it off.
Cool. Okay.
My real question, I think, on that is, how do I make the CRM sexy on the front end to get somebody to actually inquire?
Are the ads working right now?
I wouldn't say we're spending enough to say yes.
What do you spend it?
$2,000 a month.
Oh, okay. So, yeah, that's...
We just have them on.
Yeah.
Got it.
Rule of thumb for everybody.
Just side note.
I can't really test a campaign unless I'm willing to spend two X my target KAC as just a test.
of whether this works or not.
So it's like if my target KAC is 2K,
it's like if I don't spend at least 4K,
it's like you can't know anything
because the cadence of feedback is so slow on 2000.
It's every two months,
you'd be able to get like a sale inefficiently.
And so you would,
because I have to be willing to spend more than my target KAC
so that I can then get it efficient.
Assuming that I'm going to literally knock it out the gate
on the first shot is unlikely.
Okay.
So from an offer perspective,
what problem does go high-level stuff solve for the online fitness coaches?
We really break it down into four different funnels.
We have basic mini-chat killer.
We have a link in bio, which is your lead magnet.
We have...
So there's a pain there.
Which is you have followers.
Want to turn your followers into customers without DMing anyone?
It's going to be the pain of being in the DMs all day, I would imagine.
They're all online fitness coaches?
Yeah, and I'm guessing most of them are on meta or IG or whatever as their primary way of getting customers.
Instagram primarily.
Yeah, and maybe some like 20% on LinkedIn doing busy executives, whatever.
Yeah, I would say none of them actually are on LinkedIn.
Okay, so it's just IG.
Yeah.
So at least you have a very targeted avatar.
So it's like, hey, you're having trouble turning your Instagram followers into customers.
All of this can be automated.
We'll show you in seven minutes how to do it.
And that's the lead magnet.
And then it works a case study of somebody who has.
ideally 7,000 followers and then was able to get to this many sales per month.
Intimidating.
That's what I would, that's what I would lead with.
It would be like, here's five different coaches who all had less than 5,000 followers
who are all able to get five clients a week.
Right?
That sounds sexy.
Just using our automation.
That would be my angle.
But fundamentally, it would just be like, boom, five case studies.
Let me break down each of these.
And each of the five would represent different psychographs or avatars.
So it'd be like, jacked white bodybuilding dude.
And then it'd be like skinny vegan dude who's older and black.
And then there's Asian girl, vegan power lifter.
And then moms over 50 lady, like all of them have their own niches.
And I would just show that it, because everyone's concerned after you say, hey, I'm an online.
CRM is, will this work for me?
And so you just would be like, yes, it will work for you.
And so that would be basically a representative that I would use there.
That's what I would do is my first shot.
but then yeah
VSL
sales call
close
trying to
accelerate as much
of that cash
up front as you can
this is like
a bingo
bingo
money mango
mango type play
no for sure
yeah
what part
worries you
I don't think
any part worries me
as much as
just we're not
a mentorship group
yeah
and so
trying to sell
the CRM
without the
automation
process
so then
another
yeah
if you would
but just
trying to find
the right
messaging
we know
this is where
we're supposed to go
The idea was like before I just tried to figure it out.
Yeah.
I'll tell you what I did when I had an identical business with Alan.
It wasn't just online, but it was brick and mortar primarily.
But same idea.
Me marketing directly to SMBs sucked.
And so I just marketed to agencies.
And so to your point, like you're not a guru.
You don't want to get in the guru business.
I didn't want to be in the SMB guru business.
I just found people who had agencies that were Cairo agency,
whatever agency.
And I said, hey, use my platform.
I'll do this shit that you don't want to do.
And then they constantly would have clients coming in and out,
but the people, but they stuck with me for less.
Suzanne, we should run from an ad strategy campaign to your business mentor.
Yeah.
If you're a fitness business coach, hit me up.
We'd love to do this stuff all for you.
And we have stickier revenue than you do.
And so like the pains for those people, aren't you tired of giving people the keys
the kingdom and having them leave three months later,
wouldn't it be nice to have some recurring revenue that would actually stick
year every year?
Imagine if you could have customers from three years ago or every customer you've ever sold
in your whole life still paying you, how different would your business look?
Probably materially.
Each of those are probably hooks that I would test.
And I don't know which one would work, but one of them would.
And then that as soon as I know, then crack.
But I would probably go there, especially if you're like,
because what will happen is if you actually go straight to the co-finition
coaches, they'll be like, great, I have this thing. How do I get leads? And then you're like, fuck.
Yeah, it's a whole other process. So you'll end up having to get into that when in reality,
the people, you have to meet customers who have the problem to solve. You don't want to generate
demand. You want to channel it. Yeah. As the coaches that normally are already doing 10K
or like our I know client's. Great. I don't know what the LTVTAC difference between the two
would be. I can tell you that I know like on our side with Alan, it was absurd when we went one level
up. Yeah. So just going, because an agency, it's like I could acquire an agency for $5,000.
And then the agencies would pay to onboard with us and they'd pay $25,000, number one. And then number
two, then each one that would onboard, let's say they had 50 customers. They'd pay $1,000 per
customers. We had another $50,000. And then we had the recurring, which on the back end was like
30% of top line. So it was a super profitable model for us. But it worked for them because they didn't
have to do any of this backend shit, which we did. So if I had to, like,
how do you get there faster would probably be just go up one level of.
But when you do that, though, realize you will now serve two customers.
You'll basically have to have a customer success manager for the gurus.
And then you'll also have to have success on this side to make sure the customers are happy.
So it'd be two-sided.
My name is Katie.
I sell new construction homes to first-time home buyers.
Awesome.
We do 200 million in revenue.
Amazing.
We would like to be at 300 and land.
acquisition, the constraint of our industry is what's stopping us. So you getting land has been
the issue? Yes. Okay. So where do you currently, where do you source land deals now? It's like
the permitting or just, okay, so it's mostly just getting farmers to give up their land? Yeah,
anyone who owns land. Sure, but they just have a lot of it. Yeah. Word. So what's the current
strategy that you use to get farmers to give up their land? Find out who they are. Okay.
do a lot of digging to find out who has land available and calling them.
Are you buying lists?
No, there's not.
It's readily available in the MLS.
Like we have access to the information.
Okay.
So the issue is there's just no more names to call?
It's not about the lead of land.
It's getting it from the point of acquiring it ready to build on.
Is the permitting?
It's the development of the raw land.
to finish lot, could be anywhere from two to ten years depending on the project.
And we don't want to put our cash just rotting out in the 10-year timeline, no return.
So we like to purchase it from a developer that does it for us.
We can find the leads and find the land, but we don't have the people to develop it to get it to us.
Your size, have you considered either one pillaging the...
Best developer's talent, bucket A, bucket B, just your size, you can just do the acquisition.
Become the developer yourself, you mean?
Like, yeah, we'll just buy one.
Yeah, buy one so you can just basically vertically integrate what you're trying to build.
Yeah, we should probably do that.
You have the capital to do it, and I'm sure you have really good lending relationships anyways.
And those businesses, I don't know what kind of margins those run, but like I'm sure, like, I would look at who are, like, my first steps would be, like, if I was,
like transplanted in. I'd be like, okay, who did we buy land that was developed from over the last
10 years? And I would get all of those names. And then I would be smiling, dying, slash trying to fly out
or fly them out to say, some of those guys are going to be older. Some of those guys aren't going to
give a shit anymore. And they've got a good team or whatever. And I'd be like, great, like,
how can we make something work here? And I'd be looking at doing a deal that way because it depends
obviously at your size, it's buyer build. And it really depends on how entrenched the inroads are and
how from like the zoning and all that bullshit,
how relationship dependent it is at the levels that you're looking at.
I'll give you a completely different example.
But if you think about like Open AI and some of the new AI stuff that's going on there,
one of the strategies that's becoming more prevalent is rather than try and buy these AI companies
that let's say they've got 30 geniuses that work there and trying to buy that company for a billion dollars,
they just look at the top 20 of the 30 people.
who don't have, who have, maybe they got diluted because of the way the VCs ran the deal or whatever.
And then they just say, hey, I'll give you, and you've seen these like $100 million signing bonuses,
probably like flying around on Instagram.
And it sounds absurd, but it actually is more efficient to give one person or the four key people in the business,
$100 million than buy the business for $4 billion.
So it's just a pure allocation of capital play.
And so from a buy versus build, if you can strip the talent out and they can keep the relationships and then you can rebuild it,
that'll be the most efficient way to do it.
But the, and again, the test is, is that would be my hypothesis, like how ingrained are those inroads?
If they're super entrenched and very difficult to transport those relationships, then I would be looking at, I'll just buy the whole co.
Older guys oftentimes will actually take super long earn out periods because it just becomes an annuity for them.
So sometimes they're willing to take 15 years seller financing just to know that they're going to get paid and you collateralize it against the business.
And you already have assets and so do they.
And so that can actually be a really, it's a win-win structure for many of them.
Yeah.
Just as a consideration.
But that's probably, I would, you're at the size now rather than me say,
here's how I'd build a land development business.
That's probably how I'd think about it.
I think we have just been avoiding it because it's a distraction from home building.
It's like a completely different business.
I think that every business at a large enough scale becomes a business of businesses.
Okay.
So like Amazon is not just like a business.
It's like there's AWS and there's the white label business.
and then there's the logistics and distribution.
There's so many elements.
There's the video and the media side.
There's so many different elements of Amazon
that you might be at the stage where it might make sense.
So it does come back to the goals.
If you know that you're, do you feel confident
that you'll just stay at $200 million or are you going to grow at 20%
if nothing happens?
Or what's the current growth rate?
Are you stuck there?
We've been stuck.
Okay.
Yeah.
Then you probably do need to,
if that is the constraint of the business,
it's like we build on every piece of land that we can get,
that's the constraint.
All right.
So then I think about, so the quantified version of what a constraint is, it's the highest return.
It is the allocation of resources that yield you the highest return.
And so if you focus on, so fundamentally, so why would we not want to do that?
It's like, this is the place where we would get the highest return in the business.
And the nice thing with that is that constraints oftentimes are not like 10, 20, 30 percent improvements.
They can be like order of magnitude improvements.
All of a sudden you can go to a billion because you opened up five times the land.
nailed it.
Thank you.
My name's Eric Stafer's and I'm not a paid spokesperson,
but I'm going to speak for all the entrepreneurs.
You put together an amazing group here,
and not just of entrepreneurs that you curated,
but the acquisition team, we've learned so much.
So thank you for that.
Thank you.
My company is Bio Accelerator.
We're one of the top stem cell companies in the world.
Right now that's what we're known for.
We're actually a biotech platform,
so we have a lot more behind the scenes.
So what we do right now,
what we sell for revenue is our services,
our healthcare services in stem cell and exosome.
We're 24 million.
We want to be at 250.
Okay.
Actually 500, but I was sandbagging for this.
But there's a lot of things stopping us.
One of them, I'm afraid, that has been uncovered
is our level of expertise, possibly including me.
I think we're doing better than anybody in the world.
I'm biased, obviously, but we're pioneering an industry.
So there's no real great blueprint.
That's my excuse.
but I've raised capital both for this business and my previous real estate career,
but it's been in small chunks of $5 million, $10 million, $15 million.
Like full more rounds or like friends and family?
Both.
So for this company, I seeded it, Angel Seed and then Series A, we're on a Series B right now.
That's about my level of expertise.
But when we really need to get out to scale, we're going to have to get a lot more money.
And I'm noticing and starting developing these relationships that it's a much different
conversation when you start asking for $100 million versus $5.10. So I guess my question gets down to
what would be a good suggestion knowing that I don't want to leave the company and get kicked out
yet? How much equity do you have left? Or do you have? 65%. Okay. So you still have a good chunk.
And then 35% is all investors or their team? Okay. I have some, yeah, team members also.
Okay. Key players, yeah, chief medical officer, stuff like that. So it was the issue that you've had the
conversations and people are saying no to the higher valuation in order for you to get the
capital you need? Yeah, a little bit of that because really we have a lot of technology that
hasn't, it's been proven in our clinic and it's ready to basically scale if I could get
the money for the manufacturing to build the extra laboratories. And so I don't want the valuation
to be squeezed so much that it squeezes me right out of a power position. Yeah. Yeah,
that's the issue. Do you, do the existing invalienable? Do you, do the existing,
investors who have come in so far do they have because like you can absolutely maintain control and
still be a minority shareholder zuck has 100 to one voting rights and so if there's a business that
requires more capital but they still trust you but understand that it requires more capital to get
to where you want to go then it you could still maintain the control you want as long as they
buy you yeah the people we have right now are like that we have some professional athletes and
celebrities. A lot of people that were like really good patients of ours. And then they wrote
checks. Yeah. And then they wrote us checks. But they're not really big funding partners.
So, this is just a sale. That's all it is. And so I would I would encourage you to probably
think less about, less about the facts and more about the story. Now, facts do make great
for great stories. But the question that we have to answer is like, what would you need to see
in order to believe.
And so if I'm talking to,
so when we're thinking,
we're about to, let's say we want to raise around in 2026, right?
I'm having this conversations now
with 10 times the amount of potential kind of like investment partners
to understand what their,
what each of them needs to believe or needs to see
in order to feel confident to make the bad.
And once I have that kind of big list,
then I can narrow that down to, okay, this guy's unrealistic,
this guy's unrealistic.
This we can do, and it's going to cost us this much.
And so sometimes it's a tiny race to just get this one need to believe to be believed,
and then you can ladder into this other thing.
And so I think about it as I want to go find my customers, find out what they want,
and then build the thing they want.
Now, to be clear, that's not like trying to derail the vision,
like you don't want to build another person's company.
But it's typically they're all going to just try to pay down risk.
That's all they're paying down, right?
Or want you to pay down for them.
So from a control perspective, that's super manageable.
If you did it today, it's like maybe you lose half the equity that you have,
but now you have a company that you raise, how much cash do you need?
To finish this round, $5 million, but we want to go out and raise $1,26, $27.
And you want to raise that at what, a billion?
No, half a bill.
Okay, $500 million is what you want to raise it at.
So you want to sell 20% and get $100 million in cash.
Yeah.
Okay.
they have to see basically what risk are the people who bought in at 20 or what's your current valuation the last round 50 million okay so that's a 10x difference in valuation what risk did the 50 million dollar round take on that they are now rewarded for with the 500 million dollar round that's a question no no in my mind we've de-risk this more than any other platform on the planet but there's still a lot of regulatory risk
Okay. So there's a lot of unknowns that the 50 million round didn't know, like in the sense that
now Florida and Utah and some other states are starting to change their thought process on stem cell.
So it's starting to look more de-risk in that, from that point of view.
So directionally, has there been any technological change or sales velocity change or
avatar change? Has there been any new finding that fundamentally changes the game?
Because again, I'm trying to help build the story here because that's all we're saying.
selling here is that we raised at 50, now we're raising at 500, and the reason is...
Oh, yeah, we'll have a lot of reasons. Yeah, because with the... Yeah, sorry, I guess I wasn't
understanding. Yeah, we're going to build a laboratory that we've already proven our technology
that we've been delivering for years, and we're just going to be able to scale it. So I think it was
there at 50. Yeah. And that was not there at 50. That was not there in 50. Okay, great. And so
to me, it's like, these are the, this is what has changed and now fundamentally changes the nature of
the business. That is it. So it's like, this is a $10 billion business. And,
there are three more assumptions that have to be proven true.
We proved this one right, which is why we are now,
because they're all discounts on a $20 billion business,
of the likelihood that you actually achieve that.
Like, at least that's the thinking process of most VCs,
or at least good VCs come in with.
It's like they're only making money on multi, multi-billion dollar companies.
And so it's how many assumptions do I have to believe will be true?
And the fewer assumptions that need to be true,
the higher the valuation is the higher likelihood.
And so if we're like, this was actually the riskiest of the four that have to happen,
and that's why we have the biggest step up in our valuation, because now it's just a capital
constraint, not a assumption constraint.
We've already deconstrained this.
And from the regulatory risk perspective, all the directions are pointing green, not red.
That's how I'd position it.
Okay.
It is for sure a pitch, though.
Yeah.
Yeah, I get kind of in the weeds of the nuts and bolts and people just, their eyes glaze over.
They don't know the science.
Yeah.
They just want to know that they're going to make a lot of money.
And so it's going to be a sale on you and a sale on the story.
Okay.
I'm just like, do not be a scientist for the pitch.
Yeah, no, I've, oh, I'm not.
Yeah, I was like, we can help you with that if you need it.
Yeah.
Thanks.
Hey, Alex.
What's up?
My name is Francis Aguillo.
I am a real estate wholesaler.
Okay.
We're currently averaging about $450,000 a month in revenue.
Okay.
in revenue i would like to be at a mean that's your spread that's your making or that's like
house volume that's gross okay so what's your what's your spread on that what's your take on
that so we're at 40 percent so right around 250 240 interesting weird that's high
what kind of what are your wholesale is all right so here's the is they've heard of brothels
So imagine a brothel, but now it's all midgets.
Okay, keep going.
You're good.
Okay, but here's the challenge we run into.
So we're currently at 450 average, yeah?
We've had 700K months this year already.
The challenge is every time we get to those numbers,
and I try to, hey, you know what, it's time to ramp up.
For some reason, we tend to tank to $200, $250.
Okay.
I'm sick.
I have cost to believe it's the sales team.
and just okay they have those power months where everyone takes home 20 30 grand uh-huh and then the
month after it's are they pure commission or is it split so there is a base salary okay what's the
split between commission and base so they're at 42 base okay uh per annum and then 10% of the
assignment fees okay of the fees all right this is so you have an ops issue
which is sales ops.
And so it's good.
This is going to be much more weedy
in terms of like tactics
to answer this question.
But it's,
there's probably like 20 things
that you need to be doing
and you're probably doing like 13 of them
and the other seven
are going to be the thing
that make the difference
and creating the consistency of the team.
That's at the service level.
At the deep root of this is
who's the leader of the sales team?
I do have a sales manager.
Okay.
So he or she is,
the problem.
Because
like sales at the end of the day
is a culture game.
Everything's a culture game. But like sales, you can feel
it so quickly when things are good or not
good because the performance, the feedback clips are so fast.
But for whatever reason,
you do not have a culture of consistency
within your team.
I would wager that script adherence
is low
because you have such variability in close rates.
Unless there's a change,
and lead quality, which would be something else.
But are the leads the same, like, this month as last month?
Yes, it leaves this thing.
Yeah, so it's a sales discipline issue, which then comes down to the training cadence,
the scripting, how people are being managed on a daily basis and weekly basis in terms
of their career goals, how, like, you're doing morning.
Like, this is all sales ops.
I could, like, just start talking about sales, but this is a pure sales ops issue.
And so at the, there's a two-s.
step, like I would approach this in two steps. Step one is we should do all the stuff that we are not
currently doing, or we should be doing. Everyone should be reading the same script. If they're not
reading the script, why are you on this team? We need to have training that's every day to make sure
that they are saying things the right way. We need to make sure that everyone memorize the script.
Some of you guys might have seen the YouTube video I put out two days ago about this. But like they have
to breed the script. If they were not saying the script word for word, you cannot be on this team.
You cannot take these calls. I'm getting these leads and not for you to go cowboy and
make shit up. And that then if we cannot solve that problem, because for whatever reason,
you keep trying it and they don't adhere and they go off script because they just want to
close the deals, it means you have a cultural issue, which is a leader problem. Because it means
the leader is reinforcing behaviors that get people to go off script. And there's no consequences
for doing it. And so if you want to have a consistent world-class sales team, the process has to
always go above the player.
No one is above the process.
And I do think that 95, maybe 98% of sales teams have no idea how sales training, how sales
culture, any of this stuff works.
They just hire a bunch of people, see who closes deals, fire the rest.
And so then you just have a bunch of mercenaries who work for you.
But there is no culture.
There is no team.
And it's every man for himself.
And that is what creates this volatility in sales.
And some guy says something and he closes a deal and the other guy's, I'm going to try that
now and there's no consistency
across the board and that also gets you
in trouble long term because they start promising things
and making deals that you can't cash
that makes a lot of sense
up until now we have scripts
but there are more of suggestions
guidelines yeah
no it's
I've done a lot of sales
this is a straight out of the book
checklist problem
we have to do all of these things
if we do this entire checklist we will get this outcome
if we can't do this checklist the leader
is the problem because they don't know how to
reinforced culture, which then means that they're not able to get the right people on and the
wrong people out, which sometimes means we might have to fire half the team to get the right
people in so that we can build the culture we need to get to where we want to go.
Because you are in, I show the shapes of businesses, you are in a sales and marketing business.
There's functionally no delivery. Like you're just basically, like, you guys doing outbound
or like smiling and dialing or do you buy leads from setting teams? Inbound, just Google Ads.
Google Ads? Okay. So you have inbound lead.
that are coming in and then you close.
Like, that's the business.
Like, you buy media, you sell shit.
And so this has to be a core,
like you have to be world class at this
if you want to be world class at wholesale.
Gotcha.
But that's the contrary.
In the events that I have to let go of half the team,
they're just not good enough.
Yeah.
Where do you suggest I look for?
It's not about where, it's about how.
So it's not like I'm going to find,
the better you get at training sales
and creating consistent sales processes,
the less skill someone can have
and create a consistent outcome within your team,
which becomes the arbitrage of your business.
Just like I said, the cleaning thing before,
if the whole contrain of that business
is going to be finding,
basically ticking a human being
and then turning them to a great cleaner
that actually shows up on time,
you have to take the raw input
of somebody who has no skill
and just has work ethic, just has energy,
and in 14 days you can get them closing deals on wholesaling.
That box is the value that your company,
that is your IP, that is the trade secret.
That's how your company is valuable.
And so when I say who versus how, like where do I find these people?
You could run Indeed ads and find like for this caliber of salesperson, they're everywhere.
The issue is then what is the process and what the expectations were setting for those people as they walk in?
And so typically when you're doing high volume sales like you are, how many guys you have in the team?
Currently 17.
Okay.
So when you have that, that's mid-sized.
someone comes in, usually you get constrained because the amount of churn you have,
people quitting leaving, is about equal to what you have to hire, and that's what keeps you
stuck, right?
And so it's a process issue on the demand gen side for talent.
And so usually we look at that and say, okay, what part of this can we screen ahead of time?
So let's send them the script before they even show up.
So people apply, we send them the script.
And then send us a 60 second video of you saying the script.
And then from the 60 second videos, we're going to invite people to a group call,
not 101 because we don't have time for that.
And we're going to go quick drill, say the script, give a piece of feedback, see how they do it again.
If they could take the feedback well and they were prepared, great.
It means they're coachable.
They have work ethic.
Awesome.
Now we can take you to a job offer call.
Somebody has attitude on the coaching.
They're out.
If someone doesn't show up prepared, they're out.
Very easy screening.
And so you take 10, you pick two, pick three.
They go to the next one.
You make job offers.
And that's the flow.
But like the entire sales process of selling them on.
selling for you sets the frame for how the company operates.
Like how disciplined you are and how militant you are in terms of how you set the frame for,
this is how we fucking do things here.
Either get in or get out.
I do not care, but we win.
And if you can set that frame, you will attract winners.
And winning is not for everybody.
And so that means that on the team, there's probably some losers.
And it's not for everybody.
So that's the decision you make.
And that's from top down.
So there's the tactics.
And then there's the tactics.
there's the root issue. I would try this first. If this doesn't work, you have to probably gut things.
Thank you. I know he's the only person struggling with sales here. I saw like more notes.
Okay, group interview. Yeah, yeah. Go ahead. Wow. I'm super nervous. Oh, don't be. So I actually,
there is someone that I ran into at a house party that was pivotal for you. Pivotal for me?
Yeah. You mentioned in a podcast.
that they that they inspired you to create content okay and I was too shy to say hello so can you imagine
how I feel right now you're crushing it thank you okay so my name is Sasha I sold designer bags
and sunglasses cool and we do about six million a month no so sorry a year sorry six million a year
still cool and I would like to do 38 million
Precise.
Yeah, 38 million.
Okay.
And what's stopping me is...
Why 38?
Just because I figured 100,000 a day, something like that, round up, down, something like that.
Okay.
Got it.
And just a roundabout.
And obviously more.
Yeah, yeah, okay.
But I was thinking 38 would be fair.
Yeah, that works.
And it is just recruiting.
Recruiting is the bottom of it, because you're saying?
Yeah.
Okay, got it.
My house cleaner was my...
first employee and she just and because I consumed yours and laid those content so much that I was like
I'm gonna be these two people in one that's me yeah be these two people and as a result I have
a great team okay a really great team and it's just a matter of being militant in the the recruiting
process okay the we do sell on whatnot quite a bit so who do you have what's stopping you so you make
money six million dollars of your selling handbags and
And sunglasses.
For you to sell more handbags of sunglasses, you need more people to do that?
Yes, because we only go live for about five hours a day because we get tired.
It just me.
Me and I have three salespeople, but it's just we get tired.
If we were live more often, we could create more.
You're going live on like your Instagram page or your what?
On whatnot.
Okay, got it.
And do you have a big following there?
110,000.
And so you're just selling to that same base?
and if you just sold for longer, you would make more?
A lot more.
I could do $100,000 in the show.
Okay.
So you just need two more salespeople who were going on camera?
But, yeah.
And then the recruiting as well.
Recruiting for what?
Packing.
Because we do a lot of...
You do your own 3PL or not third party, but do you do your logistics?
Why?
Why do we do it ourselves?
I don't know you can have other people do it.
Boy, oh boy.
Yeah.
Step inside.
Yes.
So functionally, like, because of the nature of the business that you're in,
we have to think, we have to consolidate resources.
I'm not normally somebody who's let's cut parts of the business out.
But unless your shipping is some key differentiator that you have,
like Amazon shipping became a competitive advantage, right?
But unless that's like some differentiator,
then shipping for the most part is pretty commoditized.
And there are people who all day long,
to think about saving 15 cents on cardboard boxes and tape and packing peanuts and all that shit.
And I think that you having to think about that and run a functionally a warehouse at the same time as running a marketing and sales and talent business slash media.
That's not where the value is.
The values in the distribution in the sales.
And so I would say, can we outsource this so that can we outsource this, the logistics,
part so that you can just go all it because all we had to do is you get two more salespeople
when you get to 100,000 a day, we should do that.
We have to physically show the product.
I'm not saying you don't have some product on hand.
You just don't need a warehouse.
No, we do need it because it's go.
Okay.
We run probably about.
So you're like, we sold this item to this person is how you do it.
Yes.
Okay.
Got it.
It is like a warehouse.
It's, yeah.
Okay.
That's fine.
All right, so you just need to hire more people.
So what's stopping you from hiring more people?
The talent.
The talent.
Do you hire more people?
I'm learning now.
That's why I'm here.
Oh, you're good.
You're good.
So I'm saying, like, you have two sets of roles.
You've got warehouse folks, and you've got people who can get on camera.
So what are you currently doing to get each of those people?
We had ads on Indeed.
Okay.
But I didn't realize how a militant had to be until I came here.
It makes.
lot of sense. I know that there's that many interviews that are required.
And that's more for the warehouse side, correct?
Both, because sales is...
I think that you'd be able to find salespeople.
Like, I would probably look at Amazon affiliates.
How much would you pay them?
Percentage.
That's the thing.
Okay, so it takes skill to do what we do.
Yeah.
It takes skill.
Agreed.
For example, my girl...
is better than me.
Great.
She's better than me.
And it's,
not only is it motor skills,
it's presentation and entertainment.
Dude, I get it.
I understand.
I did a lie for three days.
I got it.
Yeah.
So finding and training that,
that's definitely a process and takes time.
Yeah.
The question is whether you want to buy or build.
Do you want to buy the talent or build the talent?
Building the talent is cheaper,
takes longer, harder.
buying the talent is faster more expensive which one do you which one feels right for you so when it
comes to the so we have we're not always so we're profitable per show yes okay profitable per show
but sometimes when ends up happening is let's just say it's a Wednesday are you on cash based
accounting or accrual probably cash yeah so you might if basically if you run a physical products business
which you do here you're like okay we made money now let's take all of that profit gross
profit that we had and go buy more shit so we can sell more shit right so this is where like
you probably have what's your like what's your financial the financial side of the business the
financial ops look like my account to handles it you're who my accountant oh your accountant does
it okay you will need to have soon a relatively strong finance person who can give you better
casting so that you can it's not just like how much cash you have the bank count let's go buy more
shit it's we can only afford to buy this much given this growth rate that we want to have
otherwise you'll get into these probably cash crunches that you're feeling right now it's not
that the business is unprofitable because i'm guessing the headcount's not super buy so our shows
will make anywhere from five to seven thousand profit depending on like the volume that we did that day
so we know the profit like per show however that's where the skill comes into play if a show's not
going well, we need to have that person trained to be able to do the thing. And so that's why
not knowing how much to pay them is the... I think doing a percentage would make sense.
Percentage or profit? Yeah. Like a salesperson. And so you can buy or build that. So you buy it as
I would just go to mini micro-influencers who are already like on Amazon hawking stuff and be like,
they already do live streams and they already do sell shit. And I bet I could teach them to do this for me.
That is a buy version because you already know it's already proven.
You're just saying, hey, do it under my umbrella.
The build version is that you have to kiss a lot more toads
and try and look for who has already built in a bunch of soft skills.
And then you can hire for the small skill efficiency that you know how to train.
Okay, so Amazon affiliates.
You can do either.
But, yeah, obviously this is a lower risk thing.
And then you have to have some agreement that they're going to only sell for you for X period of time.
Like a contract.
Yeah.
Like a contract.
Thank you.
but big picture because I want to make sure that you're good.
The Indeed warehouse stuff that's just commoditized.
You have a warehouse, maybe you have to have it for your business.
But I don't see that as like, that's not a core differentiator.
You're not different because you have a warehouse point of you.
That's not special.
So the roles that you have there, it's like they need to be like, have a pulse, have a good leader there, let them just deal with it.
Your star factor is going to be your ability to train people to sell.
And so that's like, where is your.
What is the true pinpoint of where the most value gets created for you as the founder, the entrepreneur,
is that you need to be able to take somebody and teach them to sell?
Yeah.
And you have to break it down in terms of the most concrete language you possibly can't.
And so think of everything purely in terms of behavior and do not use any amorphous words.
So I need you to have higher energy.
That means nothing.
I need you to raise your voice.
I need you to talk faster.
I need you to have your shoulders back.
You have to describe things that people can see,
and then other people will describe them as having high energy,
having charisma, having confidence.
And so if you want to teach someone to present,
you have to tell them what to do with their body and their voice,
and it will be far faster for you.
And what you'll find is the training lab,
the reason to take so long for people to train
where they can't train salespeople or presentation people
is because they literally do not use words that other people understand.
this is the problem.
This is why most companies cannot teach people to do shit.
Because they say, have more charisma, and then the person listens, and it's like, I'll translate
that into what I think charisma means, which who fucking knows what they think it means, right?
And then we're just playing this telephone game where no one agreed on what are the behaviors
I want you to do.
That will compress the amount of time that will take you to get some one up to speed.
And two, long term, if you can develop the sales training, then you can have a stable of
stallions that are on 24-7 for you working in your barn.
I don't know why it's animals now, but let's go with it.
So that's actually, that brings up a good point.
So I have, so my girl, like I said, she's my house cleaner,
shows up at my door one day.
She's like, hey, I want to be you.
Yeah.
And she's like, I'm a copy and paste of you, and she became me.
Yeah.
Now there's a little bit, a little bit of a, how can I,
Because obviously I had to learn the care part, like from Layla.
So I learned the care part.
And now I have it.
But then I've seen her, I've seen situations not go the way they should because she's too, she's a copy and paste of me from yesterday.
Uh-huh.
So I'm starting to see those.
What's the problem?
We'll just put her in front of the camera, have her sell and get her out of the building.
If she can sell.
Yeah.
So let her sell.
Don't have her manage people.
Have herself.
Got it.
Understood.
Thank you.
This is good talk.
Yeah.
Yes, sir.
Alex.
My name is Sebastian.
Four years learning.
Thanks for everything.
Thanks for coming out from Australia.
Melbourne.
Yep.
Melbourne.
Nice.
Sick.
Blue Sense Digital.
We sell paid ads and growth advisory to eight and nine figure e-com brands.
Sweet.
We do three and a half.
Okay.
We'd like to be.
at 10 than 20.
Okay.
Feel super clear on our top priority against our supply constraint.
Oh, talent?
Yeah, talent acquisition and first getting LTGP on talent.
Something that's unclear is we've just established this past 12 months our leadership team.
So we have two team leaders, ahead of growth and ahead of strategy.
They're all just on salary at the moment.
But putting together or building an incentive, a great incentive.
plan for them as a group to carry us as we two and three X head count.
I would just go profit share pool 10 to 20 percent and then they get slices of that
slice so it caps. So basically it's like if you say simple math, $100 a year of profit,
$20 is always going to be allocated or 20 percent is always going to be allocated to all
leaders. And so they get slices of that pool, but then you always have 80. And then they think like
you do, which is if we're going to bring this leader and we've got to give up some of this pie,
but they should be able to grow the pie, which is the exact same math that all of us do when we
bring someone in. And so it gets them thinking more like owners. That's the simplest way I could
break it down. Are you plenty on trying to sell the business anytime soon? Potentially. Yeah.
Okay. If you want, you can include a profit's interest in the sale, which you can have be
proportional to their interest. Yeah. And then if they leave, it comes back to you.
Yep. How would you apportion that percentage split?
against those different roles?
It's going to be, so first off,
you're going to want to leave probably two-thirds
for future talent if you want to go big.
And so do not be like,
okay, I'm going to blow my whole slice of pie
on these people because the best talent is in the future.
It's not right now.
But I'll give you the pitch or the walkthrough
that I have with somebody who's in this position,
is that, and this will probably apply to half of you,
who here has somebody that they were considering tying into your business.
Okay, so I'll give you quick, big picture advice.
If you never want to sell the business, don't give shares away.
The only thing that is guaranteed 10 years from now is that you will still be in the business.
That's it.
Everything else is not guaranteed, so I would not encourage you to give real shares away.
Thing one.
Thing two, there are four things that equity provides.
One is cash flow.
The second is safe.
sale bonus, sale dollars, the third is risk, and the fourth is control.
And so when I have a conversation like this, I'd be like, okay, cool.
So do you want any risk?
And they're like, no, I don't want any risk.
And you're like, okay, cool.
So we don't want that.
I'm not going to give you control.
So that's off the table.
So all we have left are cash flow and the chance that we sell.
And that's what we're going to do.
And I'm sure in Melbourne, I know the legal situation, but there's a version of we'll give you
profit share, which comes off bottom line. And in the event of a sale, you'll get a sale bonus.
Now, the issue with that is it's going to be taxed as income, at least it is in the U.S.
if they have a sale bonus, rather than capital gains. But there is no real other
alternative because either they have to take on risk and not get control and pay taxes on you
gifting to them, or they have to buy it and give you money. Most people don't want to do either
of those things. And you have to agree on evaluation. It's a whole fucking mess. And so it's easier
just say, I'll give you some money today.
And if we sell, you get money tomorrow.
And if you leave, you get neither.
And then that sale, you might have just said that.
The sale number is that predetermined?
There's a zillion ways to slice this.
But the simple way is if you have a 10% profit share, like for the whole company,
and somebody, let's say, gets 10% of that.
So they have 1% of the profit.
You could say, when we sell, you will get a proportional amount relative to the total for that 1%.
So they get 1% of the sale.
Sure.
Yeah.
And when you write that, make sure that it's the percentage of cash, not calculated on the total value of the sale.
Yeah.
Sorry, last thing.
I got fucked on that one before, so there you go.
Stoat.
The head of growth is pretty much the sole sales guy.
Uh-huh.
We're our first sales guy, non-founder led.
He'd be at this table commission on clipper sales plus this percentage of profit share, or it's one of the other?
Is he a founder?
No.
It just sounds like he's your sales guy.
Correct.
I don't, thank you.
You roll for us.
He gets commission.
Yeah.
He already participates.
He's at the leadership table.
Uh-huh.
The other guys at the leadership table.
Does he do marketing?
He started to, yeah.
He's developing into his backfilling that head of growth role.
Giving equity to sales guys is like one of those day one mistakes that I'd prefer you avoid.
Yeah.
So if that guy is like really ambitious and really hungry and smart and you think that he's going to be their long term, I would say, I want you the leadership
table, I don't think you're ready there yet.
This is what I would need to say.
And just make it quantifiable.
You need a master demand gen, which creates five deals a week, five deals a month,
whatever that number is that you'd act.
Like if he actually did this, you'd be like, you earned it.
So whatever that is.
Sweet.
And clock and roll.
Yeah, you bet.
Was this helpful for somebody else?
Okay.
This is how you have the condo, though.
It's much easier than like, why won't you give me?
It's like, you don't even want equity.
Do you want to pay me?
No.
Do you want to pay taxes?
No.
Okay, great.
Do you want risk?
No.
Okay, great.
I'm not going to give you that.
want these two and I can do that for you. Yeah. Hello, Alex. I'm going to piggyback on Dr. Stemsell
and just thank you for... That's Elsinor. He went to... Sorry, go ahead.
Letting us learn from you and your team. My name's Trenton. We sell roofing in the Metro Detroit
Market. Sweet. We're going to do about $3 million this year. We'd like to be at $10 million.
Okay. Quick context, we were primarily a storm contractor. Yeah. Storms have
vanished in our market, which was...
What the hell, right?
It's a global warming vacate.
Climate change, whatever.
Actually, the best thing that ever happened
because it allowed me to step into retail.
So over this last year,
I really had to rebuild my business
because right before that,
we had hit to $5 million two years in a row.
Okay.
And now we're seeing this drop off.
So my biggest constraint are what's stopping me
is that for the last eight years,
all of our lead gen has been from...
weather from doors okay so it's been 100% door-to-door lead gen and now when we're trying to knock for
retail it seems to be like heavier of a weight on the team it's say retail what do you mean like just people
in market that need a roof it's like residential residential yeah and when you were doing door knocking
before you were knocking on residential doors okay so we were getting funding from the insurance company
got it word okay yeah okay so keep going so now
with me being a door-to-door guy,
purchasing leads and all that was like sacrilegious to me.
So there's some limiting beliefs there
that I started to explore last October.
We bought leads.
I just want to be lead curious.
That's all I'm asking for.
Yeah.
I'm very lead curious now.
But I basically got slaughtered learning this.
Just not be acquisitionary binary.
Be non-binary with your leads.
Like as many as you want.
No, that's what I'm trying to do here.
and when we did purchase leads
You get the unedited version by the way
Hey go ahead
And when we started to
stack the guys's calendars
There was a big culture shift
Yeah
Where we actually saw like more buy-in from the guys
But then like the door knocking
Just went away easier
It was way easier
But
Like our cack and all that
Was absolutely horrid
So I'll spend $7,500
Just to acquire one customer
Over the summer
And it wasn't
sustainable.
So I saw,
make from a customer.
On average,
$6,500.
So that does not work.
No.
It doesn't work.
Yeah.
And it was just like a lot of the marketing
agencies that we worked with were like younger people.
They were like using AI tools,
go high level like that.
So we decided that we were going to build it in-house.
Okay.
So with that being said,
now it comes into a leadership issue.
Because I need somebody that like knows how to
market better than I do so that I can focus.
assign training and can i pause you real quick yes okay cool so you're at three you want to get to 10
you rebuilt it from storm chasing to just straight up door knocking whenever fine i think it was a good
idea you had a door knocking team you took the same sales guys brought them on leads that you got them
they got lazy fat and don't want to do door knocking anymore great rule number one outbound and
inbound are separate teams yes inbound is what you graduate to and so if you're an absolutely
savage. Like you just take children's souls and just rip them out every day because you're a
terrible person. But you're just unbelievable at sales. Then and only then do you get the opportunity
for me to feed you leads? Because these are the most expensive leads that we have to work very
hard for to make sure. And like we cannot waste them on anybody who cannot close everything.
And so thank you. Oh, that was an amen. So first off is the team should be separate,
but you're in this mix now. You're in a little bit of a mess. And so
my two cents would be like take that because I'm sure their commissions have gone down since they now are selling nothing basically yes yeah so I would say guys my fuck up I went to this thing he told me I did this big boo which is inbound and outbound we're together which is not how it should be everybody get back on the streets you guys do that and then for the absolute savages of you because you can usually have far fewer people on inbound that becomes the Christmas tree of the career path because on inbound I can feed you and you can do five sales a day you can't do that door knocking
but you can do it if I'm feeding you leads that are already qualified, already set,
already gone through a VSL, whatever, in the sales motion.
And then those guys can absolutely clean up.
But you earn the opportunity to get that level of commissions.
Now, the commission structure should also be different on inbound because you have to pay for those leads.
So it's a different role.
They graduate to it.
It's more volume, lower per, but it's more reliable, which guys with families, things like that.
If you have a bad day, you close two and a good day you close seven, it's different than you have a bad day.
you can close zero zero zero it's much more it's much more stressful and so guys will be happy to
even give up they'll even make the same money but just have to be more reliable they'll be and you
don't have to be at the sun so then we should hire for inbound sales yeah or take one of the guys
you have who's really good at it and put everybody else back on the street so you just funnel everything
to that guy who because then you can iterate faster because you're new on this and so you want to you never
want to have too many news because kind of like the brick analogy I gave at the beginning the more news there
are the more likely something's going to fuck up.
And so I know this is an absolute savage salesperson.
If they're closable, he'll close them or she'll close them.
And so then the only variable we have is just what offer slash lead source am I getting
and what process is going from lead to talk into them?
Those are the only variables you have to play with.
It's much easier to iterate on that and then get it to go faster.
Okay.
Okay.
And then, okay.
So then I want to hire a marketing director or leader to manage that.
Now, Tim was blowing our minds in the workshop.
He does do that.
Our Asian Clark Kent.
Yeah, it was, it was, yeah.
Racist today?
I was almost going to say he was a ninja, but I didn't want to.
He was in those, anyways.
He's Chinese, I'll have you know.
Samurai.
You're good.
Keep up.
But he was talking about when another guy was talking about,
constraint and he was talking about the trade-off of okay so you could spend six thousand dollars a
month you don't want to spend basically a hundred grand to replace the person what i'm trying to figure
out is i think i've answered my own question i won't keep going here it's i've been working on the
wrong problem i think is what the situation is and i'm trying to make sure i simplify this for you
out outbound team goes out inbound team becomes the one guy you need to hire a marketer person
who actually knows what they're doing probably pay more than you expect but then that person will
be worth it. Your entire business is sales and marketing, so you should have the core elements of
the business in house. Okay. Great. If you need help with the sales process, we can help. Excellent.
Thank you. Alex, this will be your last question. Ah. It's got to be like the best question ever.
Hello. So my name is Evan. I sell duct cleaning supply to duct cleaners. This year,
we will do $1.2 million in revenue. And I think I'd like to be around
three and a half. Okay. And I think what is stopping me is just being clueless.
Okay. Cool. So let's give you clues. So do one more. How do you get customers now?
Strictly organic. Can you take more customers than you have? Yes. Okay. So you don't do anything. That's why. All right.
No, I mean like it's word of mouth. There's no like demand gen that's happening. All right.
So I've got good news and bad news. The good news is that your business,
probably you probably are good at what you do because you've been relying solely on word of mouth.
So that's the good news. The bad news is that you're going to have a steep learning curve for what
you have to do next. And so you basically have to pick. Do you want to do outbound as your way of getting
customers, which could either be door knocking, it could be email, it could be cold calling,
but you've got to be Instagram DMing, it could be anything. But outbound, you could do paid ads
to get customers. You can have affiliates, so you do those things to get affiliates,
or you can post content. Those are your options.
Which of these do you feel like you are best equipped to do?
Probably paid ads, but one of the things I was thinking, like, is creating a higher value per customer, a good option instead of trying to get more customers.
Okay.
I don't know which route to go.
So you would want to double how much customers are worth?
I guess utilize my existing customer base with more consumable, so there's more repeat orders.
So, like, they're ordering more.
So duck cleaners go clean ducks.
Yeah.
Correct.
And you sell them?
We sell them the cleaning supplies, which is really high profits.
And then we started selling some consumables, but they're low profits.
They might buy $500 a year, but it's only like $6 a unit or something.
So there's not too much money in that yet.
Okay.
I guess the solution.
But are they buying regularly from you?
It's just like how many customers for other new customers versus repeat customers?
We average 80 new customers a month.
Okay.
So you do not have a lot of repeat business.
No.
How?
Unfortunately, but fortunately, the equipment I sell is really good, so it doesn't break down frequently.
But on the consumable side, are all those repeat customers?
Consumables, yeah, those would all be repeat customers.
There's just, even though the margins are, there's just, you don't make so much selling a $6 product.
So I don't know if there's a way, I don't know, maybe through selling them education to maybe that be something.
You have a normal business.
There's a zillion businesses that work this way.
Auto dealerships work this way.
Large equipment works this way.
Like ink and printers work this way.
You basically have three wheels of revenue in this business.
You've got, you sell the machines, you sell the stuff that the machines use, and you sell the service around the machines.
That's the three-pronged approach.
And so your ability to extend the customer LTV is going to be around the second two,
not where most people will even like the more sophisticated business will sell these at cost
or at a loss because all their margin is on the consumables and on the service.
Now, you can sell bigger customers so that those $6 things times 10,000 of those
starts to add up or we can sell more on the front end.
But either way, the core focus of your business, like if I had a two-step approach for you,
core focus number one is we have to know that we're retaining 90, 95% of those people on an annual basis on all the consumables.
So every year, I should know that 95% of those people are, they have to buy it from somewhere and they should all buy it from me.
And so it ends up happening is your business starts, that becomes like the annuity of the business.
So you acquire these new customers to sell machines for, whatever, and then this base of service and consumables just continues to rise over time and that's super profitable.
That's the game.
Now, you said that you wanted to grow the business by making them more valuable.
I think you will have a hard time making the individual more valuable.
I think it would be easier for you to sell a higher tier customer, so somebody who cleans more ducks
so that they can buy in higher volume or buy for entire fleets, whatever.
That would be the path, but it will be a different sales motion than you currently do.
And so you have, you are at a crossroads where if you want to have significant growth,
you'll either have to have a new acquisition,
you'll have to have a new acquisition system
basically either way,
because you're either going to have a new acquisition system
for a new type of customer
or a new acquisition system for your existing customer.
If I had my druthers,
I'd probably rather you start with new acquisition system
existing customer because you already know that flow.
Once you have that, then I'd be willing to go out market.
Gotcha.
So would a good first step be to reach out
to our existing customer bases with
explaining to them we have consumables?
Like we don't do any outbound,
existing customers?
Yes, that would be an excellent idea.
Gotcha.
We have things available for purchase.
You should purchase them from us.
That makes sense.
And so realistically, you should probably get them
on a cadence or subscription
with the sale of the initial product.
So I don't know what the offers that you use
is probably beyond the scope right now,
but that's where a lot of the alpha is right there
is what kind of maintenance programs
are we selling up front?
What kind of incentives are we getting them
for subscriptions up front?
Like the entire business, and again,
I have more good news for you
is that you've been making the money that you are,
with none of the actual pieces that make your business make money make money,
which is great news.
And so we just have to put these other two wheels in place
and then develop the motions around those
and the profitability of the business will go up a lot.
Like a lot, dude.
You've got the hard part of a profitable business
without the profitable part of the profitable business.
So we just have to bridge that mode.
That's it.
Yeah, that makes sense.
Yeah, I think that's my only question.
Okay, great.
So sales motion change, offer change, and then there's going to be a reengagement on the back.
And those are the three things for like today.
All right.
Cool.
Thank you.
Rock and roll.
Appreciate you.
Okay.
Fun.
Exciting.
We had a brothel.
Lots of exciting things.
