The Game with Alex Hormozi - The 3 Evil "E's" Entrepreneurs Make | Ep 298
Episode Date: May 11, 2021Growth will pay the expenses. Today, Alex (@AlexHormozi) talks about the three evil “E’s” in entrepreneurship, how each evil affects you, and gives advice on what you can do to avoid them! Be ca...reful, for they might just be in front of you without realizing it!Welcome to The Game w/Alex Hormozi, hosted by entrepreneur, founder, investor, author, public speaker, and content creator Alex Hormozi. On this podcast you’ll hear how to get more customers, make more profit per customer, how to keep them longer, and the many failures and lessons Alex has learned on his path from $100M to $1B in net worth.Timestamps:(1:27) - The 1st evil “E” of entrepreneurship is Expectations(3:36) - The 2nd evil “E” is Emotions(8:28) - The 3rd evil “E” is Expenses(12:19) - The evilest of the E’s and what to do to avoid themFollow Alex Hormozi’s Socials:LinkedIn | Instagram | Facebook | YouTube | Twitter | Acquisition
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The biggest mistakes that are made stem from these three evil ease.
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 than the many failures and lessons we have learned along the way.
I hope you enjoy and subscribe.
What's going on everyone? It's Alex Mosey, a CEO of Allad, Prestige Labs, Jim Lunch.
We've done $120 million in sales in the last four years.
And so today what I want to talk about is the three entrepreneurial evil ease of entrepreneurship.
All right. So these are the three kind of ease that I see over and over again from the entrepreneurs that we work with directly in our portfolio companies, but also in the entrepreneurs that I talk to in general. The biggest mistakes that are made stem from these three evil E's. And so what I'm going to do is I'm going to walk through all three of them. I'll tell you an easy way to try and at least attenuate the mistakes that you can make from them. And then at the end, I'll show you the one that I think is actually the most evil of them all. All right? So the first E is, you.
expectations all right and the reason that this one is so evil is that most of the
time us entrepreneurs we think that everything has to happen immediately right I
had an entrepreneur not that long ago reach out to me and say hey how can you
know if we work together how can you guarantee that I'm gonna get to a million
dollars a month within the next six months and they were currently I think doing
a hundred thousand dollars a month and that kind of expectation and mindset is
literally what will destroy you in business. Because what happens is you set these arbitrary,
because all the goals are arbitrary for the most part, right? These numbers that in your mind make
you feel good or make you feel accomplished. And you set these things up there with not a huge
path of getting there. And you put an arbitrary timeline on it and then you try and force yourself
into it. And so what ends up happening is you take shortcuts, you make hasty, high-risk decisions,
and most of the time you end up destroying the business and taking 10 steps backwards.
And so expectations that we set for ourselves and our teams,
we want to be intolerant of anything other than excellence,
but focused far more on the process than the outcome.
So if you can shift the expectations from outcome-based expectations
to process-based expectations and then meet that with the intolerance of excellence,
right, or tolerating only excellence, excuse me,
then you can help mitigate expectation evils, right,
where you basically destroy your business
as a result of thinking that you have to be at a million dollars a month
or $100,000 a month or $10,000 a month
or whatever that number is for you by X time, right?
What I see again and again and again
of the people who make way more money than I do
is they have reasonable expectations
that would be unreasonable to achieve
based on process, right?
I have a mentor right now who always repeats the same thing.
He says, good process drives good results.
And I just, that's been something I've been trying to ingrain in my mind.
Good process drives good results.
All right.
So that's evil number one.
The second evil is emotions.
All right.
The second thing that will kill your business.
All right.
If you look at the biggest CEOs in the world, you look at the Bezos, you look at, you know,
you look at, you look at, you look at Munger, you look at all these guys, right?
And what you may notice is that they're very devoid of emotion.
And it's not that they're like emotionless people.
It's more so that they try and stay as even handed as possible with the decisions.
And this is just something that I've observed.
And so here's a telltale sign that you can tell for yourself if you're suffering from this.
Because sometimes it's hard, especially for guys for us to be like, I'm emotional right now.
But like we're human.
We have emotions.
And so if you're looking and you flip flop a lot on decisions, as in your
presented the same data and one day you feel this way and another day you feel this way and literally how you process the decision
Flip-flops all the time it's because you're being subject to emotions now if you look at the trajectory of a business and the and the the hundreds and thousands of decisions that we have to make as an entrepreneur
You can see how quickly these thousands of decisions can spin this way or this way on this path
based on your emotions and it can be the right way the wrong way and so
I'll give you here's here's two two pieces to this it's it's very difficult to a
eliminate emotions, right? But if you can detect when you are emotional, then you can decrease the
speed of your decision making, which is usually contrary to what most people do when they are
emotional. They speed up their decision making process when they're in emotions, all right? And so if you
feel urgency, so for me, these are things that are like red flags. If I feel like I have to
make a decision by today or whatever, most times it's completely fictitious and made up in my mind.
And so what I try and do is extend the time horizon between the feeling I have and when I actually decide to take action.
I can't tell you the amount of huge mistakes that I was able to avoid simply by sleeping it off, right?
Giving myself 24 hours to think on it.
And a lot of times the entire world looks different when you wake up at the morning.
And so that should frighten you because it frightens me.
How can the world look so different only, you know, after nine hours of sleep, right?
It's because our emotional state's different.
And so this is a tactic that I do like a lot for managing emotions.
So the best decisions that we make for ourselves, in my opinion, or that I have made for myself, have come from a state of contentment.
And so there have probably been moments.
That's why when you go on vacation, you feel like you have a lot of clarity.
It's because you're in the correct emotional state to make the right decisions because you're not operating from a place of scarcity.
Right?
You're not operating from a place of have to.
You're not operating from a place of deficiency where I am not good enough, right?
When you're operating from a place of contentment, and I'm not saying we're always content.
That's not my point, right?
The point is that you could probably recognize those times where you sit back and you're feeling gracious, you know, you have a lot of gratitude for an experience or things that give you perspective.
And so it's in those time periods where you should make big decisions for your life and then know that you made them in the proper emotional.
state. This is something that I'm
actively focused a lot on for me
because in our businesses
now, we have four of them.
Being in the
right call is basically my only job
now. It's really just proper decision
making. Hey guys, love that
you're listening to the podcast. If you
ever want to have the video version of
this, which usually has more effects, more visuals,
more graphs, you know, drawn out stuff.
Sometimes it can help hit
the brain centers in different ways. You can check
YouTube channel it's absolutely free go check that out if that's what you are into and if not
keep enjoying the show and so when I sense myself in a well-rested content you know full of
gratitude mood that is when I want to look at my most complex issues my most
complex multivaribald you know decisions and say this is what I think the best
course of action is and then sticking with that even when the the trials and
tribulations that are never going to happen as a result of the decision later
on the road. And so that's my, that's my hack is I can't get around emotion. I try and extend
time horizons whenever I feel urgency. And then if, if I'm going to make emotions from an emotional
state, I try and go from a place of contentment and gratitude. And if I do not feel that state,
I don't usually make the decision. So think about that. So if you have like moments when you're
playing with your kids and you look back, you're like, man, life's awesome. That's when you make the
decisions that you need to make about your life.
All right, because from there, you'll be operating with a much longer time horizon.
And that's, I think, my way, I think this is doing it that way will trick yourself
into extending your time horizon, which ultimately will lead to better decision making.
And the third E, of third evils, evil E, oops, I'm writing down evil, is, or are, excuse me,
are expenses, all right?
So the first two, one is what you think should happen.
the emotions affect how you think it should happen,
and the expenses are the, it's like the cloud and the dirt, right,
are the things that we incur along the way
that increase the risk of it not occurring, right?
So if you think about expenses in general,
they are liabilities, they are risk that we take on.
And so if our goal as entrepreneurs
is to increase our upside and decrease our downside, right?
That is kind of entrepreneurship and business in general, right?
Then actively thinking about decreasing our downside,
our liabilities, is a way of increasing the life.
that our expectations are met, right?
And so one of the biggest mistakes and biggest evils that will destroy entrepreneurial businesses is because they set massive expectations when they are emotional and emotionally deficient, because they need to satisfy, you know, emotional needs that their parents didn't meet when they were kids, they then incur expenses that they shouldn't otherwise have to meet these demands that are completely arbitrary and made up in their minds.
right and so I see this what happened all the time it's like hey we want to scale we just hired four more people so that we can scale
It doesn't work that way
Get the growth first and then the growth will pay for the people
Don't put the cart in front of the horse the only exception to this is if you have like commission only
You know reps like sales reps things like that, but most other times
99% of other times
When you are incurring greater expenses, it's not like, it should not be to, quote, anticipate growth, right?
Growth will pay the expenses.
And if you need to, quote, delay something for a smaller period of time so that you can short up your infrastructure, then you can do that.
And you would be amazed at how much flexibility there is, right?
It's much easier to solve problems with cash in the bank, with contracts signed.
And you're an entrepreneur.
Like, solving problems is what we do, right?
And so if you're in that state, think about how much you eat.
Like, if you have the immediate demand, right?
You will solve the problem and the people will come.
I promise you.
All right.
One of the biggest mistakes that I mean, I've made this one so many times.
I hired 25 support reps in anticipation of growth for our supplement company,
Prestige Labs, two years ago.
And I currently now have.
for people that handle more business than the 25 did.
Think about that.
And so what happens is when you anticipate growth,
you don't even know what the growth is going to look like.
And so you basically just put people there.
The culture of the team decreases,
the morale of the team decreases,
they're being less efficient.
And when you have lots of people,
you don't think about driving good process, right?
You just think, like, we'll just throw more bodies
at the problem.
And that's a horrible way to go about business.
It's also not a good customer experience
in the long run.
And so if we can,
adjust our expectations to be reasonable and based on process, not outcome,
by managing our emotions and making decisions from a place of contentment, right,
so that we don't set these deficient expectations on ourselves and our business that we have to satisfy
because we must be a certain way by this time,
then we won't incur expenses and risk that is undue and not necessarily that will likely destroy our business
when it was 100% based on our false, made-up expectations about what we thought.
should happen should and so when I look at the things that undo entrepreneurs and
entrepreneurial businesses these are the three evil ease expectations emotions and
expenses and I told you at the beginning that I would share the one that I think is
the most deadly and it's this guy in my opinion expectations because what we
believe because these are basically beliefs just said differently right
another way to say this and this is this is a really a really
really good way that I got from a different coach to reframe beliefs is she said if you
just call all your beliefs assumptions they will be far more malleable and it's such
it's words matter right and if we call our beliefs assumptions they become far more
changeable for ourselves and so if I say this is my assumption what do you guys
think rather than this is my expectation what do you guys think see how different
that feels but they function the same why right
But one of them is approachable.
One of them is malleable.
One of them can take new feedback and new inputs and new data.
And the other one is a must, a should, a have to, right?
And so if we can readjust our expectations, right, and be focused on our product,
over delivering, delighting the customers, right, being intolerant of anything but excellence
in the process.
And because of that, our emotions stay more stable because we're not missing goals that we have to hit.
Right? Which then create more scarcity, more deficiency, more guttural feelings that then make us shorten our decision-making loops that cause poor decisions and then cause us to make poor decisions that create expenses.
All right. So this is a loop that self-reinforces and it can either be a virtuous or vicious cycle.
And so it starts at the top and spins all the way around. And so those are the three evil ease of entrepreneurship and entrepreneurial mistakes that hopefully you can use some of these tactics to avoid.
All right.
Don't hire before you need it.
Let the growth pay for the expenses.
When you're making decisions, try and extend the space.
This is what I have found effective for me.
And try and make decisions from a point of gratitude and contentment.
And then keep the expectations driven around process, not outcome.
And if you can keep your high expectations, but keep them on process, not on what has to happen.
Because when you reverse it the other way, you'll start making terrible decisions.
Thanks.
