The Game with Alex Hormozi - The Power of Focus and Playing The Game (on Leveling Up with Eric Siu) Pt. 1 - Aug ‘23 | Ep 615
Episode Date: November 18, 2023“We will do our jobs. We will do a good job. We will do all of the basics and we will do it every time.” Today, join Alex (@AlexHormozi) he guests on Leveling Up with Eric Siu to discuss the chall...enges and lessons learned from running multiple businesses simultaneously, emphasizing the importance of focus and specialization. He also shares insights on the role of content in driving deal flow and the complexities of operating a holding company. This is part 1 of the interview.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.Follow Eric Siu on:➤ Instagram | Twitter / X | Spotify | Apple➤ Check out full episode on YouTube!Timestamps:(2:15) - Holding company, content for deal flow.(11:19) - Managing stress with multiple companies and content creation.(15:13) - Advice for those buying businesses and hiring operators.(19:32) - Transitioning from minority to majority investments.(23:40) - Changes in content strategy over the past 12 months.(28:29) - Percentage of work on shorts vs long-form content, hooks, stories.(36:17) - Indoctrinating team into way of thinking.(44:04) - Evolution of Alex and Leila's relationship.(49:27) - Structure of Alex's content team and filming days.(57:50) - Compounding on various platforms.Follow Alex Hormozi’s Socials:LinkedIn | Instagram | Facebook | YouTube | Twitter | Acquisition
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Discussion (0)
And so a lot of people will do anything for the algorithm. But like, if it's not on brand for me,
if it's not something I'm an expert in, I'm not going to talk about it. That's my one piece of
advice for everybody who's like starting to get into the game of content is like, just talk about
stuff you know about. Just don't pretend to be someone you're not. Welcome to the game where we
talk about how to get more customers, how to make more per customer and how to keep them longer and
the many failures and lessons we have learned along the way. I hope you enjoy and subscribe.
What happened with the Crocs? Yeah. So you introduced us to whatever, some guy at Crocs.
Yeah. Yeah. Then. You know, then.
send us all these cool designs for some acquisitions.com crocs, which would have been dope,
and I would have totally wrapped him. And it was like, yeah, we'll do some sort of collab thing.
Like, right when we were ready to move forward, I was like, cool, like, send me whatever link I can
promote and like, let's do this. Like, I didn't even really like care about like money splits or anything.
I just like, thought it'd be dope if everybody had some. Yeah. And then he was like, well, just tell us
how many you want and here's the bill. And I was like, huh? And it wasn't even that they were priced at
normal crocs. They were priced it twice with the normal. It was like 80 bucks to us. And
us to have the crox.
And I was like, there's some massive misunderstanding.
I was like so many people, if there was like an acquisition.
not com crock would rep these like for sure.
I like tens of thousands of people who like did the thing, like I'd get this one or whatever.
And so because I was a prima donna, I was like, no, I'm not wearing crox again.
And so after that I stopped wearing crocs.
We're not done here.
I'm going to help sort this stuff.
So the story here is my thing last year at my event, you were wearing crocs and you were
just like, dude, I'm ready to take it.
to the next level, I'm super motivated to promote.
I was like, dude, I happen to know one, their VP of Digital there.
Yeah.
And no, we are going to rectify this.
Yeah.
And I just want to see it happen.
It's not like he's going to pay me or anything.
So that's a good place to start.
And, you know, it's interesting enough, Dan, he actually has a holding company.
And what I wanted to bring up was this, I was at an investor conference a couple months ago
called a capital conference.
Cool.
And every year, there's like rage.
I think the year before it's like all about the hedge funds.
This year it's about hold co.
right, everyone's Holdco.
Interesting.
As if it's really easy to start a holding company, right?
And then it's like, no, there's a lot that goes into it.
I mean, you have a portfolio of businesses, right?
And maybe we can spend some time talking about how difficult it actually is to not only be
creating content, which we'll talk about in a second, but running a holding company.
It's not just, oh, I'm going to hire operator and that's it, right?
It's like much easier said than done.
Yeah.
Well, to dial in on the Holdco side, I mean, we have, it's tough if we,
if we try to pull apart media from the actual people.
But I think we have like just, just under 30 people who work a hold code, which is like a lot of
people for a holding company.
But we're really hands on in terms of how we like add value to companies.
So I think there's there's kind of two models, at least that I'm, you know, aware of at least that we
considered.
One is the completely decentralized model, the Berkshire Hathaway model, which is delegation to the
point of abdication, right?
Like just like, don't call me unless everything's burning and then still don't call me.
And that's one model.
But part of the reason that we have basically the complete opposite model is that the deal flow that we have usually wants our help to grow.
So we're definitely growth partners more than we are.
Let's buy it a good price and hold it and just try and arbitrage the value that we can get from the business and then reallocate capital at the holding company.
And so for us, we're looking at is this company in our deal box?
Do we really like the founders?
because a lot of times if you're buying a company, you kick the founders out and then you put
it an operator that you trust, et cetera. So like we have a lot of, which actually makes it harder for us to do
deals because there's so many reasons that we won't do a deal. Like we don't like the founders. They don't have a big
enough vision. We don't think the product's good enough long term, which means like we won't redo product
market fit. That's one of our big like that's why three million if anyone's curious, like why three million in top line is kind of the
minimum. And for it's three million ish, but at least a million in EBITA because unless you're there, like usually it's
you're still figuring stuff out.
Like we want to have at least a basic product market fit.
Yeah,
there's something that's here, right?
And so we won't redo that.
And then we want it to be in a couple errors.
For us,
it's usually consumer services or business services,
which is either brick and mortar chains
or national services like mortgage sales or something, right?
And those are places where if we can see like an easy, like, 5x or something like that,
that's usually what we will want to pick up.
So if there's like a bunch of, like it's kind of funny, like the double ed sort of,
you want a good business, but my, my head of bizdev said, he's like,
we want you to be very specifically incompetent as in like incompetent in all the ways
that we are excellent.
And so it's like if someone's like, oh, yeah, our sales process is horrible or like, man,
we can't get enough demand gen, but we have like a huge LTV and we're really sticking on the back
and like those are companies that we come in and just murder.
Yeah.
I mean, we just bought a 32 location teeth whitening chain.
And I was so excited about this.
And then we went to the facility.
And the experience was fine in terms of the product.
But the sales process that I went through was like, I was like giddy.
I was like, oh my God.
Because it's so bad.
There's so many things that we can do to improve this.
And so we just rolled out our first level and we five X LTV.
Wow.
In one rollout.
And so this is 32 locations.
And I was like, great.
Like we just created $50 million in enterprise value.
Like let's just roll this out of it.
over the next 12 months to all 32.
And I was like, and that will be a W for the year.
You know what I mean?
Like one of the hardest parts about what we have is that you have this desire to have
activity, right?
It's like we have all, because right now we get 3,000 companies a month that apply.
So it's, it's continued to grow.
But we don't, we don't necessarily make more money by doing more deals.
And so it's way more about fine.
And like the hard part is sticking with the plan and not getting like eyes bigger than
your stomach.
And so anyways, that's, that's been the biggest challenge for us is like just being
very selective about the deals that we know are the best deals for us, not necessarily just good
deals. And you talk about the deal box, which is Warren Buffett's like you wait to swing, right?
So what do you think it is for your deal box? You kind of mentioned a couple of things.
Yeah. So right now, and I think that over time we'll probably expand it as we bring in other like,
like X operators. So if someone's scaled an exit of business for like 100 million plus in like
software or something, then I'd be like, well, dude, just come into my deal flow and we'll make a deal
that makes sense for both of it. You don't have to spend three years building out this massive
deal machine, I'll just partner with you on it and then we'll kick off a different pod. But for right
now, our stuff has been focused on services just because that's the world we just know really well.
Got it. And that this kind of starts to go into content a little bit because you've been very
prolific in the last two years with leveling up your content. Did that teeth whitening company,
did that come through your content or where did it come from? Content. So walk me through how that
work. Because actually, I was having lunch and my friend has a pet holding company. He's like, I want to ask
like how because he does produce content right he's like how much does that content actually help
with deal flow so what happened with that story all of our deal flow comes from content so yes it does help
um yeah i mean it's like someone will watch a number of pieces they'll listen to a bunch of podcasts
they'll buy the book they'll read the book they go through the course and you know they'll have spent
a hundred hours with me virtually uh before they decide to take the first action which i like because
then a lot of times they'll fix a lot of the low hanging for it which is kind of nice because then
you don't have to like have a thing that has all these issues
And so they'll apply our head of business that, well, well, there's multiple screenings.
We have an automated screening that weeds out like probably like 90% just because they're not big enough or they're in a space or they're international, et cetera.
And then once that we have somebody who immediately reaches out to just qualify that this data is accurate, which again, that's like another wave.
And then from the qualifying stage, we have somebody who then does a way more in-depth business case and basically writes up a full like one page write-up per business.
And then the ones that that person thinks are big enough and in our deal box then get passed on to managing director of business development.
And so then he takes the deal from that point until close, which is usually like several more conversations, which he usually weeds up most of them.
We usually do about two LOIs a month is what that results in for us.
I think just for those people listening, it's hard.
Once you're in it, like you understand how hard it is, right?
but when you look at your team, it actually is a team of badass.
It's like a SWAT team, right?
And so you have people that have actually been there, done that.
You've talked about your CFO before.
You said it's 30 people.
Who else are kind of the key players on that hold code team?
Because I don't want people to think this is easy.
Oh, yeah.
Everything's easy if you don't do a good job.
So for us, we look at it by function.
So it's like we have somebody who's an IT.
We call them SMEs, so subject matter experts.
So subject matter experts for,
IT for finance, for HR and recruiting.
We have two different marketing speeds.
One that's more on like the tech side, like,
MARTEC and like media buying and like funnel optimization stuff,
CRO.
And then the other one is more like truly like the art side of like the words,
the copy via video sales letters, ads, that kind of side.
And then we have a director of sales and we have a director of customer success.
And so each of those people has years of experience building and scaling multiple teams.
bigger than most of the companies that are coming to us and now have, you know,
experience doing their function and scaling it within each of our portfolio companies.
And we've just, it's just a very long process of step by step codifying every play in the
playbook. And I think that it's kind of like the, the Bruce Lee of like in the beginning,
everything simple. And then you have like a zillion, you know, punches and kicks. And then it comes
back to just like, don't get hit. And I think that right now we're, we're getting better and
better at like, okay, we crush this playbook really well. We crush this playbook really well.
And so right now we've got like a three playbook that it's like we can 10x like services
companies. And so I'm just trying to see like, okay, there's 20 other things that we do really
well. But like what are those like easy, just massive levers that we can crank on?
And then I think that's where I want to just like, I might even say let's get even more efficient
at just do it pulling these four levers immediately 10xing the business and then saying like, okay,
So do we want to exit or do we want to like double down again or do a dividend recap or something like that and then reinvest for another time?
I think we're hanging out like a like a year ago, it was service plus other businesses. And I think now you guys are honing it even more and even more. And like that's what business is. Right. You just hone in more and more and more. Because then you can get more. And then it's even easier at the holding company to create value than the portfolio companies because they're doing the same. Like if you're switching from like let's say a, like the pet thing, right? So like let's say I had one of his company. So like let's say I had one of his company.
companies, which would not be my mailbox.
And we're optimizing a Shopify page for chewing toys for dogs.
And then like the next call is about the brick and mortar teeth
wedding chain.
It's like it's such a jarring switch of like perspectives that you don't get a lot of like
accretive you know benefit between both of those calls.
Whereas if you have brick and mortar teeth whitening and the next hole,
I have brick and mortar photography and then the next call is brick and
mortar gym chain and all of them are selling sessions and appointments.
It's like, okay.
like run this play.
Yeah.
You had to talk recently, and I want to go into this a little more because back in the day,
at least for me, it was like, I had this senior living business.
There's this education thing.
There's this thing.
There's this thing.
There's this.
There's this.
Right.
And for you, you had like nine different businesses or whatever, right?
I mean, just how bad was it when that was when I was actually happy?
Because I don't think people really understand how important focus is until they get punched
in the gut.
But it's like, how do you prevent that?
So I think the big difference is.
because people are like, Alex, you talk about Focus now,
but you have 13 portfolio companies.
But like, I have one holding company.
And if you were to reframe it as like,
I own a marketing agency and I have 13 clients,
it feels that way except I own them.
You know what I mean?
But there's a full CEO and leadership team
that run each of the companies.
And we have our leadership team that runs that.
And so like I own the holding company
and that's my work.
You know what I mean?
But where I've made the huge mistake
when I was earlier on is like,
I have one company that makes money.
I'll start another.
And so then you end up becoming CEO of three companies, and it's a nightmare.
And so that's the part like it's weird because I feel like I only, I mean, I don't want to
speak this over myself, but like I was only really able to understand how to do multiple
things once I sold gym launch because then I think it was the first time I was really above the
business.
And then at that point, I was like, okay, so the above the business is the one thing.
The portfolio is the one thing.
And then that's when you're like your value prop as a as a hold co it is a bit like the holding company is a business in and it of itself.
And I think that's the big like epiphany that I had is like it is a business. And then you get really specific. You niche down just like you do in any other business on. And you talk about working. So there's above the business in the business. What's what what's the difference with above? In the business is like I'm taking sales calls. I think on the business is like.
I'm in leadership positions.
I'm managing.
I'm leading.
I'm casting the vision.
I'm inspiring the team.
And then above the businesses, the business is, you look at many businesses and they are all
almost like product lines or clients, as I was saying earlier, that you don't sit anywhere
on the org chart for these businesses.
And that's probably the easiest litmus test is like, do you have a direct report from the
company?
And I have zero.
Yeah.
From any of the companies.
Yeah.
It's funny.
So Neil sometimes will call me in the middle of the day and he'll be like, what are you doing?
I'm like, I'm working on stuff.
He's like, I'm bored.
Yeah.
It's just like, right?
But it's not like that, but he works really hard.
Yeah.
But I think the other good comparison here is the difference between like a parallel entrepreneur and a serial entrepreneur.
Because a serial entrepreneur actually waits to the next level.
Yeah.
A parallel starts multiple things.
Yeah.
But to your point, how are you supposed to compete?
Yeah.
I mean, the focus, the one person who's going all in on one thing, it's always, in my opinion,
going to make the most money. And if you look at the wealthiest 50 people in the world,
they all went all in on one thing. And there's a couple private equity investors who are at that top
now. But I would make the argument that they got into the business of private equity. And that
was their one thing. Even though they bought and sold companies, it functioned the same way as
having a marketing agency, except the unit size was bigger with more zeros.
Do you think when you had the nine different companies, was it nine?
Yeah.
Okay.
When you had the nine, A, it felt frantic, right?
But did you feel like you were really close to losing it all?
Every day.
Yeah.
It was horrible.
It was like, it was so stressful.
Because I mean, I had nine companies worth of employees.
I didn't understand how operate.
I didn't understand how leadership worked.
I just didn't understand how management.
I didn't have one-on-ones.
I didn't have a communication cadence.
And I was the rainmaker for all the businesses.
Like, it was so ridiculous when I think about it now.
Like, it was so obviously stupid.
but you just don't know when you're ignorant.
Before we move on from here, what do you say to all the people now that want to start a whole code?
They're just like, I'm going to go buy businesses because that's what cool people do.
And I'm going to go hire an operator.
You have any words for those people?
Well, right now, buying businesses is like in vogue.
I don't really know why it got in vogue.
But my best guess is that we have so many people retiring right now that there's just a huge supply spike.
And then a lot of people who never made their money buying businesses selling courses on how to buy businesses.
because the thing is, and this is kind of for the audience,
is like if you make your money buying businesses and you're really good at it,
you don't need to sell a course.
Like the best people of buying businesses buy businesses and hold them and invest.
Like I think Naval said like the best investors don't sell courses on investing.
You know what I mean?
Because like if you're really good at it, you don't need to.
And I just, I like, I kind of stick by that.
And so it is kind of shitty and there's a lot of marketing dollars that are going behind that
and a lot of content being made because it's like sexy.
and the idea of buying a business for no money down that makes 500,000 year, which is absolutely
possible. You totally can do that. But the thing that they miss is that I can buy a business for
$0 down that makes $500 or a million a year and know how to run it. If you've never run a business,
and even if you do somehow magically pull off that deal, you're still screwed because you have
no idea how to run a business. And so it's like you still lack the skills even though you can
close the sale. I could sell that I could build a skyscraper. And if I somehow
managed to BS my way through the negotiations and close the contract, I still have to build a skyscraper.
And if you've never built a building before or even a house, very tough. And the likelihood that you then
lose your ass on because like you're not, you'll get the business that does a million dollars in
profit per year for zero dollars down, but not for zero dollars. And that's the piece that I think a lot of
is like, it's not free. Like you have a liability or you have a debt if you some sort of seller
financing, creative financing, whatever. It's like, but now you owe this person. Yeah. And that's
the marketing piece, right? I think we get the, it's the headlines at the end of the day.
I want to talk about the content piece. So I was hanging out, I was speaking to real estate
mastermind a couple weeks ago. Basically, this guy owns $1.5 billion in real estate in Arizona.
And then in the middle of the pandemic, he's like, I'm just going to do YouTube for fun,
right? Because he couldn't go anywhere. So he grew to like 400K or so.
Oh, sick. And then, but his content is like top notch, right? It's like he understands.
Yeah, it's like, this guy's deep. You can tell, right? Tax advantage is whatever.
And but then you, Ken McElroy.
Okay, I'll look at them out.
You should definitely talk super smart.
But then you look at other people who are getting millions and millions of views a month on YouTube.
And they're talking about all these different businesses.
But then they know the YouTube game, but they don't have depth when it comes to business.
So I see it as a tradeoff at the end of the day.
But you're actually able to play both, right?
And so they were talking to me there.
It's like, okay, what's the point of even creating content?
I'll just go buy more business.
Actually, this was last week.
One of my friends went to me, he's like, Eric, I don't need to create content.
I'll just go buy their businesses.
And then I posted that to Twitter X the next day.
And Layla was like, so Layla was like, oh no, but you create leverage is where we get our deal flow from.
And you said all your deal flow comes from that, right?
So I guess we have the same as, you know, we have a network and things like that come through.
But I don't, I can't, I don't think we've done a deal that's not come through our deal flow.
Got it.
And of the 3,000 that come through each month, what percent actually make it?
Oh, tiny.
Right.
We do two LOIs a month.
And that's not to dissuade people.
It's mostly because we just have a lot of people who don't have qualified businesses.
Just to be clear, like, if you have a qualified business, hit me up.
But we just have a tremendous amount that are doing less than a million in profit.
And they're like, I'll give you 5% Alex.
Oh, man, so tempting.
So, okay, if, for example, I mean, let's just use a fake example.
Someone has a bunch of locations.
They're doing one million in IbaDah.
Well, let me just rewind for a second.
And minimum is a million just to be clear.
So like ideally for me, like I love that like three-ish, four-ish, you know what I mean?
Like that's where like you're right about to hit that so we can just like, boom, 20.
And then it's like, and you're aligning with them.
It's like, hey, if we want to hold forever, you're like, hey, like, if I like you, maybe.
Yeah.
Right.
Yeah, I'm good on either way because like we don't need the liquidity.
Yeah.
I'm happy to let it compound tax free.
So like I'm good either way.
And I'll just rephrase it because I think when we hung out a year ago, it's, you talked about how you're maybe moving more towards,
instead of minority investments into majority.
How are you thinking about it now?
Yeah, we're 100% in that camp.
Are it's almost like finding your price
when you're selling a service,
except in the deal world, and this is one thing
that like if you really wanna get into this world,
like it is such a long game.
Because if you think about like product market fit,
you have the same concept that happens
at like a holding company when you're investing.
You have like deal fit.
And so it's like what's my offer?
but not to a customer, but to an entrepreneur, to a founder, to somebody's trying to go to their
business. And so it takes way longer to have enough qualified candidates to even make the offer.
And then it takes 90 days to even see if you can close the offer. And then from closing the offer,
it takes another year or two to see if it was actually like worked out. So like your feedback cycles
are so long that it's very painful as somebody who is an ex on, whatever you want to call me,
who's used to being able to like, hey, let's try this out. And in 30 days, have it both,
spun up, tested, and have data.
Like in 30 days, we might be able to like talk to a couple entrepreneurs that we think are
interesting.
And so, anyhow, we have moved towards bigger and bigger chunks of companies.
Right now we target 49% with most of the deals.
We just did a majority deal two months ago.
And so we're now doing both minority and majority and our minority slugs are bigger because
it's the same thing where it's like, it's the same work for us at 20% as it is at
51 and in some cases weirdly enough it's almost less work at majority because um i have fewer
emotions to manage yeah on the founder side because it's like listen i'm the one who's
taking all the risk on now and so this is what we're going to do rather than saying hey man i think
this is what we should do what do you think and so i have way my speed of implementation on majority
companies is so much faster yeah and like what i would like to do in the next and this is why it takes
years to do this but like over the next two or three years I'd love to show the difference between
our minority holdings and our majority holdings of how much more profitable on how much faster we
grew them to then make an even more compelling case of like I don't necessarily want to fully exit
founders that's not my intention it's more like we have done this before like please like let me love
you like let me let me just do what we already know how to do many times yeah and that like I remember
I had a conversation with one of our founders this is one of the companies we actually ended up
majority of. We had like six phone calls to talk about a price change that I wanted to implement.
And we implemented the price change and we doubled profit. And it was a big company already.
We doubled profit in 30 days. And like we increased the price and increased close rates. Like we call
that a wonderful because they were mispriced. Like we did a bunch of research. We saw the competitors
in the marketplace where we were like, we're not even going high. I was like, we're just going up to
market.
Yeah.
Which is, I mean, I love those opportunities.
They're not always there.
But like, but it, if it had been a majority holding, it would have just been an email
and be like, this is what it needs to change to, let the team know.
Here's, here are the, you know, bullet points to talk to the sales director and he would
just let him go.
Yeah.
Do you think before, so when you had the 20% or so, like, I think we were talking about
this already.
It's like they weren't, not that they weren't taking you seriously.
I mean, maybe you just didn't have enough weight there.
It was more of a consultative relationship.
And to be fair, like, it's not like.
like we wield authority. Like I'm not really an authoritative person from that perspective. Like,
it's always soft influence. We've never taken a vote in any company ever. Like what, because it's
funny, because during the deal process, we're like, well, how many who gets? I'm like, dude, we will
literally never look at this contract again. Like, I pride myself on the fact we've never taken a contract
out after a deal. Um, but it still feels a little different. Like, no matter what anyone says,
like, if you, if you buy majority, it just feels different. It's like, here's the plan. Let me know
if you have questions about it or like, what do you think? And I want feedback more. I want feedback.
I don't want to sell someone on it. You know what I mean? And I think that's the, that's the
You're looking to collaborate. Yeah, exactly. Yeah. And so now we rewind back to the content again.
So how do you think your content strategy has changed in the last 12 months? Because I can,
from afar, I can see some of the adjustments. Yeah. Caleb's not here today, right? Yeah. Yeah, no,
the team's bigger now. I mean, how big is the media team now?
Nine people?
Yeah, it's nine.
And then we have some vendors.
So probably if you included their teams, probably like 15 or 16 somewhere in there.
Okay.
I mean, I think the big thing is just like we try and focus on content that only we can make.
That's the, that's the big single throughput line.
If someone else can make this piece of content, I don't want to make it.
And so that's why we try and, you know, we call them, you know, one of zero stories,
which is like something no one else can do.
And so like no one can talk about like how they bought a teeth whiting chain and then like
implemented a new sales process and then five X. No one can say that because that's such like,
no one did that. I did that. And so someone might be like, here's how Coca-Cola, here's a breakdown of
Coca-Cola's business model. But like, I'm not going to do that because someone else can do that.
But this is the stuff that I can do. So it's more, it's going to be more capturing out what we're
literally doing because I think the more people saw what we actually do in companies, one, it would get even
better deal flow for us. But also it's more unique than I think what most people do. So that's kind of like us
trying to play more to our strengths, which is like, our day to day is our strength.
And we almost diverted from our strength to create content to just like learn this game.
But as our infrastructure gets bigger and better, we're leaning more and more.
So we just bought a big headquarters here in Vegas.
And so we're going to be centralizing the whole media team.
That'll be our big media headquarters.
And so we've got the gym in there too, right?
Yep.
Yeah.
They have a whole floor.
Nice.
And so there's going to be a ton of new content we're going to be pushing out.
Because it's funny because like right now people will probably be like, you've made it.
you're at like the pinnacle of content.
I'm like,
dude,
we literally haven't even started.
Like the amount of stuff
that we're planning on doing
for like 2024 is bananas.
Can't wait.
It's gonna be like,
we will be pushing out a lot of content
and it will be really good.
Because you said one thing earlier,
but I love this statement,
but it's like the second throughput
would be like too good to fail
because that buddy of yours can.
Uh-huh.
It's like you don't have to know the algorithm
in my opinion.
Like if,
if the piece is good enough,
you don't have to nail the thumb,
You don't have to nail the headline.
If people start watching it and they're like, this is so good, they will share it.
They will keep watching it and then we'll come back and watch the next time.
Because what happens is like, if you think about the human behavior side of it, if you just watch, if you overdeliver like crazy on one video, the next time you post a video, that person will click it.
And they don't even look at the thumb.
They don't look at the headline.
They're just like, oh, Alex or Eric made another video.
It must be good because all the other videos are good.
And I think it's more important to have fewer good pieces than more.
mediocre pieces. Dude, so here's where I'm coming from. Looking at Ken's, during the pandemic,
he had videos that would get a couple hundred thousand. And that's when you know you're doing
pretty well with each video. Neil, same deal. He had a couple hundred thousand. Some videos would get
a million views or so. And then same deal for me, a couple hundred. This is like four or five years
ago. And my thesis here is that you have to be in the good graces of YouTube and you have to
be considered, you cannot stop, right? And because those guys, Neil stopped, Ken stopped,
I stopped.
We're in this box right now where I look at Niels.
I'm like,
dude,
your views are the same shit from the last couple years ago,
but you're only getting like 5, 10K views, right?
So I think there's this penalty box almost.
I think it's,
in my opinion,
all social media has switched to the TikTok,
TikTokification of social media.
You know,
I actually think it's good
because what it does is it,
like subscribers mean nothing.
Followers on Instagram mean nothing.
They're literally just a vanity metric now.
And so the only thing that matters is click, retain reward.
That's it.
Like that like, and it doesn't matter what the platform is.
They're all the same is like, did you get them to click?
Did you get them to watch and did you get them to come back?
Yeah.
That's it.
And so the algorithm like it also by doing that though, it makes it there's never been a
better time to start because in the earlier days when it was subscriber based,
it was basically an email list like you build a subscriber base and then they push out
your stuff of subscribers, but they don't do that anymore at all.
And now it's just like they do look-like audiences based on what they predict.
Someone will like your thing or not.
And so you could be a brand new account and have your first video do $10 million on the first upload ever, which I think in some ways is like a great equalizer.
And it makes the content king.
Mosy Nation, real quick, if you are a business owner that has a big old business and wants to get to a much bigger business going to $50, $100 million plus.
We would love to talk to you.
And if you like that, we would like to hear more about it.
Go to acquisition.com.
You can apply anywhere on the page and talk to $50.
to one of our team and see if we can help you get there.
And so actually going to the shorts for a second,
your team of 16 people,
what percent of your work with you and your team
goes that you think into shorts versus the long form stuff?
I mean, my shorts for me is like almost not work.
That's all the team.
Okay.
That's all them.
So they're cutting up your long form stuff.
Yeah, that's almost the majority.
We did direct-to-camera stuff early to kind of like kickstart things,
but I can't remember the last direct-to-camera shoot we did.
because direct camera versus it's a very it's a different setup
so like you're no more no more direct to camera because not that I'm not against it
it's just that they've got enough other stuff and I prefer the other stuff because I think
it's more like organic yeah usability per minute of footage is highest whereas if like we do a vlog
day they're going to get three or four shorts from a full day but they got to go through
like eight hours of content whereas if I do like two hours of direct camera yeah we have like
a hundred shorts yeah it's a lot
Yeah. Yeah. And so what about from this? This you'd pull like what, like 20, 15 shorts? You would know. You would know.
Yeah, I would know. 10. 10, 20 shorts. Okay. Yeah, really 10. So you go for two hours or something like that. Okay. Got it. And your spend a year ago was like, I think like 120 grand a month. Like, what do you think that looks like now? It's probably double. Okay. So 240. Yeah. And are you getting paid on AdSense? Any of this? Yeah. Okay. I mean, not enough to make it back. It doesn't equal it out. Okay. Got it. Got it.
But it's okay, the deal flow is good.
Yeah, yeah.
No, yeah.
Like, media is just like a loss leader, if you want to consider from that perspective.
We lose money on media.
Which is funny because people are like, he makes money on his $2 book,
which, by the way, Amazon takes, you get paid like 30 cents on a book.
That's $2.
But anyways, that just goes to fund the money losing media team.
And I say that with absolute love.
You know what I mean?
But that's, I mean, all marketing loses money until it makes you money.
Like, you know, it's a long game.
And rewinding back to the deal stuff for a second.
of the 24 LOIs that you do, that comes from content, by the way, so it does make money.
How many of those that actually go through?
About half.
Okay.
Got it.
So 12 go through.
Okay.
Pretty high conversion rate, but it's also good qualification.
Yeah.
But I think we've just continued to get narrow and narrow and narrow.
Like, I wouldn't be surprised.
Well, our deal flow keeps going up.
So if we might actually have the same number of deals done on five times the amount of
deal flow.
Yeah.
Because we're just getting better and better at picking.
Yeah.
Well, one more thing before we go back to content.
What is the craziest?
thing someone has offered you because here's the thing right like i do believe there is
the brand equity that you have gets you good deal terms like there are the agencies that come to
be oh yeah we do four or five million a year we'll give you 20 percent it's like what great um so like
what is the craziest thing someone's offered like they're newborn like anything like anything like that
honestly the people who who who who make the craziest offers usually don't have anything of value
to offer you know what i mean but um i would say almost all the all the deals that we do have
favorable terms you know what i mean in terms of both price and just like
just terms in general.
Like, we try to keep our contracts as simply as humanly possible.
I put this big emphasis on the legal team to make it plain English contracts.
And like my lawyer like had a heart attack when I was like,
I want a fifth grader to be able to read this contract.
Because the biggest issue that that happens in the deal process for anyone has ever done a deal
is that their lawyer starts talking to your lawyer.
And then they just keep having these conversations and translating back and forth.
And then you have all these miscommunications.
And then it's like, yeah, yeah.
And the only person who wins there is the lawyer.
And so we've taken a little bit of a different approach of like, let's keep our conversation as primary.
And then we together tell the attorneys what we want them to do.
And that way, like any negotiating happens between us.
And that way, because like I remember there was a deal we were working on.
And their, you know, attorney who wasn't even an M&A attorney, by the way, if you are going to sell your company or have somebody invest like have an M&A attorney anyways.
It's like, no, he's a family friend.
I'm like, doesn't mean he knows anything.
The worst.
So he was like.
We need this non-compete to be, you know, 24 months and a 50-mile radius around the brick-and-mortar locations.
They asked for this.
Yeah.
And I was like, so the lawyers are talking for like two weeks about this.
And I finally, I called the founder up.
And I was like, are you planning on starting another chain?
I was like, you still own majority of this business.
Do you plan on competing with your own business?
He was like, no.
And I was like, cool.
Then as long as you own majority of the business, you don't compete with your business.
And he was like, yeah, that's fine.
It's like, great.
Glad we had this talk.
You know what I mean?
But that was probably like $10,000 in lawyer fees that went back and forth that was settled by two entrepreneurs in two minutes.
Yep.
Just obvious stuff.
You know what I mean?
But like that kind of thing is the stuff that like hang nails.
You know what I mean?
Like on deals.
Yeah.
So now we rewind back to content.
Sorry for jumping all over the place.
Yeah.
So when you're thinking about the ideation piece, right?
So is that like, are you separating that into another day?
Is that like on the same day?
And then how are you thinking about like the hooks, the stories, all that type of stuff?
The team brings everything.
Okay.
So the team brings everything from like, because they'll watch this podcast.
And then they'll be like, dude, that story was interesting.
Can we do a thing on that?
And that because like they basically the team is inherently curious people who like my content.
And so like to use some Gary terms, like they fuck with my content.
And so the stuff that they want to know more about, we go into more depth on.
Yeah. And so I haven't been asked to come up with topics in a really long time. But I'll tell you how I would come up with topics because this is how I was doing it when it was just me starting out, is that I just like to use time as my as my anchor for this. So I go far past, which is like what are the what are the life changing experiences or conversation that I've had that have shaped the way my worldview? And so those are stories that I will tell because I think they're impactful and people get value from them. Then I have recent past, which is like let me look at my calendar.
over the last week and just look at all the meetings I had.
And I just like, I would have my phone up and be like, okay, so I was talking to one
of our profile companies was trying to make a change on pricing.
And so this is what we were considered.
You know what I mean?
I just literally go through what my life was.
I have present, which is whenever something comes up in the moment, I always have a way
to like brain dump it.
And so for me, Twitter or X is kind of my brain dump.
Whenever I threads.
Yeah.
Or, well, they, they repost stuff.
Got it.
But Twitter is my is my home base for that.
Yeah. And so they'll also come with the tweets that they thought were like interesting to make more content about.
And then you've got like manufactured, which is stuff that doesn't exist at all.
What's an example?
Like I lived on $100 in third for 30 days. Like here's what happened. Like as an example.
That wouldn't be one that I would make. But like, because somebody else could make that.
Yeah. But stuff like that. And then and then like case studies and vlogs. So those are kind of like
the buckets that that we think through.
But most of you'll notice it's just like real stuff.
So we don't have to come up with like, what would people find interesting?
Like, well, this is what I did.
And if they find it interesting, awesome.
And what's like the micro there?
Is it like one day at a time?
They just dump a bunch of topics on you?
Well, would we do recording?
Because we record like twice a month.
Okay.
And this is what?
How much in a day?
Oh, it's a full day.
Okay.
So it's two full days a month is when we do the recording.
Once we get the headquarters, it'll probably be smaller chunks more frequent.
but for right now it's just like one eight hour day twice a month got it um but they'll have like full
uh like six page uh pre-productions for every video of like these are these are these are the themes
either store these are the four or five stories that we think are that we've pulled from your other
pieces that we think would tie well together around this topic um i talked to the team uh to get stats on
some of these companies for this case study so like the media team now will talk to our subject
matter experts at Holdco to get like hey what was new this week did you guys do any implementations or
whatever and then they'll take that and then repackage it and then that'll become content dude i mean
this is a sidebar here but like i know even with Caleb and my just sense in general like you like
you like to be friends with your staff right and which i think is good and that's how they really
understand what you want and how you think as a person yeah how do you indoctrinate them into your way of
thinking like a chief of staff would just be sitting and watching you and shadowing you for a
couple months, right? Yeah, I think it's osmosis. Okay. I think it's just proximity and exposure.
And that's why I'm so excited for the headquarters. It's funny because as a previously
remote before it was cool, you know, that's how we scaled gym launch. Everything we had was remote.
And this will be since my brick and mortar chain, this will be the first in-person stuff I've done.
But it's weird because I feel incredibly confident at how much of a game changer I think it's going
to be. Dude, I mean, here's where I'm at, right? And maybe my staff might crucify me for saying
this if they find it. But I'm an introvert and I did. I've been working remote at tech companies for the
longest time and like we were doing hybrid even before the pandemic hit like a couple years, three, two.
But I'm just like, dude, you cannot replace like this, right? Like this is a relationship and it goes
much further. And I just think commercial, I think commercial real estate's going to come back in
the next five, 10 years. So it just seems to be moving that way because how are you supposed to
if there's this, how can you compete? Yeah. I think,
You know, one of the, this is kind of interesting is like, if I, if we had like an SOP on how to handle
difficult conversations, right, or bad news, whatever, if I teach an SOP around that, people would be like,
okay, got it, these are the steps. But it's incredibly different to see me get bad news and then
watch what happens. Like, it's a completely different experience. And I think that is something that
becomes memorable. And that's what can change someone's behavior way faster. Yeah. I mean,
dude, like that in itself is a story and people remember stories.
And so when it comes to your videos, because you're pretty good at just, your memory, I think, is really good.
I just forget stuff, right?
But it's like you seem to weave into stories pretty well.
Like, how much is it just second nature to you now?
How much are you thinking about your stories when you're creating content?
Yeah.
So the story telling component was something that I really worked hard on and I have continued to work hard on for our most, probably six years.
So when I started gym launch and I had to start teaching,
Basically, when I had to start teaching, I realized that teaching was making connections between
things that people understand and things that they don't. And so that's why metaphors and analogies
are so strong because they're like, okay, so energies, so you're kind of like a car. And if you put
your gas in, it's kind of like your body and the food, you know what I mean? So it's like,
I understand this, but I don't understand this, but I can apply the same principles. And so
when I realized that I used to just kind of like lecture people on like jargon, right, their eyes
would roll over and I just didn't get the desired result. So I had to start.
learning. So then I started reading books on how to tell stories. And the, the TLDR on like how to
tell a story is just, uh, you have a character, you have an unmet desire, you have an obstacle, you
have a guide who comes in with some sort of solution. The person tries the new way. Yeah. It works.
And then there's an internal achievement and an external achievement, meaning like, who did they
become in the process and what happened on the outside? And so like I just pretty much just try and
think through that process of like desire, unmet desire, obstacle, guide, plan, execution,
result. The fact that you can just roll that off your tongue means like it is burned into you,
right? Because I mean, I just, oh, it's like sounds like the Harmon circle. Oh, is it? Yeah.
The stories are the same. Yeah. Yeah. It's, I mean, it's, for me, I just riff on it.
This, I was kind of making fun of Neil and myself. When I look at both of our YouTube channels,
I was like, you know what we suck at YouTube? Because we just lecture people, right? It's like,
but then we do like, we do like live recording and then I'm just sharing a story about Mr.
Beast, two million views on TikTok.
right or anyway point is so the story is huge do you think about your hooks a lot yeah the hooks
everything and let me just rewind the stories real quick which books did you read to get better at
storytelling um honestly i think reading fiction and then i'm a big articles guy like i don't i don't
actually people would be amazed to have a few books i read um i'm like really narrow i'll like binge
consume a field of study and so i might read like nine books
So like when we when we started doing deals at Acquisition.com, I read nine books in one month on dealmaking.
And I was like, okay, I feel like I have a better understanding of just the levers, the tools that I have available in my tool belt that I didn't know existed.
But then I haven't read one since.
And then same thing with like, you know, storytelling in general was more reading all the different articles and stuff that were out there about storytelling.
So that I could understand.
And there's a million different like story, you know, unmet desire character, you know, whatever.
but they all more or less follow that same trajectory.
And so to answer the first thing you said,
like how much do we work on the hook a lot?
And if that sounds like it's in contrast
to what I was saying earlier, it's not.
Because if you have something that's amazing,
it'll get shared no matter what.
But if you have something that's mediocre,
if you have an amazing hook, it'll also get shared.
And so if you can create an unbelievable hook,
you can still have content that just murders.
And I'll tell you a story that isn't mine
and how it related.
one. So a buddy of mine was a big infomercial guy. He's a little older. And he did this book. He had
a book that he was selling. And so he had Larry King fly out and record like a one hour book infomercial
promo. And so it was like a big deal for him, you know, getting interviewed by Larry King.
And so he had Larry King be like, and you're live with Larry King, like the same intro he does for all
the shows. And this guy was a very good marketer. And so he ran the ad and he was like,
this thing's going to murder. I'm going to make so much money. And it tanked. And he was like,
what is going on?
And so then he was like, so he started studying game footage.
He looked at his all-time best dads.
He was like, all right, I'm watching this one.
He watched this one.
And he was like, I messed up the hook.
He's like, the hook's wrong.
And so he flew Larry King back out, reset up the entire fake setup of Larry King Live and re-recorded
the first 30 seconds and then pushed out the new one with the new hook, $100 million
in the next 12 months.
That's crazy.
And so we had like, my story is not nearly as significant as that, but we had a video recently
that was like we all were like this is a good video and it got like 5,000 views or something which is
pretty small for our account and so the guys just cut out the first three seconds and then it was
it was basically saying like so I had this time when and then they just cut that out and just went to
the when the thing happened yeah and it went from 5,000 to 900,000 is it because in analytics you just
saw a big tank like drop off like the they hear the first three words or five words or phrase
yeah and they're like not interested yeah and so you have
have five seconds, but it's more like two.
Yeah.
Or like two milliseconds in a short.
Yeah, tiny.
But it makes all the difference in the world.
So going back to your team, then, like, is most of your content team based here?
I'm going to give a really good sexy tactic.
Yes.
So this is something that I haven't even shared with you guys, but I just had this
realization.
So I had a tweet that just crushed this morning.
And I was thinking about this when I made it was I wanted to give a business example.
And then I used the same principle in a marriage.
And then I did the job.
generality of the principal. But then I was like, I should put the marriage one first because it's the
way wider hook. And then I did the business one. And then it had the philosophical principle.
And then it way outperformed. And so we would like when we're thinking about our hooks,
we'll probably go wide business principle. Rather than like any of the other versions of that
so that we can get a, you know, a wider demo. But anyways, this just like like I enjoy the
game. Yeah, I just enjoy the game. Like I think I think it's fun to learn this stuff.
You fell in business love with Layla first before you fell in love, love.
Yeah.
What do you mean by that?
Well, I liked her mind first.
Yeah.
I mean, I pitched her on working for me the first time we met.
And I was like, hey, this might not work out.
But like, you should totally work for me and we can make a bunch of money together.
And I just said like plain black and white, I'll pay you twice as much as you're currently making.
So but still look at the offer independent of me.
Like it should make sense for you.
And so obviously she said no for the first 30 days because I asked her every day.
And she said no.
But then when I did the turnaround business,
launched three gyms,
came back with a big stack of money.
She was like,
oh,
so this works.
And I was like,
yeah.
And the first question she actually asked me
after we processed all the money
because I did it together
to a little bit of flex.
We processed like 120 grand in like 45 minutes.
And she was like,
I mean,
I'm 27.
She's 23.
She was like, whoa.
She's like,
is this legal?
Yeah.
Your first couple of dates
were you guys just like working at Starbucks or something?
Yeah,
just working together.
Yeah.
I mean,
I didn't,
it was weird because
like I just I just like liked hanging with her like I just liked her around and that was like
whenever I had the choice of like me being alone and me being with Layla I just like always wanted
to be with her and she kind of had the same thing and so but we didn't have like romance chemically
love until much later but I got her to quit her job and fly out with me within like six
weeks and even when you guys got married you I think you like you weren't in love love yet right
really like at what point did you say she's going to be one but I
we're not in Love Love yet.
I've said that we really got into like love love in December of 19.
So that was two years, two and a half years after we got married.
Okay.
And that was because we made a conscious decision.
We were actually both pretty miserable.
Mostly because we were, and I was really up front about this and we both agreed.
I said, listen, here are the priorities.
I was like business and then us.
We got to feed the business and the business feeds us.
That's how this works.
And in December of 19, we were both like we had this like,
deep conversation where she's like I'm just like not happy with this and I was like me neither
and so we're like I think we I think our premise was wrong and so we said well what if we just like
made marriage the priority and then the business would flow from that yeah and so that's when we flipped
everything and it's actually been great since then and again it was fine it wasn't like you know
combative it was just it's just much better yeah and I think you said this before it's love is
something that you decide to work on it's not it's like an active thing it's not passive I also
think there's a lot of different versions of relationships. Like if you think about your friendships,
like your friendships with like seven different dudes that you know. Yeah. You probably have like the
relationship is different with all of them. And so I think like love is a really general word and we're
just more limited by like our vocabulary than anything else. Like I think Layla and I have a very
different love than most people who are married and together. But I would say that it is absolutely
founded in respect. And that to me was probably the most unique aspect of my relationship with her
was that I, I just respected her. And she respects me.
And I would say until that point, I probably had the more traditional relationships that were just like more lovey-dovey, more chemically, more romance, et cetera.
But the thing is like, I'm a really extreme person.
And so if someone doesn't like what I like, they're not going to see me very much.
And if they do and if they are that way, anytime I do something, it's going to feel like I'm doing them a favor.
And that that tallyboard of like who's doing who a favor would get way out of whack really fast.
and then I start resenting them because I'm like, I want to do this other thing.
And it's not that I don't love you.
I just want to work.
And that's what I want to do.
And so the fact that she just like, the biggest thing that made me really love Lela was just that she has never tried to change me.
Yeah.
Like she just, it was pure acceptance on this is Alex.
Like I'm not going to get him to dress a certain way.
I'm not going to get him to behave a certain way.
Talks.
Like I'm not going to ask him.
Nothing.
She just was like, you do you.
And I will do me next to you.
and as long as we agree on where we're going,
we'll get there and have a good time.
You know who told me this?
Neil told me this actually.
I was like,
so why did you decide that his wife is the one, right?
Michelle.
And he's like,
she just let me be me.
Yeah.
And like, you know, we've dated, right?
I've seen, you know, people come and go.
But and then now, you know, he's hounding me about kids all the time, right?
He's like, you got to get married to have kids, right?
He's lecturing everyone.
Last week at my thing, he was lecturing Syed, the WordPress king.
And he's like, you need to have more kids, blah, blah, blah.
But where I'm going with this is, do you think kids will be on the horizon for you?
I mean, if that will change things.
I think it's possible.
I mean, it was still young.
Like, I mean, we have time.
I mean, you're still young.
Yeah, I mean, right.
Yeah, I'm still.
But, like, I'm not the limiter.
You know what I mean?
For youth in terms of procreation.
But yeah, I mean, she's still young.
And if we work cool either way.
Yeah.
So if it happened, like, if she got pregnant tomorrow, like, we'd have the kid.
Yeah.
I mean, this is all like conjecture at the end of the day because like you guys adapted your marriage
and then it might adapt at the next level. It's all levels, right? Yeah. I'm not, I'm not worried about it.
I think I would I would like to have kids at some point, kind of like when people who don't, who are employed and are like, I'd like to start a business someday. Yeah. It's, it's an easy thing to say, you know, like sounds great, but I'm sure it would be very different.
All right, we're going to go back to content and then I got a bunch of stuff to double down on here.
So going back to the structure of your content team like A,
were they based mostly and then who are kind of the key players there?
We're all U.S. based.
Okay.
And most of them are West Coast because we're on the West Coast.
So I think right now 100%.
Nope, we have one person on East Coast.
Everybody else is either Southern California or Vegas.
Yeah.
So what I found is, A, the reason I'm asking that is because what I see does fail on content
it's because we've gone cheap
and relied too much on offshore
and it's like dude
where's the strategy
grammatical mistakes
they're picking the wrong areas
for the hooks
right so you nodding your head over there
like wrong areas for the hooks
just bad part
like there is no story
and it's like no wonder
everything's falling flat
and you look at the metrics right
and you're nodding your head
seems like it's happened to you
oh I mean early
but I think the big thing
that everyone messes up
with the content
and even the quote going cheap
is that like
they have to understand brand
and that was I mean
that's been my big epiphany
post-Gim launch was I didn't understand brand when I had gym launch.
Like I understand.
I don't want to say I understand brand, but I have a much better idea of it now.
And like my team right now has so much footage and they could clip a bunch of moments during
the vlog days and make me look bad and get a zillion views.
Like we could do that.
But that doesn't help me.
And so a lot of people will do anything for the algorithm.
They become AlgoHors is what we call it.
which is just like this is really hot right now we should make that stuff but like I'm not
if it's not on brand for me if it's not something I'm an expert in I'm not going to talk about it
and that's I think that's that's my one piece of advice for everybody who's like starting to get
into the game of content is like just talk about stuff you know about they don't worry like
just don't pretend to be someone you're not like if you if you're only good at sewing then just
talk about sewing don't start making content about how people should invest their money like just
talk about sewing. Let me ask you this. When you produce content now, those full days now,
are you very much looking forward to? And are you enjoying it when you're creating your content?
It really all depends on how much I've slept the night before. Look, it's actually like the biggest
factor. It's just like how much will I slept the night before. Like we had a reporting day recently
and I basically didn't sleep at all the two nights before. And so like that was like I had to use
willpower. But most times I don't have to use willpower. I can just, I can just rock and roll.
Yeah. And so you feel like for the most part, when you, let's assume you had a good night of sleep, you feel like you're creating the content that you want to create.
I think it's always an evolving process. I mean, I think it's more like a dichotomy to be managed than a problem to be solved.
And so there's like stuff that I super, super fuck with exclusively. And then there's stuff that the audience absolutely loves and the algorithm loves. And so we just try and find that middle ground. And if anything, we're probably right of center of like if Alex doesn't like it, he's not going to keep doing it.
So, but like, I'm looking at this on like a 20-year time horizon. And so, you know, we had a video that, uh, that we, that was ready for this week that we were supposed to post. And then we, I saw it and I was like, I don't want to post it. Yeah. And so we didn't have a YouTube video out this week. And I will survive. I like it. And so the, now just trying to think for the team's perspective, like all the hard work on like the edits, the jump cuts, the thumbnails and all that. Um, how much effort are you putting into that now? Because.
Because, actually, that one talk that you did recently, I saw the headline change like three
times in the span of a couple hours.
So what's going into all the testing right now?
Yeah, it's right off the bat.
So our head of YouTube, I mean, we'll still do a good job.
We'll still split tests like we would for an ad.
You know, we'll try different headlines, watch different thumbnails.
Because at the end of the day, like, the mission is to get real business education accessible
to everyone.
And that means that we have to meet people where they're at, which is why I have to tie in more
stories.
And I don't just, like, review Excel sheets on.
on YouTube screen shares.
You know what I mean?
Because like,
that's not going to help anyone.
Yeah.
In fact,
it'll help basically no one.
And so we have to make accessible,
which is part of the reason the vlog is,
it's like that is a form of consumption that a lot of people can do.
And so we were going to be doing more of that because more people can consume it and benefit from it.
We will play the game just like anyone else does.
But the thing is,
is like they will send me thumbnails and headlines and I'll be like,
that's not true.
or I don't like how this makes the person that we're talking about the video sound.
I'll give you an example.
We had an affiliate video that went out basically explaining how you can use affiliates
to promote a business.
And I was talking about it within the context of the book that's like my next book that's coming out.
And I think one of the headlines split test that was sent to me was something like
how I got or how I convinced, yeah, I think it was how I convinced 12,000 people to promote my book.
And I was like, if I'm an affiliate and I see that headline, I was like, that doesn't make me feel good.
And so I was, so I was talking to see what was like, we have to think about it.
We have to think about it from every angle.
So there's there's the Alex brand angle.
Does this reinforce or dilute the values that we have in the position that we want to associate ourselves with?
Then we have the, uh, the audience like who's actually watching this?
Does this make them feel more aligned with that, that ultimate mission?
Does this leave them better than they were than they started?
And then it's also who's the subject of the content, right?
Like I could make content that makes me look fine and the audience would enjoy,
but it's me bashing somebody.
That's not going to be,
I'm never going to do that because I would never,
I would never do that.
If we don't have a win-win-win-win, then it's not right.
And we will keep doing it until we have a win-win-win.
Got it.
I love that.
And that aligns with your values,
the unimpeachable character.
Yeah, I'm never going to throw shit.
I'll criticize generally and I will pray specifically.
Warren Buffett.
Yeah.
all this so you have mozy media right now you've got the vlog you've got the new studio coming
and then this this podcast you've got two full days that you record already i imagine i imagine
this has to start getting annoying at some point before you're doing a ton of pods but it makes
sense because you're on the book tour right now so i only do podcasts with people that i feel like
doing a podcast with so if i like so this is actually this might be kind of interesting um i will only do
so this is for anybody who's trying to get me on a podcast i will do podcast i will do
podcast if I think the person who's doing the interviewing has good questions. So I did one recently
with somebody who had no, like a very small audience. But I saw or the team had seen that he like did
a ton of research on every person would watch like 50 hours of content to ask like really good
in-depth questions. Not like so. Tell me your origin story. It's Danny. Right. Yeah. Danny.
Yeah. And so yeah. Danny did a great job. And so I'm like and he's doing it absolutely the right way,
which is like do the work and you can and you can bat outside of your outside of your league
if you do the work but the flip side is like if somebody's got like they've been doing a podcast
they've got 500 episodes they've never taken off and the first question that they ask in every
video is like so tell me about yourself no thank you i'm just not interested like my audience already has
50 podcasts they can watch of me saying the exact same story yeah and so i would like to there's an element of
of there's their audience.
And I can do the TLDR on that, like in two minutes,
which I can understand.
But I'd prefer them just provide the context for me
so we can actually like rip and more.
Yeah.
But that's the,
um,
I don't like I enjoy the good conversations.
The hard part is just how many do you have?
Yeah.
Um,
and which ones do you pick?
Cause like right now,
I think we get like 10 requests a day.
Yeah.
Uh,
yeah,
it's a lot.
Yeah.
Um,
and I feel bad.
Cause you,
I want it,
I want to say yes,
but mathematically it can't.
Um,
it's not even like a reschedule.
It's just like,
it's just a no.
Yeah.
And so it really comes down to the quality of the interview.
And if we can do it in person, I feel like the in-person podcasts outperform the Zoom
podcasts.
It's literally just like all of the in-persons and then like all of the Zooms.
So like the best Zoom podcast is probably like about as good as like the worst in-person
podcast.
Dude, I mean, I enjoy these, right?
Because these are much longer.
I think if we did this on Zoom, it would probably be like an hour or so.
Yeah.
And you get tired.
I don't know why.
I feel like I'm way more, I'm like way, I feel like I tire out faster.
I'm like less interested.
I don't know.
Just staring on a screen.
Yeah, maybe.
Yeah.
I wanted to start to dovetail this into the book, but just I'm curious, you started to compound
on all the channels, right?
Twitter, LinkedIn, everything.
How are you compounding?
Are you like, you're a numbers guy too?
Like, you're tracking the month over month growth.
Like, how are you looking on those?
I see the compounding as a consequence of what we're doing rather than the goal.
What do you mean by that?
Yeah.
So, like, we're a huge.
human and we love having things that we can measure and the more ways you measure, the more we can
win. So I can appreciate that. But like, we're big on if we have a piece of content that we're like,
this is going to really help someone. And even if it's not super wide and we know it's not going to get,
it's not going to perform, we'll, we'll push it for sure. And so it's, I think it's really been all
about the too good to fail. It's like, as long as we make sure that what we were putting out is high
quality and that I am proud to have it out there, it's kind of like the rest will take care of
stuff. Like we will do our jobs. We will do a good job. We will do all of the basics and we will do it
every time. And if we do that on a long enough time horizon, we will get the result we want.
Yeah. Makes sense.
