The Game with Alex Hormozi - You Are Responsible For Making Your Team Better | Ep 906
Episode Date: October 30, 2025Welcome to The Game w/Alex Hormozi, hosted by entrepreneur, founder, investor, author, public speaker, and content creator Alex Hormozi. On this podcast you’ll hear how to get more customers, make m...ore profit per customer, how to keep them longer, and the many failures and lessons Alex has learned and will learn on his path from $100M to $1B in net worth.Wanna scale your business? Click here.Follow Alex Hormozi’s Socials:LinkedIn | Instagram | Facebook | YouTube | Twitter | Acquisition
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Because they have to have an appreciation for the craft.
It's the sale on them.
It's like, how hard are we selling them on this is a skill that you will use for the rest of your life?
And you're going to have to get good at it here or somewhere else, but you might as well get good at it here and get paid to do it.
Trav diggedy dog, Trav City.
All right.
Tell me about the business.
All right.
Sounds good.
So we are at about $4 million a year in revenue.
Awesome.
20% net, residential window replacement.
so the homeowners.
And our biggest bottleneck, as far as I see it, is with our model, so our primary customer
acquisition method is door-to-door.
It's a two-part sell, set or closer model.
And it's a high turn role.
Like, we know how to sell windows.
We know how to do it well.
But getting reps hired, trained, and retained has been a huge challenge.
And so we can't just like, and there's there's kind of levels to that, right?
There's getting people interested enough to say yes to the job.
There's getting them to stick past, you know, week one and then actually producing.
Our biggest fall off right now is literally just from showing up day one to making it at the end of week one, where they just get in and realize, oh, gosh, I can't hack this.
Yeah.
What do the top closers make?
16 to 20, 10 a month.
Yeah, okay, they make good money.
Okay, so I want to give you a couple
frames on this and then we'll dive in. So frame number
one is that this is a feature, not a bug.
It's the nature door to door. So instead of the thing like,
man, I think there's something wrong with our business, like,
it might be just like we need to do way more
of it. Like, at the very most basic level,
like, it could just be, how do I do 10 times more of this
and I deal with all the numbers I currently have?
That's like thing one.
Thing two. It might also be an avatar
selection issue. So to pull back,
the thing that I was just talking about, these applications just like leads that you have
for a business. Like, I'm sure it's like they have to have at least this many windows or they have to have
a home that's valued above X or whatever. Right? You look at certain neighborhoods when you go door to door,
right? Yep. Right. So the same degree is you might be, you might be knocking it to give you a one-to-one
example. It's like if you're going into the projects or the hood, right, where home values are lower,
the likelihood that they're going to buy a higher ticket thing is lower, right? Sure.
Right. And so you might still be attracting apps for SDR, you know, door knockers, whatever, for the setters from figuratively the, quote, low income part of the internet. Right. And that doesn't actually have anything with income, but I'm just saying, just to give you like an analogy here. And so the question is, what do the people who make it have in common? Balls.
Well, yeah, sure. But what we want to do, no, no, you're good. You're good. What we want to do is look at, we want to look at what are the behaviors?
So I look at demographics, just like you would with the customer.
What are the demographics that have higher likelihoods of success?
Is there age ranges, things like that?
Number two, is there any kind of past experiences that they had that make it more likely for
them to succeed?
The next is going to be the behaviors.
What did these people do?
Just like we'd have activation.
Now, you're not in a service business.
Well, you kind of are, but it's a little bit different.
It's not like customer has to do something, right?
But if you were in a business where our customer has to do something, we'd say,
like, what are the behaviors that a really successful customer did?
and then we say, okay, we want to force that activation path for everyone.
So what percentage of people who are starting make it pass week one?
We have two small offices, and it does vary per office.
One of them is significantly worse currently with this issue, but ultimately I don't know.
But bad, like not a lot.
And again, it's more, it's less of it like they couldn't see results.
And so they fizzled out because they need to pay their bills because it is 100% commission.
And it's right now more of a,
I don't get past day three because I realize once the rubber meets the road and I'm on the doorstep by myself, I can't hack it.
It's kind of what it's.
Yeah, I hear you.
How much role play do you do with these guys before they get out there?
So we've got to have the script down and we do, you know, we meet daily for an hour or two.
and so that couple hours a day is is do you have like two makeshift doors that you have at your facility where
they like knock on it and open and there's nothing on the other side of it we've got the office door
and we'll either just not use a door or use that door this is going to sound silly but i am 100%
right you want to approximate the conditions of the sale as closely as humanly possible in the training
something as simple as them not actually knocking on the door
will have a very meaningful difference
in their ability to retain the information
and actually deliver it in a comparable setting.
Okay. Yeah, we have definitely not focused on that.
Right. So you have a training issue.
To me, this is a training issue. It's a training and expectations problem.
So obviously there's some element of like, who am I bringing in? That's going to be one component of it.
If you look at 10 people, I'm sure right off the bat, you can probably be 50-50 on,
like, I can for sure tell you that these three guys aren't going to make it, right?
But there's some guys who are like, I'm not really sure.
Well, it's like, let's just take out the guys we already know aren't going to make it.
And then let's get the other 50% and try and approximate the training.
So what I would do is I would set up two or three freestanding doors inside of your facility.
And the reason I would want to do that is because I want them to learn to run.
I want them to learn to hustle between doors because it's a huge difference in terms of their doors knock per day, right?
Yeah.
Right.
So I want them to practice like they play.
So you're going to knock on the door.
You're going to do it.
We're going to hit the script.
And if they mess it up, we say stop.
step back, knock again, do it again.
Because the thing is it's going to be so muscle memory for them, like literally, like,
their hands are going to knock the same number of times.
They're going to say the same word, the same spot.
And that will approximate so much more closely what they're going to experience there.
I would also encourage you to have basically the rowdy customer because it going mediocre
okay is not what they're afraid of.
That's not why they're not, that's not why they're leaving.
It's like, we have to have people slamming doors in their face.
We have to have people not liking them so that they can get used to that.
So kind of what you were saying there.
Like I got 90% of what you were saying, but the missed the punchline.
You're saying...
Yeah, yeah.
No, you're good.
Three freestanding doors.
Yeah.
They are the responses that they get in the world.
Yes.
I want them to be okay.
I want to roll play out what someone losing their shit on them is like.
So that they stop having this big fear around it.
It's like, it's going to be okay.
You're going to survive.
If someone calls you a rodent, guess what?
You can knock on the next door, baby.
The only person who knows how the last door went is you.
Cool.
Right?
And so where it gets nasty from a training perspective is when someone gets hot, someone gets on fire,
because everyone's been there, right?
You're like, man, I feel like I can close everybody today, right?
They actually talk differently.
They move differently.
Their tonality changes.
And then what we want to do is be as granular as possible about what those tonality changes,
how their body moves, how they comport themselves, to maximize likely to get more closes in a row.
But this to me is like, thing one is you should absolutely set this training,
like this is like a tomorrow thing.
Like set the three freestanding doors up so they can practice one knocking on doors and also quickly transitioning between doors.
Thing one.
And that way they can also have a bad door, good door, bad door and still know that, hey, I'm going to get one out of 20 doors who opens.
I'm going to get a set.
Right.
And we have to set expectations of like, listen, we need you to be doing 10 doors an hour or whatever your numbers are.
It depends on how far apart the doors are or whatever.
But like we should set these number of doors knock per hour goals so that we can just, they have to look at it as a numbers game.
Yeah, cool.
Yeah, I agree that it's, I mean, there's levels of the, that it's a training issue.
You know, there's the week one training issue.
Well, it's for sure because one of them is doing way better than the other.
So we know one of the trainers is already doing way better than the other location, right?
Between the two that you got right now?
Right.
So already there's a discrepancy.
So we know that like if the bad location was doing as well as the good location,
we already know that's 100% possible because it's already happening, right?
But I'll bet you both could lift.
And I also think part of this is, do you have the ACQ sales, the closure handbook?
Yeah, I would have them read what it's like to be the top 1% and what is selling those two parts of the closer handbook.
And I would use that to set the frame for what this experience is going to be like for them.
And what is selling?
Because they have to have an appreciation for the craft.
And I think that if they, again, part of this is just going to be the sale.
It's the sale on them.
It's like, how hard are we selling them on this is a skill.
that you will use for the rest of your life.
And you're going to have to get good at it here or somewhere else,
but you might as well get good at it here and get paid to do it.
So for me, the selling is like, if you sell with the correct messaging,
it will attract the right prospect.
So you've probably heard of the Shackleton ad.
Have you heard of that?
So this was the ad that he ran that was like,
whether it was him or not, it's become lore.
So the ad said, men wanted for hazardous journey,
small wages, bitter, cold, long months of complete darkness, constant danger, safe return
doubtful, honor and recognition in case of success. That was the end. And he was overwhelmed with
people who were into it. And so it's like, we want to, we want to state the facts and tell the truth.
And the truth is very compelling, which is that this will be a skill you will learn for the
rest of your life. And it will take you 30 days. If you make it 30 days, you will have an experience
that you will remember forever. Any person who's ever done door to door will tell you about their
experience doing door to door. It shapes you, right? And so we need to paint that picture
truthfully to them, but truthfully explain why it's in their best interest to stick it out.
And we want to have as many reward cycles as possible. So are there ways that we can give a
scoreboard that are like, I want somebody who gets an award for most doors knocked, most doors
opened. Like we want other ways of giving them recognition early and fast so that they could see
that they're at least on the right track.
So if I were to zoom all the way out,
thing one is going to be,
I want the types of people
who have higher likelihoods of succeeding in this
based on demographics, past experience,
and the behaviors they demonstrate
in the application process.
Thing one.
This will be online too.
So if you're like, I'm not writing fast enough.
That's thing one.
Yeah, you're good.
Yeah.
Thing two is that I want the training environment
to approximate reality as closely as humanly possible.
I want to have multiple doors.
I want them to knock every time.
No one just says this.
script. You knock every time because that's how you do it in the real world. Thing three, as soon as
they do begin, I want to have multiple ways for them to win that are ideally approximations or
on the way to them getting their first set or multiple sets. I want to award them for knocking the
most doors. I want to award them for having the most doors open. I want to award them for the biggest
cuss out that they get, right? I want to make this fun. I want to take the pressure away. Just make it a game.
Yeah. Gameified. Yeah. Yeah. I like it.
we do that and you have leaderboards just for the setters beyond just sets. I want to have
some of the other metrics that are there. Right. Just close this is one thing, but I want to have
who did the most dials. I want to say who did the most, who had the most pickups, right? Who had
the most calls that lasted past two minutes? Right. Same idea. Yeah, cool. Love it.
Is there anything that you feel is worth mentioning as far as just like the overall talent acquisition
funnel or this is going to trump that regardless of where and how we're bringing people in?
I mean, we kind of talked about the how.
Yeah, doing more, I mean, doing more in general, this was kind of the feature bug thing of like, well, what does it cost you to get an activated rep?
Are you willing to spend more for that?
If so, spend more so you get more of them.
Like, if we change nothing, it would still grow the business if we just had more reps.
Like, if we changed nothing.
If we change these three things and spend more, it'll be double double.
Yeah.
I guess I was more asking, like, because right now, 99% come from just.
like an Indeed listing.
And obviously changing what that indeed listing looks like and sounds like can obviously change who we're attracting.
Totally.
Well, I think the copy that I just kind of outlined, again, state the facts and tell the truth.
But I would just try and make it look like a hardcore life opportunity, which is what it is.
Like you're not selling Windows.
You're selling a skill that they're going to learn and get paid to do, which I think is pretty compelling.
I would also strongly encourage because almost every door to door team that's very big has a three-step process for the career progression.
Step one is learn how to sell.
Step two is learn how to get one person to sell that you taught.
Step three is recruit a team.
So I think that you probably are missing step two and three for your team if 99% of your dudes are coming from ads.
You're missing out on the entire referral component of them bringing their friends and getting an override on teaching their friend and then building a team.
Right now we're at a spot where we need this base level of momentum to even do two and three.
But yes.
And I recently made some changes there that makes it compelling towards like not just a oh yeah,
I can make a little bit extra with bringing a friend in and be more sticky.
But I can make a side hustle just bringing my friends.
And even if I don't sell.
It's a career path.
Yeah.
It's a recruiter.
It's another set.
Just selling a different opportunity.
Yep. But yeah, that's step one, two, three, and then obviously do more, the unspoken fourth.
Rock and roll. Appreciate you, man. All right. Talk soon. Bye.
Okay. I have a screensaver on my screen, so I can't see the chat.
All right, here we go. We're back. All right, so Richard Ferris.
For Mosey, I have a real estate development business. We do value add deals.
How do I apply your principles from $100 million series?
to this business, okay?
You're scaling ACQ, which is private equity,
is very similar, in my opinion.
Yeah.
So, okay.
So if you're in the development business,
do you see your leads as the deals,
or do you see your leads as the investors?
So maybe if you guys can scroll down,
we'll be able to see Richard's answer.
See here.
Richard, where are you at?
Give me an answer here, man.
you see both as leads.
All right.
So which are you, we're on right now.
But yeah, do you see, which one are you not getting leads for?
Use your own capital.
Okay.
So you really want more deals then.
Okay.
So I guess from the development perspective,
you're looking at tear downs and or land.
Okay.
Yeah.
So, I mean, this is going to be just an advertising thing, straight up.
It's like, all right.
So can I build a brand around this?
So this is going to be all this book.
It's going to be all blue book, right?
Yeah.
Land and conversation.
So I would be looking at me,
things is so targeted.
I would probably be using an outreach method
and then having a base level of content.
So I wouldn't expect that content was going to bring me like tons
because you're probably so specialized
because it has to be certain size,
certain area, all that kind of stuff.
I would be making sufficient content
that people would know that I'm legit
and I do this for a living.
But outreach would be my primary method.
method of trying to attract deals. And as silly as this may sound, kind of like I was saying earlier
with Sharon in the real estate industry, like he did 260-something events. Like in industries where it's
super small and very aggregate at the top, the conference or shooting them in the barrel method
is one of the most effective ways of doing it. Like if I had to like start over tomorrow
new industry, I would be at every one of these conferences and I'd be meeting every person that I
possibly could there. Because it's not the person you meet. It's the person that person
introduce you to. Like, that's the, that's the game, right? And so that's kind of like an investment that I
would be looking at in terms of increasing number of conferences that I would attend. I'd be like,
can I do one a week? And then outbound and follow-up would be the next thing. But it's going to take a lot
of violence for this. But once you have, you know, a few good deals and, like, I'm sure, I mean,
if this is the main business that you do, you having a few good big wins will attract more attention and more
capital, obviously. But a lot of the deal stuff is like building out the broker network.
Like that's what we have in our, because we do a lot of real estate. We just have a network of brokers
that we've done a lot of deals with. And so over time, we've just, you know, it's a long business,
right? And so it's like for the last, like, we've been focused on, you know, one market
particularly for like six years. And now, like, most of the brokers come to us with all their
off market deals first because they know we can close. And so some of that takes time. But it's also, like,
kind of how it works. So I know that was a little bit less of like, here's a little bit less of like,
me tell you this one secret, but I think you already knew there wasn't going to be a secret
method. And so, yeah, that's the deal. And I will not respond to spammers. We do not negotiate
with spammers in the chat. That is our, that's right. That's right, Duke. That's right. We do not.
All right. Senato Sanani. Alex, I'm from Albania. My question is in real. Jesus, here we'll go.
Can I grow the business with little connections and no big capital? Yeah. You just start wholesaling.
I mean, yeah, that's what you do. You get deals under contract for less than their worth and sell them to people who are willing to spend more. You make the difference. That's the zero down zero capital play when you're in real estate. Then you build enough capital that you start taking those deals down and then you just work your way up from Minot to whale. It just takes time. All right, Prince Gemini. I have a janitorial business. What kind of lead magnet, my ideal avatar? Need help attracting and nurturing clients? Appreciate it. Well, dude, if you're
in the janitorial business, it's going to be commercial building owners, right? And so lead magnets
there are, I mean, it's going to depend on the size of the buildings that you're looking at. If you're
looking at smaller buildings that you're doing, you're really just looking at business owners, probably.
I would imagine, like, the first and most likely path would probably be a Google PPC campaign,
so pay-per-click campaign on anyone that's searching that in your local area. That would be like
the fastest first method of getting leads. They'll be the most expensive, but they'll be the most qualified.
All right. So that's kind of like thing one.
Thing two, in that space is I would probably trying to think about, I mean, door knocking
would work okay. It depends on the size of the building again.
So I don't have as much. Like if you have smaller buildings, door knock and work if they're
bigger building, then it's going to be outreach to building managers, which is going to work
better off of LinkedIn, outbound strategy. So I'd be looking at building managers who are actually
who are the decision maker for those services. And I'll be doing outbound on LinkedIn.
There was a business that I looked at not that long ago that had a set.
They went for Wales and they only were talking to building managers.
They did it all exclusively on LinkedIn.
So there's two strategies that I would do.
And in terms of lead magnet, I think the lead magnet actually matters less for like this type of business.
It would probably be more like what is my offer rather than what is my lead magnet.
So I'd be focused more on like what's my more compelling way to pull cash forward,
which might be like I get paid quarterly and I get paid in advance.
So that'll be one of the like ways that I would pull cash for forward and decrease term.
But in those businesses, his turn is almost nothing.
So it is definitely the acquisition game of getting customers.
All right.
David Kisle, Kisiel, Kisiel.
I'm a pro-volible player.
I have 150,000 followers across platforms.
Any tips for monetizing my audience?
Yes, I have tips.
So many tips.
Many, many tips.
The frosted, the most frosted of tips.
Right now, only taking one-off brand deals.
Well, dude.
A couple things.
So I think one of the things is hard for a lot of kind of like celebrity or sports people
is understanding what business they're really in.
So if you want to be like basically you are a media company.
Like fundamentally what are what like what are pro sports and sports in general?
They're entertainment.
That's what they are.
So they entertain people.
What is the point of entertainment?
To get people to continue to watch.
That is what the point of entertainment is.
And so really good entertainment gets lots of people to keep watching.
That's what good entertainment is.
By the way, that's what the news is too.
Crazy.
Anyways.
So if that's the business that you're in, you need to make the decision.
Okay, so first off, you're in the media business more than,
and it's like you are a performer.
You perform a specific skill, people watch you, and that's how the game works.
Okay.
Now, from there, you kind of have two paths.
Path one is you keep going in the entertainment direction,
which you can do by just showing more and more clips of you playing,
you spiking and doing all sorts of stuff,
and probably interweaving stuff about you,
which would then kind of build some depth to the audience
rather than you just being some trick-shot guy, right? That's path one. And the primary way that you're
probably going to monetize is the way you currently are, which is that you're going to have to do
outbound via sponsorships. But I see that as relatively limited. The alternative path is to become
more of an education business. And so I'll give you a shout out to Trevor Bauer. He was,
if you don't know who he is, he was one of the best pictures of all time and had a really unfortunate
situation that came up where a girl lied and whatever. I don't want to get into it. And I'm saying
that because she came out later in situate. But it ruined his career and he basically wasn't
all to play pro anymore. So what did you do? He couldn't play pro anymore. And so he had to find
another way to monetize. And so one is he shows people how to pitch. So I think you showing people
how to do volleyball stuff and do it the way that you do it is a really good one. So it's like,
can we develop an app or training program that you could sell digitally to show people how to
jump higher, spike more, run faster, the workouts associated with volleyball, all that stuff
would totally work. The second is that you can sell kind of like high, like, depends on
how much cloud you have in the space, but like you signing balls, you signing shorts,
you signing shirts, or having merch associated with a brand that you want to, maybe it's like,
you know, high level spike or maybe you're a serving specialist, whatever your thing is, right?
I would have training around that and I would have merch around that. Now, when you do that,
you kind of transition more into an educator and less of a entertainer.
But from a monetization perspective, I would be strongly looking at that.
Now, door three is that you just find a company that you really like a lot
and see if you can negotiate a deal where you can get a percentage of the company
from an equity perspective and maybe even a tiny slice of royalty based on the traffic
that you send, where you become a brand spokesperson, and then you hope that that business
eventually exits and whatnot and you just focus on making content and playing.
So sponsorships is going to be more powerful.
Obviously, you just have to sell and then keep making content.
When you become an educator, you have to do more work because you have delivery.
Now you could just sell pure digital.
That would make you less money, but it would be less work.
If you sold digital and then also services in terms of you looking at people spiking, giving them feedback,
that's like basically a personal training business that's focused on volleyball.
So that works for any kind of creator that's kind of any of those niches.
But those are kind of the paths that I would be looking at.
And all of those are different ways so you can monetize.
But if you guys dug this, it helps the team now that we'll keep doing this stuff.
You guys rock. This was a ton of fun. I love doing this stuff.
This is the kind of content I enjoy making because I could literally do this all day because I like business.
And if you like business, then you will like this stuff too.
All right. Keeping amazing. Yeah, I'll see you guys on the next dream. Rock and roll.
Out!
