Throwback: How I Made My First Million (In Profit) | Ep 858 - podcast episode cover

Throwback: How I Made My First Million (In Profit) | Ep 858

Mar 26, 202533 min
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Summary

Alex Hormozi shares the story of how he made his first million in profit, detailing the pivotal moments and shifts in behavior that led to his success. He recounts overcoming a DUI, selling his gyms, facing financial ruin, and the difficult journey of launching Gym Launch. The episode emphasizes the importance of focus, skill development, and adapting business models to achieve significant profit and growth.

Episode description

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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 and will learn on his path from $100M to $1B in net worth.

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Transcript

Welcome back to the game. Today, I talk about how I made my first million. And the big difference was focus, honestly. There was a clear transition point in my life where I went from doing business, and I've been doing this for years, and becoming a, I mean, crazy to say this, but a millionaire. It seems so cringe to say it.

I think even saying cringe is cringe now. I think it's like old people stuff now. Anyways, how I made my first million, and there were significant changes in my behavior, and this... podcast zooms in on that exact moment and the shift in behavior and then the resulting outcome. And I think you'll probably be able to take one, two, maybe more things from this episode that could potentially help you out. I want to talk to you about how I made my first million dollars in profit.

Mind you, the reason I'm so big on profit rather than revenue is that at that point, I had already made I was already making a couple million dollars a year between all the different things that I was doing, but I was taking home basically nothing. Because I was so spread thin, I wasn't paying attention to profit. I was just looking at revenue, trying to beef myself up and feel status rather than thinking about what I was actually taking home.

And I told you in a different video how I got in a head-on collision in a DUI at 60 miles an hour on the highway and walked away from it. And that was kind of the catalyst that ended up changing my life in a lot of ways. Mostly because I decided to confront decisions that I... been putting off.

and make hard calls that I didn't want to make to force myself to focus on one thing. And so what I want to do in this video is talk to you about the result of that decision and what kind of happened and transpired in the next six to 12 months, which is anything. Anything but a Cinderella story. I made the calls. I went all in on gym launch. I basically fire sold my other businesses and Just as a quick tangent on that

Like a lot of times I think the great thing that we have is sitting right in front of us after we let go of the things that are holding us down. I'm a big believer in the theory of constraint, which is, you know, a system will grow to...

up to it's basically it's bottleneck right and then until you relieve that like systems will grow as long as they're not constrained and so most of us are constrained in many ways and we just do not recognize them which is why we have things called limiting beliefs it is a constraint right and for me in a very real way i had constraints in terms

in terms of all the different things that I was allocating my attention to. I had, you know, I think literally like nine or 10 businesses, I'll use quotes here, that I was trying to run at the same time and I was spread so thin that I could barely allocate anything and I was working every hour of the day and I was drinking half of them. bottle of Johnny Walker at night, so I just go to sleep. And so anyways, I got in the head-on collision. I decided to make the next...

the next move, which was going all in on gym launch. And this is the beginning of yet another hard road ahead. And so at this time, for those of you who don't know, I started flying around and doing

uh done for you gym launches and so what that was was basically layla and i would go and do a gym turnaround i didn't like to use that word because i didn't think gym owners liked it i was originally going to call it gym rescue but no one wants to be rescued so i called it gym launch and everyone was okay with that name we would fly out

two brick and mortar facilities. We'd sit at the front desk. I would spend my own money on everything. So the offer was pretty simple. I said, I would fill your gym in 30 days for free. That was the offer. I was like, I'll spend my own money on the ads. I'll spend my own money on the hotels, the food, the everything. And the deal is I just get to keep the upfront cash that I collect and then everything afterwards that's contract value, you get to keep. It was a pretty compelling offer, right?

have to do anything right they would just say yes and then I would show up I think I'd ask them for $500 to reserve the date just to make sure that they wouldn't like not be there but I would I made it a refundable deposit but anyways I would fly out and We would spend all the money in marketing and we would sell on average when Layla and I would go we'd sell an average about 200 people in 21 days So we'd average about 10 sales a day

um and then we would take you know then we'd fly to the next one this is kind of what we had been doing in 2016 and i was doing this while also having six gyms and two agencies and and and all these other things that were going on and i was spread wildly too thin And that's when I got in the DUI and then decided to end everything except for gym lunch. We ended up basically...

I sold five of the six gyms, I shut down the two agencies, and then I had one gym that was left over, and I put the money from the sale of those other businesses, which was not a lot, into kind of the last facility. The partner that I had at that facility ended up... feeling like I had been taking distributions somehow from the business which I hadn't and then he took what he believed was rightful compensation for him.

not being involved in that gym anyways. It basically took the rest of the money out of the account. And so I basically was left with nothing. So I was truly at this rock bottom moment of just gotten a DUI. I just got rid of all my gyms. I put all the money from those gyms into this last facility. That money got taken.

And I then decided to close that one gym down. And then when I did that, I couldn't sell anymore at that facility to generate cash flow because I wanted to close it down. I didn't want to be involved in that gym anymore. And so I basically stomached rent and payroll out of there with no new cash flow coming in and I watched my bank account.

basically go from some money to no money and so at the end of that we shut the gym down I got tons of refunds and things like that that ended up happening afterwards because people are weird when you when you shut a business down so heads up and so we just kept but the coach that I had at the time was just like just write the checks do right by everyone and you'll be able to you know escape this thing

unscathed emotionally and and more or less I did I was able like that was some of the best advice I ever got like I just I didn't try and pursue anything with the partner. I just wrote the checks for all the customers who, even if we had fulfilled the services, I just wrote the checks. And I actually didn't. Layla wrote the checks because I was so like...

destroyed by this entire decision process. But anyways, I was completely clean slate at that point. I think all in all, I had $23,000 left over at that point.

And so after selling six businesses and all that stuff, I had nothing left. And this was hard for me because I just spent four years building six facilities and all that stuff, and I almost had nothing to show for it. And that was one of the biggest lessons that I've had is that you have all these skills and experiences and character traits.

they developed to show for it like the entrepreneurial journey is one that improves you not anything else and so that's why i'm such a big believer in that stuff because like i had these things these assets that i did not value and what's crazy is that in the next you know

30 days or so we did a hundred something thousand in sales and so i was like oh wow we uh we can do this and so anywho um actually i think what ended up happening is i had almost no money and then we did a launch and then After all the costs and everything, I think I had 20 something thousand.

in in in money for me the next month uh leila and i said we were just focusing purely on this business she told all of her friends from high school to quit their jobs right so she had six friends from high school that all were doing mlm shake mix stuff And she said, hey, you know.

you should quit that and start selling this stuff we can make 100 bucks a pop instead of you know making five dollars on shake mix and they were all like awesome let's do it in between month between uh i think it was like november ish going into january which is when we wanted to slate the six gyms that we were going to launch at the same time which of course makes sense right

why go from one to two when you could go from one to six because that's a brilliant idea of alex's right and so we had one month in between where i was going to go launch a gym with layla we were going to do like 100 grand ish and then i was going to be able to that was kind of going to be the restart money right so here's what

happens next? I get a text from a guy and he's like, hey, my brother lives in the same city as where you're starting your new gym. And I was like, or not starting, doing a launch. I was like, okay. And he's like, yeah, he's a salesman. He really needs a job.

He's got a baby and he's got another one on the way and it might be a good fit. And so anyways, I knew I needed to take a month to kind of put all the resources together to start doing the launches at six at a time and training those sales guys and everything. So I was like, okay, that might work. at work because then I don't have to spend all day selling. And so anyways, I trained him and he crushed it. In the next 30 days he did,

I think 120,000 in sales in December, which is like, A, a hard month to do it in, and B, it was a great first launch for somebody who's new, which also kind of proved the model to me because I had done it, Layla had done it, but we never had someone else who wasn't like super tied to me doing it. Obviously, Layla was more invested.

than just, you know, just an employee right at the time. And so it was awesome. So I was like super excited. I was like sick. This hundred grand is going to be the launch money for the next thing. This will be great. And so at this point, Layla says, this guy's a winner. I'm going to take him home to meet my family, which is hilarious because I was not a winner at that time. And so anyways, I'm at her family's house.

Christmas Eve, and we had been selling for three weeks at this point. So we had, you know, $70,000, $80,000 in sales at this point. And what was weird was I was running all the money through just my gym processor because I still, you know, maintain the processing, like my POS.

and um and so anyways i always got deposits on tuesdays and i was like huh this is weird we haven't gotten a deposit since like i didn't get a deposit last tuesday and i was like okay that's odd and i called them and they're like hey you know uh i gave it like three or four days because i was like you know maybe it's delayed or something and it had been a holiday because it was in the holiday season whatever and so um the deposit is supposed to hit it doesn't i wait some days

Keep checking. Doesn't hit. I call them. They say, hey, you're in an annual review. It's standard. Nothing to worry about. And I was like, that's weird. I've been with you guys for five years. I've never had an annual review. Interesting.

And then waited a couple days, called again, was like, hey man, we're really going to need these funds. I need you to deposit these. And they're like, yeah, yeah, yeah. We're just working through some final things, blah, blah, blah. I was like, all right. And so Christmas Eve, I call them.

and uh we're supposed to launch six gyms starting on the 26th so two days later i called the guys up and i was like i'm not getting off the phone until you send me the money like i'm not like i need there's a hundred grand that's sitting there like i need that money the guy was like

Sorry, you know, we're seeing some regular activity in your account. And this is because we had written all these refund checks for clients when I was closing down the gym, the last gym that I had. So there's been some regular activity. This isn't the way that... you know you're not you it seems like you have a virtual business now that's not what this is intended for this is supposed to be for a single brick and mortar location so we're going to hold on to all the funds for six months and i

I lost it. And for those of you who don't know me, when I lose it, I don't actually get, like, explosive. I just get incredibly cold and very mean. And so I probably said some of the meanest things. Like, I didn't cuss. I was just, like, I destroyed the person's character that I was talking to on the phone like that.

question like why they were alive and so anyways I got off the phone and Leila and I's parents are supposed to go to the movies because it's Christmas Eve and her dad was like you know he seems a little stressed she's like is she always this way and um and of course i was a little bit stressed at that time um and so

here's what was crazy is that as we're going to the movie theaters i'm just like completely numb i just was like i feel dead on the inside and so we go to the theaters the movie's playing in front of me i'm not even watching the movie layla holds my hand and she's like what's going on i was like i'll tell you later

She takes my pulse. My resting pulse was like 120 in a dark movie theater at age 27. I was stressed out of my mind. And so we left the movies, and I told her, I was like, the money's not coming. she was like what do you mean i was like they're keeping it she's like can they do that i was like apparently like this was the first time i'd even known this that a processor can hold money and so

Anyways, I got home. I still owed the salesman from the last month who had done that huge launch, like all these sales that had happened and somebody had sold them, right? But I didn't collect the money from it. And so I owed a $22,000 commission check and I had $23,000 left and it was on money that I never...

received and so um in in congruence with the the lesson that i had learned from you know the the clean exit of all these other things which was like just do right by everyone and then you won't have any emotional scars that you'll carry with you And so I wrote the check. Actually, I wired it for $22,000 and I had $1,000 left. And that's when we got home.

And I told Layla, you know, everything that I had done. I was like, I have a thousand dollars left. And we were supposed to launch. She had told her six friends to quit their jobs. And we were going to start launching gyms two days later on the 26th. and i was like i have a thousand dollars and i have a credit card that has a hundred thousand dollar limit i was like i will do this i was like but this could go horribly wrong so you don't have to stay with me if you don't want to and um

That was like this was the moment for me that I that I knew I was gonna marry Layla and she said I would sleep with you under a bridge if it came to that She's like we'll get through it. And that was what I just like i wanted to like you know i would i would have been teary but i was so emotionally numb at this point that i just wanted to just like keep moving forward and keep keep keep getting through it and so anyways 48 hours later

I make all the ads. I set up all the campaigns, all the funnels, all the everythings. And I remember turning the campaigns on for all the six locations that we're going to do. It's like off to on, off to on, off to on, off to on. And I remember I was sweating. I was literally sweating when this was happening because I just felt such dread. I was like, this could literally just ruin me. Like right now I have no money, but I'm not in debt.

And I'm going to be going in debt at a rate of $3,300 per day of money that I do not have. And so anyways, I turned it on and the six guys were at the locations and it was $3,300 a day because I was paying for hotel, airfare, food, car. um ad spend and commissions every single day for six guys and i had remember i had a thousand dollars right and so it was all coming out of a credit card

in the next 30 days. And we ended up getting canceled by the processor, right? I told you this at the beginning of the story. So I started all this and I had no way to process money. So these guys are getting leads. They're making calls. They're closing deals.

And I can't process the money. All right. And so, so we're sitting there, right? And and and these contracts are just coming in right and we had them scan them so we had this mobile app and we had this central dropbox which of course is not pci compliant i had no idea what pci compliance was um and so we had this one lady that we used to work at my jib that i was paying part-time to process this. Mind you, I didn't understand how much work this was because we were doing like 50 sales a day.

right um between these locations at like 500 bucks a pop and i was paying someone for part-time four hours a day of contract work which was just insane it was like it was probably two people's worth of work and i was paying somebody part-time it ended up that ended up blowing up because she couldn't do that in her full-time job so and and we didn't even have a way to process the money anyways right

And so anyways, I'm calling everybody I know to try and figure out, I was like, hey, can you process this? And then you can keep 10% and just send me the rest of the money. And people were like, I don't know, man. Like, I don't know if I want to do that. And so no one would process the money for me. And so I called every person I knew. And then I finally got in touch with a guy named Alex Roy at the time who specialized in like.

high risk processing which is basically the category i was in at that time and he said i can get you set up and i was like okay cool um he said but given the record that you have right now uh because you just refunded all those all those people at the last location he's like they're gonna want a reserve which means they keep a certain percentage no matter what

And they're going to put a limit on how much you can charge. And I was like, okay, cool. He said, they'll give you a $50,000 limit. And I was like, dude, I need like four times that. And he was like, sorry, man, that's what I can get you. And so the last week of January. All right. So we were doing we're doing five, six thousand a day in sales, maybe more than that.

And I had no way of processing it right in the last week I get this processor for $50,000 and I run I run $50,000 in a day right and uh he's like okay here's the good news is that it's per month so it was the end of he's like so this week you can do 50 and the next week you can do 50 and then i'll see if i can get more lined up more processors at 50k to allow you to start processing for them and i was like okay fine

Hey guys, love that you're listening to the podcast. If you ever want to have the video version of this, which usually has more effects, more visuals, more graphs, you know, drawn out stuff. Sometimes it can help hit the brain centers in different ways. You can check on my YouTube channel. It's absolutely free. Go check that out if that's what you are into. And if not, keep enjoying the show. So next week we do 50 on that same processor.

and then we set up another one and another one and another one and i was able to like catch this this falling plane as it's going and we ended up somehow i think we ended up processing 100 grand actually

that first month. I think he got two people. He got somebody like the last day of the month and I processed another hundred, um, sorry, another 50, uh, to get a hundred for that first month. And then the next month I had three processors. So I was able to process 150 and things actually started, uh, working right so you know we did a hundred thousand which basically just covered my credit card bill which is doing 3300 a day right so I just

boom, I'm back to zero again. But at least I had a way of getting out of this thing, right? So the next month, I think we did 150 or 180. I have the chart in my book, $100 million offers. I can't remember what it was, but it was somewhere in there.

and so i processed that february and we actually had a profit that month i was like holy cow like we i think we made like 30 or 40 grand and i was like oh my god i think we might we might get out of this right but wait there's more there's more to the story it gets worse

And so I think we're, I think I'm in the, in the home stretch. Right. And so then March rolls around. All right. So at this point, people that we had sold in January, we were selling six week weight loss programs at local gyms. All of a sudden. I see this massive hit on the bank account for a hundred grand. And I was like, whoa, what's going on? What happened?

And it turned out that two of the facilities that we had launched in January, and this is now at end of February, beginning of March, they told a number of their... clients, hey, if you refund, you can just sign up through me. And I'll do it for less.

and so we had already paid for the airfare the flights hotels commissions ad spend for all these sales so you know the margin on this was lowish right i was probably running 20 margins and uh that hundred thousand completely wiped out all of the savings that i had had over the next the last month or two right um and uh and it was actually more than i could even handle and so we had to sell more to cover the refunds and so this is where things got even more fun

And I say that sarcastically. So this is what happened next. February, we do more money. March, I know that we have to sell even more. So I hired two more sales guys. We do eight launches that month. And that's to cover the refunds that are starting to come in from January. All right.

You can probably see where this is going. The refunds start getting worse. There's more and more and more. It turns out after everything, 35% of all of our sales that we were making were getting refunded, which is an astronomical number that is hard to even comprehend.

And it was because we had no control over the fulfillment, right? So we were selling, and then other people were filling on contracts that we had sold. And so, and there was a lot of, you know, hey, just refund, sign up through me. Don't worry, because we'd be gone, right? We'd already left the location, and these people were getting fulfilled on contracts. And so we didn't have the relationship with the customer. The business owner did.

And so it was a really dumb model from that perspective. I learned, right? One of the lessons I learned there was control the, like, you want to control everything end to end if you want a life lesson. And so anyways, the next month we have to sell more. And so I think we did 280,000 the next month. And I was like, okay, cool. But all of the excess cash that came from that, from like the profit went into funding these refunds from the month before.

And then refunds just kept going up. And so I knew that in April I was going to have to sell even more to cover the refunds from February and March. And I felt like I was in a death trap. I was like, I don't know how to get out of this. Like every month I have to sell more to cover the refunds from the month before, but then the cash from these things, I'm going to need to cover the next month and sell even more. And honestly, I had no idea what I was going to do.

All of a sudden, Layla at this point, because she still has one foot out the door a little bit because she was like, I don't know about this guy. And so this whole time she'd been living on like $3,000 a month that she was getting from her like online coaching business. So she transitioned her personal training clients to online.

doing like three grand a month from that and i was like hey why don't we take the middleman out of this we know how to mark and sell weight loss let's just sell it online which by the way is a massive transition from doing brick and mortar um but anyways i was like you know i was in absolute desperation

And so I wrote one of the best sales pages of my entire life out of just sheer need. It took me two days to write the sales letter, maybe three. And I didn't even get up from the computer. I was just writing the sales letter. And so... I started running traffic to it and we started doing a thousand bucks a day.

Um, of just online. So there was no margin. There was no, uh, it was all margin, right? Minus ad spend. And I was like, holy cow, this could work. Right. And so we had eight sales guys. And so I was like, okay, we can tell these guys, they don't have to sell at gyms anymore. They can sell from home. They can see their wives and we can do 8,000 a day. Cause if we're doing a thousand, just, just.

with her styling we could do eight 70 more guys and do 8 000 today and so i told the guys the next month uh the gyms that were lined up to launch the next month hey we're not gonna we're not gonna be doing this anymore sorry we're gonna be going another direction and they were like hey man like we need this

and um i was like sorry man like i it's just it's just i'm not doing that model anymore and um they're like well can you show us what you're doing because like my friend told me that you signed up like 200 people at his gym in like three weeks and i was like

no man sorry and uh he was like dude please like and i was like i'm not flying out there man i'm sorry i'm not doing it um and so anyways push comes to shove i was like fine i'll show you how to do it i was like but i'm not flying out there to save your ass you can't sell he's like no no that's fine

He was like, well, how much to show me how to do it? And at the time I picked what was the highest number I could possibly imagine in my head, which was $6,000. And I said that because I didn't want him to say yes. Because I didn't want to do it. I just wanted to move on. Because I was so, hopefully at this point you see how scarred I was by all of these experiences leading up to this. And the guy said, okay. And I looked at the phone and was like, you've got to be kidding me.

And I was like, holy crap. And so it was $6,000. And then I had seven more guys that I was supposed to call, you know, to tell them that I wasn't going to do their launch the next month. And so the next conversation I had, I was like, well, shoot, if I'm going to do it, I guess.

i guess i have to make it now that i sold one of them this whole program um next guy same conversation with the same way and he was like well how much and i was like eight grand and he was like okay and i was like holy cow And then every single one after that said yes and ended up doing $60,000 in sales in a day. And I looked at Layla and I was like, we might be able to get out of this.

at that time as much as people talk about the romantic like vision and strategy and and impact and saving lives and all this stuff like it wasn't any of that i was just trying to be able to not be in debt and pay the pay the bills that were mounting every single month off and so i knew that i needed to make like 150 000 in profit in the next like 30 days or so in order for this to work right

And this was the only way I could do it. And so what I did was I called, you know, those guys, they all bought. And then I called up every gym that we had launched at that point, which was like 32, I think. And I called every one of those guys and was like, hey, you know how we filled your gym up?

want me to show you how I did that? And they were like, yeah, that would be great. That's exactly what we did. And so I ended up doing like 300,000 in sales the next month, selling a digital product, which was actually more like a consulting type thing. And here's what's crazy. The next 30 days, the average gym that used the consulting program, Gym Launch, did $30,000.

collected cash not contract not contract not anything like that but $30,000 in sales in the next 30 days and and then that is when everything took off like a rocket because every single one of those guys told every person that they knew that was in the gym space like dude i just did this thing and it killed that was what gave birth to gym launch as it became the consulting company the licensing company

where we license out all the materials, all the ads, all the copy, all the scripts, how to set up the the the lobbies and the thing is is that when people ask me about the story and this is you know now we're six months into 2017 at this point so i've gone through like the hardest 18 months of my entire life that is when we just went from uh i think we did

a hundred grand that first, you know, month or last few weeks. And then we did 300, then 480, then 780, then a million, then one two, then one five, one eight two. due to like we just kept we just grew like like a rocket and a lot of people think it was because of the marketing that i was running at that point but it wasn't there was a lot of it was just the word of mouth and the actual product worked you know what i mean

And I use that as an example, because like right now I launched the book, $100 million offers. It's 99 cents with one post. on my instagram which is not that big um of a following and right now it sells about a thousand copies a day with no funnels no ads no whatever um and it's because the product was good you know i mean people talk if the product's good and

with this product i was able to charge an egregious amount of money but it was because we charge because we were making people so much money like if i if i gave you a system that made thirty thousand dollars on average in the first 30 days how much is that system worth right most guys charge you know for franchises they'll charge 500 000 for a system that does something like that right and i was just charging 16 grand because i was like holy cow like

they're going to make double their money in the first 30 days if they just do this right and i was so i knew every aspect every piece of this process because i had done it not only for my six gyms but for the 30 plus that we had launched and so like i knew the differences between different markets

I knew how to train sales guys to get them to do it. I knew how to position the offer. I knew how to do the layout of the sales room in the lobby. So you can maximize the amount of people that you could sell. I knew how to do the nutrition consultations the next day. So you could cover all the ad spend, um, just with product sales, right? Like I knew all these things.

because I did it. And so I tell the story to illustrate one thing. One is that what you are going through now doesn't mean like your work works on you more than you work on it i was developing skills character traits and beliefs through this entire three four five six year period of just of just eating that i did not know was for me And so we think that the first business, the second business, the fifth business you start is going to be the business that's going to be it for you.

Like the journey is long, you know what I mean? And you accumulate these skills and these beliefs and these traits over time. And those become the things, those are your actual assets, right? The businesses are just manifestations of those assets in reality. And so... As these things took off, my life radically transformed. And the piece that I get a lot of questions about is like, how can I do what you did in my space or in my niche or my whatever?

And the thing is, is people want to skip the first five years of the story, right? The first five years was that I didn't sell a course on how to make $10,000 a month from a gym. when i had my first gym i didn't do that when i had a second i didn't do that when i had a third i didn't do that when i had a fourth i didn't do that when i had a fifth i didn't do that when i had a sixth right um because i didn't feel like i was good enough and

It was only, and even then I started doing the launches as the next thing because I wanted to make sure that everyone always got way more value than they paid me, which was zero. They paid me nothing and then I would fill their gym up. Pretty good deal, right? No risk for them.

And so I did that for almost two years, doing the gym launches, right, where we'd fly out. And you already know how that went, which was difficult and hard for me. But I learned so much. I learned how to run a virtual sales team. I learned how to do all these things so that when I did have the next opportunity,

that lined up for me, we went from zero to 30 million in the next year in revenue because I had accumulated all of these skills and these character traits that I would not otherwise have had. and so a lot of people want to just jump to that part but they don't have the skills they don't have the character traits they don't have the beliefs that align with what they want to achieve and so i'm a big believer that the foundation

that you set is going to dictate the height of the peak of the pyramid that you want to build within your life and the business that you want to grow and so most people have a very small foundation they took a course and then they want to start selling how to you know run facebook ads right or whatever

And so the reality is that they're just not good enough. And that's why. The thing that they have just doesn't work that well, which is why it doesn't make money, which is why they don't make money, right? Because the amount of money that you'll make will be...

will be predicted by the value that you provide to the marketplace that's always what it is i know this is a longer story but i think that hopefully it illustrates one that the path is not straight uh two uh it is is fraught with difficulty and mind you me telling you the very the quote end of the story is that like oh yeah then you know everything took off like a rocket

All of these types of problems, there was different problems that we had to solve then. Just like, how do you double every month and somehow keep up with high quality service and support and train talent while also bringing new people in and keep a culture?

and all of these things. But at the end of the day, the product brought us so much forgiveness from our customers because they were just all making so much money using the systems that we had laid out that we were able to build the infrastructure as the plane was flying. you know, during the journey. And so anyways, that was, that was the transition of me going from broke and looking at bankruptcy lawyers to we did 3 million in profit just in the last.

like four or five months of that year. And then the next year we did 17 million in profit. And that was because I switched from a service. um to uh to media which is uh no cost of reproduction so there's significantly higher gross margins on it which is a better opportunity vehicle and what's interesting about this and i'll just i'll i'll hit this because i i could probably make a video on this one concept alone

And I think it's worth highlighting is that when I had my gyms, right, that I had relatively the same skill set, right? I knew how to help people lose weight. I knew how to, you know, I knew how to market. I knew how to sell. I had these locations, all of that.

From there, I transitioned to a done-for-you sales model, right? And I made more money, right? Now, I had some issues. It's funny because I could look at that model now and fix it in two seconds because it's obvious what I would need to do to change the model. But I didn't do that.

But I made more money in terms of revenue and you know in terms of net margins I was making more but there was holes in the in the actual way the model was designed which is why I had to do with all these other things And then finally we switched to licensing um code in media right and that is where you know the highest gross margins exist and so i had the same skills right um but as my beliefs changed and my character traits changed and developed

I was able to switch into better and better opportunity vehicles for the same set of skills. And that is what ended up creating the fortune that Layla and I were able to amass in this period of time.

And it was because of that transition through different vehicles, repackaging the same skills. And so the first step in this is getting the skills to repackage. And I think most people just want to skip that part, which is the rocky cutscene that every single person that I know is successful does that no one wants to talk about. Every single great big business owner that I know have these years of thinkless work where they develop these skills, these traits.

in these beliefs that end up setting them free. And everyone wants to just take the one course and thinks they're going to become a millionaire in six months, and it's just not the case. And so many people are far ahead of me in their entrepreneurial journey than I was in my first two years, three years, five years. And so I tell the story to hopefully give anyone hope who's like two years in and isn't making money. It's like, well.

multiply that by three and then that's about where i was where i started making real money so um anyways lots of love mosey nation i love you all my name is alex ramosi i own acquisition.com we do about 85 million dollars a year in revenue and i have absolutely nothing to sell you um keep being awesome if you did enjoy this hit the subscribe button and i'll see you in the next video and if you didn't like this then i love you either way all right lots of love i'll see you then bye

Real quick, guys, I have a special, special gift for you for being loyal listeners of the podcast. Layla and I spent probably an entire quarter putting together our scaling roadmap. It's breaking scaling into 10 stages.

and across all eight functions of the business. So you've got marketing, you've got sales, you've got product, you've got customer success, you've got IT, you've got recruiting, you've got HR, you've got finance. And we show the problems that emerge at every level of scale and how to graduate to the next level. It's all free.

and you can get it personalized to you so it's about 30-ish pages for each of the stages once you answer the questions it will tell you exactly where you're at and what you need to do to grow it's about 14 hours of stuff, but it's narrowed down so that you only have to watch the part that's relevant to you, which will probably be about 90 minutes. And so if that's at all interesting, you can go to acquisition.com forward slash roadmap, R-O-A-D map, roadmap.

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