Search for a command to run...

Timestamps are as accurate as they can be but may be slightly off. We encourage you to listen to the full context.
In this insightful episode of My First Million, Sam Parr sits down with Alex Hormozi to explore the critical aspects of building exceptional businesses through superior talent acquisition and strategic thinking. (00:00) The conversation dives deep into Hormozi's philosophy that "the highest returns on capital we get as entrepreneurs is talent," covering everything from hiring practices to leadership frameworks. (27:27)
Sam Parr is the co-host of My First Million and founder of Hampton, an exclusive community for high-growth entrepreneurs. He previously founded and sold The Hustle, a popular business newsletter, and has built multiple successful companies throughout his career.
Alex Hormozi is the founder of Acquisition.com and a serial entrepreneur who has built multiple eight-figure businesses. He's known for his systematic approach to business building, having helped companies scale rapidly through his proven frameworks and methodologies, and is the author of several business books including "$100M Offers."
Hormozi emphasizes that intelligence, defined as "rate of learning," is the most valuable trait when hiring. (06:20) Rather than focusing solely on past experience or specific skills, he looks for people who can bridge skill gaps quickly through their learning ability. This approach allows businesses to invest in people who will not only fill current roles but exceed expectations as they rapidly develop. The key insight is that while experience provides a starting advantage, high-intelligence individuals will often surpass experienced but slower-learning candidates within six months.
The concept of "macro patience, micro speed" involves consistently challenging timelines and pulling the future forward faster. (33:00) Hormozi demonstrates how effective managers don't just accept deadlines - they probe deeper with questions like "What else is blocking you?" and "How many actual hours will this take?" This systematic approach to urgency involves multiple levels of questioning that help teams realize they can often accomplish tasks much faster than initially estimated, creating a culture of operational excellence.
Once businesses reach around $5 million in revenue, the primary role shifts from doing the work to collecting exceptional people. (15:51) Hormozi explains this transition using the Biblical reference of becoming "fishers of men" - the business owner must become skilled at identifying, attracting, and retaining top talent. This requires developing pattern recognition around what exceptional performers look like at each level and being willing to pay significantly above market rate for truly exceptional people who can drive exponential returns.
Instead of hypothetical interview questions, present candidates with actual business problems your company is facing. (09:28) This approach serves multiple purposes: it makes interviews more engaging for both parties, provides free consulting value regardless of hiring outcome, and reveals how candidates think through complex problems using their unique frameworks and experiences. The quality of questions candidates ask and how they deconstruct problems reveals their intellectual horsepower and potential value to the organization.
The key to effective firing is understanding the difference between roles that are constraining business growth versus those that are simply underperforming. (27:01) Hormozi uses a traffic light system: green (performing well), yellow (underperforming but not critical), orange (can't do the job), and red (can't do the job and it's limiting company growth). Red situations require immediate action, while yellow might be tolerable temporarily. The framework helps prioritize which personnel decisions will have the greatest impact on business outcomes.