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In this episode of The Game with Alex Hormozi, host Alex Hormozi shares insights on content creation, hiring practices, leadership frameworks, and personal reflections following significant life events. (00:06) The conversation explores how Hormozi maintains consistency across his content platforms, spending only six hours per week on content creation through strategic scheduling and authentic expression. He discusses his philosophy on predicting outcomes through accurate frameworks of reality, emphasizing the importance of observing behavioral patterns rather than relying on emotions or sentiment. (00:47) A major portion centers on hiring practices at Acquisition.com, where Hormozi prioritizes general intelligence and full-stack capabilities, particularly for C-level positions. The episode concludes with personal reflections on work-life balance and trade-offs following his mother's recent passing, revealing his current 70-15-15 split between work, health, and marriage.
Alex Hormozi is an entrepreneur, founder, investor, author, public speaker, and content creator focused on scaling businesses from $100M to $1B in net worth. He founded and leads Acquisition.com, a company that helps businesses scale through strategic guidance and investment. Known for his direct, no-nonsense approach to business advice, Hormozi has built a significant media presence across multiple platforms while maintaining hands-on involvement in all content creation.
Hormozi emphasizes hiring for "horsepower" - general intelligence defined as rate of learning - over specific experience or attitude. (08:54) He explains that intelligent people can bridge skill gaps faster, making them better long-term investments. The quality of questions candidates ask during interviews serves as his primary intelligence assessment tool. Rather than generic questions, he looks for candidates who demonstrate deep research and can connect complex concepts. This approach allows him to identify people who can grow into roles rather than just fill current needs.
The single greatest framework Hormozi uses for defining reality accurately involves removing "all sentiment, emotion, and psychology from the equation and only looking at it from a behaviorist frame of what can I observe." (00:47) This approach helps him predict outcomes more accurately because it focuses on measurable, observable behaviors rather than subjective interpretations. By asking "what can a court witness see?" he eliminates ambiguity and creates clear, actionable frameworks for decision-making.
Hormozi spends only six hours per week on content creation by focusing on authentic expression rather than strategic planning. (02:53) He doesn't follow trending topics or create content calendars. Instead, he captures insights from real conversations and experiences, then schedules them for future release. This approach maintains consistency across all platforms because everything originates from his genuine thoughts and experiences, whether spoken or written.
When employees aren't performing, Hormozi uses a diagnostic framework examining four potential causes: they don't know WHAT to do, they don't know HOW to do it, they don't know WHEN to do it, or something is BLOCKING them. (04:49) This framework prevents managers from attacking the person's character and instead focuses on solving the actual constraint. Most performance issues stem from communication or training problems rather than motivation, making this a more productive approach to management conversations.
Hormozi insists on defining all goals and expectations in specific, observable terms that "a court witness could see." (48:23) Instead of vague requests like "be more loving," he advocates for specific actions like "give me a hug when I walk in the door." This precision eliminates miscommunication and creates clear success metrics. The same principle applies to business goals, marketing messages, and performance expectations - everything must be defined in measurable, behavioral terms.